Maybe because I'd read that MK said they, I took it as them working through their problems. After all, if you never argue, you can't work it out. Maybe not.
Maybe because I'd read that MK said they, I took it as them working through their problems. After all, if you never argue, you can't work it out. Maybe not.
It's funny because I don't remember them breaking up last season. What are you considering a breakup? She moved to California, but they stay together. He didn't want to get married, but they still stayed together. Even when he proposed, she said she understood that he didn't want to get married. We don't know the…
OK. Thanks. I hope you're right.
You know that or are just guessing based upon last year? I'd guess they're not working at the moment because of Messina's movie, so I fear it might be longer.
Weird. I loved 30 Rock but, to me, the romance between Liz and Chris (Was that his name?) felt tacked-on. Like, "Oh, %+}+# it's ending! We'd better get her a husband." After all those years of Liz being so strong, the fact that she settled for any old guy was disappointing to me. I guess it just shows different…
This episode was so beautifully written. Forgot how I missed their banter when the stakes were lower. The bit about Shulman hiring the wrong guy was classic.
Wait. Were Sriracha and Gratitude back? Thought that was another episode.
Very true. He has always been a jerk, and they've had numerous near breakups and actual breakups, where fans got mad at Danny. Most recently Diary of a Mad Indian Woman last season and, indeed, the season 3 finale. Maybe the commenters saying this is unusual haven't been watching the show for long?
Idk. I sort of loved the episode. It reminded me of season 2 when Danny broke up with Mindy for no good reason, and we all hated him but I was just waiting for the next week with way more involvement than one should have with a sit-com. I love that the show is tackling these issues, and I love that Mindy said what…
Loved seeing both families together. And Dot and the Lahiris' servant. I was surprised that the episode didn't end with Danny seeing the light. I'm going to guess that, with only two episodes left until the midseason finale, this will be the issue that sees us through until then. Maybe a wedding for the season…
It was definitely inflected like "What the f**k," but there are other words and phrases that have the same rhythm, such as "alphabet," which was what I heard.
Sorry but you have to really WANT it to be saying, "What the f**k to hear that." It's sort of like backwards "Paul is dead."
Yeah, they always reminded me of the sisters in the play, The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds, which was about a smart, weird younger sister who wanted to be a scientist, and her more "normal" older sister who still wasn't really all that normal. When Becky suddenly morphed into this beautiful Sarah…
William Hurt, David Ogden Stiers and Amy Wright were really great as the quirky siblings in The Accidental Tourist. Bill Pullman and Peter Gallagher as the nice and not-nice brothers in While You Were Sleeping. Andie MacDowell and Laura San Giacomo in Sex, Lies, and Videotape.
Sarah Gilbert (though Melissa Gilbert was also good as Melissa Sue Anderson's sister on Little House), but yeah, they were perfect. I never liked Sarah Chalke as well as Becky, though I like her in other things.
Kudos for including iZombie. However, while "Dead Rat, Live Rat" was a great episode, "Astroburger" was completely mind-blowing. Also, just about any Mindy Project episode is better than any New Girl episode, but "Dinner at the Castellanos" was perfection (which probably means AV Club gave it a B-). Edited to add:…
Hmm, the fact that the books were wildly successful to the degree that there were midnight parties all over the world on their publication dates and the New York Times invented a children's bestseller list and, eventually, a series list, because, otherwise, HP would have taken up all the slots on the regular…
Harry Potter wasn't even YA for most of the series. It was middle grade. Like for elementary school kids. About half these books aren't YA, and several of them aren't series.
Spiderwick was too scary visually for its intended audience (which was 8-12, not YA). Sometimes things work on paper, but not on film, especially because, with a movie for that age, you want to be able to bring the whole family. It wasn't a bad movie for a fearless 10-year-old.
Yeah, in the book he was actually a beast. But have you seen the "beast" in the Beauty and the Beast TV series? Hollywood people have apparently forgotten the Ron Perlman/Linda Hamilton Beauty and the Beast and think audiences won't respond to a beast who is actually ugly.