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jboehle
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It had almost nothing to do with the episode's central thesis, but I kind of loved how they made an outdated charging plug a key plot point. Truly one of the greatest banes of modern existence.

"and Evan Rachel Wood did a great job."

DiCaprio and Scorsese were attached to a project based on The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt (which follows his pre-presidency escapades) for the longest time, but that project fell by the wayside.

I feel like deep down he doesn't really wanna be president anymore, but deeper still he can't stand the idea of losing something so big so publicly, so he will continue to fight for it to the bitter, bitter end.

The YouTube comments section for the trailer for this is Ghostbusters levels of horrifying.

The mother that Roberts would be playing was 49 when the drug incident occurred, so it matches up pretty well, actually. The only significant difference between the two is that the mom was only 5' tall, while Roberts is 5'9", but that's not too essential to the story. A good movie would focus far more on the Easters

Someone elsewhere suggested Anna Camp, which really work, I think. I haven't seen her in too much, but just based on her role in Pitch Perfect, and a clip I saw of her killing someone on True Blood, she could pull off the pretty exterior hiding some crazed maliciousness.

Huh, I haven't heard of that…

One of those rare movie lines that is terrifying and hilarious in almost equal measure.

I just thought back to The People vs. OJ Simpson.

"Let's face it, Bernie is the Dave Matthews of politics. I can never hate him as much as I hate his fans."

Jack was actually a modest hit in 1996 - modest enough to make the top 25 grossers for the year, and thus qualify for Rabin's Forgotbuster column at The Dissolve: https://thedissolve.com/fea…

I still love how the UK classic comedy Father Ted was inspired to do an episode named "Speed 3" because the creators literally asked themselves (this is taken right from the Wikipedia page), "How can we make a worse sequel than Speed 2?"

I definitely think it was related to her comment on men being in charge. His blurting out Pete's mental history seemed very impulsive and in the moment and he immediately regretted it, but I imagine he realized through her comment how immature she was and that she doesn't seem ready to handle Pete.

I think it's less C.K. himself misunderstanding feminism and more C.K. trying to create a character that doesn't understand feminism themselves. I mentioned this in another comment on here, but there are a weird amount of millennial women that don't seem to understand what feminism is - I was in a philosophy class

Sorry for chiming in so late (finally catching up on this after falling behind in the spring), but I do know a weird amount of women my age that have similarly anti-feminist viewpoints to Jenny in this episode. None of them have ever straight-up said that they think men are better than women, but there is this weird

I'm genuinely amazed at ow many of my non-movie buff friends have expressed interest in this. A24 is truly doing the lord's work in pushing weird art house flicks to modest mainstream success (Ex Machina, Spring Breakers, The Lobster…).

It's just doing a limited run this weekend in NY and LA, it's suppose to go into wide release next weekend.

Same here. Looks like my years of avoiding using Ticketmaster at all costs has bitten me in the ass. Ah well!