Haven't watched that yet, but when I do, I'll know what to look forward to!
Haven't watched that yet, but when I do, I'll know what to look forward to!
Oh, speaking of the zombies, the one Rosita found in the house with the toy gun seemed like it wandered in from a different movie, it looked so different.
I dug this episode just because there was some positivity and laughter between two of the most consistently dour characters on the show. I have to admit that the repeated exchange of Michonne saying "We need to go back" and Rick saying "Let's continue our horny camping trip" made me fear we were being set up for the…
Well yeah, the plans went haywire, so there were some tense scenes trying to get out of trouble. In this episode featuring these characters there wasn't going to be much possibility of someone dying, but TWD still allows for things to go wrong zombie-style, like in the cases of Tyrese, Bob, and Noah, or Jessie and her…
I of course support your right to watch anything you want and criticize it on the internet later, but if you hate the show that much, maybe it's time to just stop watching it? I almost did that during the first half of the season, but I had already bought the full season on iTunes, and I wound up getting into it…
But this is something I think the show does well. Two armed people can come up with a plan to wipe out a large group of zombies, and as long as everything goes well, they will succeed. It's when something unexpected happens—there's a zombie embedded in the windshield, or the car's brakes don't work, or a piece of…
I agree. I don't think the show was trying to trick us into thinking it was Rick, it was making the point of what Michonne's reaction would be. Sure, they didn't show us Rick ducking into a box or killing the deer, but that was because we were temporarily only shown what Michonne sees.
They'll wind up in Splenda packets.
There is a disturbing lack of love for Winslow in this review and in these comments. Come on, how awesome and batshit insane is he?? The high points in this show are when the writers come up with crazy zombie antics, like the zombie barricade the Saviors chained together, the water-logged zombies in that flooded…
There are no fat women in the Zombie Apocalypse because they get shot and killed whenever a short skinny woman attempts to assassinate a warlord.
Watching the show, I was planning to check out the actress's IMDb page because I figured there was no way she had not played a Vulcan before.
Oh, it being audio isn't the postmodern part, it's that the writing is postmodern. C.f. The first line in the second paragraph: "Lincoln In The Bardo is a postmodern masterpiece." sorry for the confusion!
The moment Michonne said "We're going to be the ones that live" Rick should have measured her for a casket. TV shows and their dramatic irony are starting to get too predictable!
Aw jeez I thought he meant "oral sex with Lucille" and I was like "what?" and "ow!"
I've been trying to place where I'd seen Parminder Nagra before. Finally checked IMDb. Nope, it wasn't Bend it Like Beckham, which I've never seen, or ER, which I stopped watching long before she came on—It was one season wonder/flop Alcatraz, a show I loved and loved her in. And just as I figured it out she was…
I had like a 95% success rate! Not bad, right?
That's why the last time I listened to an audiobook was while driving across the country. It made endless miles cruising on Route 80 interesting when I could literally do nothing else, and had nothing to do but not hit other drivers.
I'm not a big audiobook listener (I think I've only listened to, like, two all the way through) but this sounds awesome enough that I'm planning to listen to the audio version before reading the print version. It seems less like "audio version of a book" than it does a postmodern radio play. Can't wait!
Yeah, as much as I love McCarthy as Spicer, her portrayal makes him seem like an awesome asskicker as opposed to an ineffectual laughingstock. How much does SNL move the needle on public perception of politicians? Did Will Ferrell's W make many people warm to him as a well-meaning buffoon rather than a convincing tool…
I see it EVERYWHERE