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I'm in with the "Where's Frasier?" crowd and also the "Futurama" crowd. Some legitimately great singular episodes in those runs. Better Off Ted has so many great ones; I'm still mad at that writer's strike. Frankly, the "scientology" episode of South Park is still, hands-down, the funniest episode of that run -

Posted elsewhere, but the Friends episode in question - this list is just episodes, people!, not overall commentary on whole shows - is hysterical. It may not have been watchable to any or all for its entire ten years, but the game show conceit of the ranked episode is wildly hilarious.

As much as I enjoyed Cheers, I would venture that none of the singular episodes, perhaps, stood out as much as the overall body of the eleven years of the series. If you think about it, Cheers was, most of the time, built around the same pattern: Sam womanizes, Diane in the early years waxes endlessly in her

Seriously, have you watched the episode in question? I get that Friends is not for everyone - and I'm probably in the target audience. Straight. Female. Thirtysomething now (younger then). But the episode is at question. Also…it's a sitcom. Not all sitcoms have teeth… not all sitcoms are clever, but Friends had

Disagree, dude… that episode they've chosen… watch it. It truly is one of the best sitcom episodes ever, because that "game show" that Ross concocted gets more and more out of control. I think about it and laugh. That's where we learn about "Miss Chanandler Bong," among other interesting tidbits. Also, you'd have

I loooved Child of Light. Such a beautiful game. All too short, but satisfying on most other levels and for all the reasons you said!

I've heard from some SAG previewers that "No More Giants" is cut. I'm already staring beadily in the direction of the nearest cineplex. Kind of an important song…

Core is right.

Boo, Lt, sir. Within You Without You is one of George's better sonic portraits, and the sitar instrumental section is fitting. Tomorrow Never Knows may be their best, most original song. It's my favorite, actually. It is what elevates Revolver to something more ethereal than just a collection of Beatles songs.

boo. Blue Jay Way gets my vote (sorry George) for songs with words and singing. Til There Was You is a remake from Sophie Tucker's lift from The Music Man. As much as I love the White Album, though, Revolution 9 is untenable, and I say this is a Beatlesologist in my own right. Nice idea, but really doesn't hold