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Real estate is kind of pricey there. But I guess they could use Bernie Madoff 's old office which is on that corner, in the Lipstick building.

That's a lot of walking.

What about historical fiction?

Unfortunately, he's probably just going to fall in love with her too.

How much does an intangible body weigh? Isn't his body more in danger of floating away like a fart in the wind?

Can't he just ask her to not do that?

Nobody on Agent Carter has said anything about love yet.

Have you seen "Ghost World"? The contrast in its co-stars' subsequent careers is fascinating.

She had good supporting roles in Shattered Glass and Up in the Air. Happy Christmas is okay too, but very improvised.
Obviously Two and a Half Men has been her biggest profile gig over the past twelve years, and she was funny on it. But it's still not a series I want to recommend to anyone.

I don't think "maybe you're the real racist" existed in 1916.
Griffith had some pretty racist views that wouldn't have looked negative or out of place at the time. But he probably didn't like the idea that his film may have incited violence.

Lynskey has been making acclaimed indie films for years. Have you seen "Hello I must be Going"? She always seems to have a film at Sundance.

That's why so many westerns were made. It was a genre with dirt cheap location shooting.

But folks in the old west DID burst randomly out into song. They had no choice, nobody had iPods or stereo systems back then.

Dan Harmon did a riff on how every time some gay guy on a tv show comes out of the closet, he's immediately rewarded with some hot young Latino partner. Like a manic pixie-door prize-starter boyfriend.

Everybody makes stinkers, whether they've won Oscars or not.
I think your premise is affected by three typical phenomena:
1. After actors become "Oscar Winning Actors", moviegoers immediately attach higher expectations to everything they do.
2. After actors have achieved the pinnacle of a movie career - the Oscar -

Well it's not like they were going to kill off a cast member. I doubt NBC expected that level of commitment to a theme night.

Why? Would Father Ted have been better as a single cam?

Don't get me wrong. I know that Joan has always been very empathetic to suffering. But she has also always kept her passions and emotions in check. Probably thanks to her career as a sober companion, she has learned to avoid using anger, shaming and contempt when expressing her opinion. Even towards those things that

It's absurd to complain about Tate Donovan 's obvious guilt, given that no other suspect was considered or even presented. You might as well complain that the guilty parties on "Columbo" were too easy to guess also.
Not every episode of "Elementary" is necessarily a whodunit. For example, in the episodes with Alicia

"she’s uniquely positioned to bring all her righteous anger to bear on the manipulative for-profit tactics of Fairbridge."