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The Porkchop Express
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The Munsters never tried to blend in. They thought that they were normal. They just couldn't understand why everyone acted so weird. The Addams Family had affluence as a barrier between them and the rest of the world. The Munsters were working class and had to interact with it more often. That, to me, was the

The show as enjoyable to watch, and Eddie Izzard was his usual fantastic performer. But I have to agree with you. The original Munsters were about a working class family trying to get along in day to day life that happened to be 'monsters'. It took me becoming an adult to realize just how subversive that show was.

I find that Goldmember has the self awareness that the second one kinda jumped the tracks and they just made fun of that. Myers realized that 'Zip-it!' was nowhere near as funny as 'Shhh!' and just had it devolve into gibberish for the third one.

Fact of the matter is that Paramount and CBS didn't have to let anyone do a fan film. The supported it until a group decided to take advantage. Even now they're still letting the fan film movement continue. They've just put some rules in place.

It sucks, but the fact is that it was the Axanar group who screwed it up for everyone. They were trying to profit off of someone else's IP. CBS and Paramount didn't like the idea of people competing against them using their own trademarked property. Keeping Trek actors out of the fan films helps create a bigger divide

I used to think that Office Space was a satire that inflated the inanity and wasteful logic of working in an office structure. Now that I've worked in an office for over a decade, I realize just how much Mike Judge pulled back.

Ask the people of Star Trek: Axanar.

But the word is that they're going to have the next two back to back.

I think they wound up adding that you can't hire the professional Trek actors to be in them anymore. But, yeah, the Axanar douches got greedy and almost ruined it for everyone else.

It's a typo. It's Skrull Island.

That's amazing. I've got the same combination on my luggage.

He's worse than Hitler.

And they get into everything.

He tripped me at the school dance and then laughed at my shoes.

Those movies were actually about a man-child growning up and becoming a man. Seeing a guy in his late 20's and even early thirties act like a weird frat boy is still somewhat funny. When the guy hits his mid-thirties and forties, not so much.

"Then there was a writers’ room that convened just for a few weeks with different people coming and going—everything was working around people’s schedules, even in the writers’ room—where we fleshed out the stories and brainstormed and mixed and matched and pieced the whole thing together."

Yeah. It's weird that they guy's only bit in the entire season is one of the funniest. "I forgot my coat."

There were a lot of opportunities that just didn't get taken. The whole King of Camp duel should have been ten times better. Rudd's Andy just seemed lost in this (His best bit was his last at the restaurant.), as did a lot of other including Ben and Beth.

It's mediocre. There are still some great gags to come, but not too many. It seemed like a lot of good ideas with poor execution. Especially the King of the Camp duel.