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The Ghost of Faffner Hall
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Since the reviewer mentioned the feeling of laziness hanging over this episode, I have to ask: how does a pre-taped sketch (the "Monster Pals" one) cut to the wrong scene? I've seen it many times in the live sketches, but never in a taped bit. Just lazy editing that no one caught?

I'd say it's a tossup between her and Killam. Side note: "Strong and Killam" would be a great name for a wrestling tag team.

I'll see you that and raise you a Jim Breuer.

But it beats doin' homework!

I'd take Jost, personally. He's not perfect, but I don't ever remember laughing at a single joke Quinn ever told. Every week it was like he expected to get big laughs just for showing up.

She was in the background of "Les Jeunes," and I believe I saw her onstage at the end of the monologue.

It's that thing where a lady stand-up gets on stage, and just says "Penis, vagina, promiscuous sex, my period," then repeats it over and over again.

Week after week I always completely forget that John Milhiser is even on this show until someone in the comments mentions him. Not a great sign. Recently I even tried to remember the names of the six featured players that were added at the top of the season, and he was the one I couldn't think of.

I was going to give Aidy Bryant credit for staying in character and ad-libbing something that fit with the sketch ("Go on, sing!") instead of either calling attention to it by cracking a joke, or letting the awkward silence hang there. Good for her.

Except someone screwed up in one of them and left out the "not," so it said that Tyson DOES own a sandwich shop named "Quizmos." Oops.

"Which 25-Year-Old Animated Disney Movie Are You?"

Hi Pharrell!

It's true, it's true! We're so LAME!

I did! "It's what I do."

I thought they were going that way too—all of those ways—so I have to give them credit for taking things in a completely different direction.

The two I remembered were Faith from Third Watch and Max from Gilmore Girls… man, this show does it more than I even realized.

I'm getting tired of what I call the "Murder She Wrote Rule," where the biggest name or most recognizable face in the guest cast is always the guilty party. (Unless they are accused or made to look guilty in the opening minutes of the episode, in which case they were framed.) Offenders include Monk, Elementary, any

I'm the opposite—some scenes I end up rewinding and watching over two or three times.

*sigh* I once showed up at an ex's doorstep wearing a suit and holding a portable tape player, and sang a karaoke version of "On the Street Where You Live" from My Fair Lady in an attempt to win her back. It was not successful. Now let us never speak of it again.

It's been a while since I saw the episode, but I think Ted implied that it was the first time he had locked eyes with the Mother, so that would definitely be this wedding.