eshuster--disqus
Eshuster
eshuster--disqus

Well, one major thing that got me about that movie was Georgie decided to show us that it wasn't any fun being a Jedi. After years of imagining how cool a "real" Jedi would be. "So, the Jedi actually live like a bunch of monks, and you're not allowed to get any girls, and they take you away from your parents." Fun.

And still the worst Batman was yet to come…

Even if the live action film's attempt to recreate "Who" faces on its characters wasn't horrifying to behold, the complete upending of the original premise would still be there. The Whos don't know the true meaning of Christmas either? I'm not always completely against an adaptation of something adding more story to

Sure, you can have cartoons for all ages, but that may not be Disney's premise here. They may be more interested in new viewers than those watching for nostalgia's sake. But of course none of us have seen it yet so what do know? :)

I think some people are missing the point of "the world is too PC and wouldn't allow this show" argument. In that show, Archie was often spouting things that someone would find offensive, up to and including using terms like "spic" or on a couple of rare occasions, the dreaded N word. It also had Archie expressing

The interesting thing about the show was that while Archie himself wasn't seen as the devil or a terrible person, he just had ridiculous old school ideas about race and society. The show made fun of racism and racists — and to some extent lots of other conservative ideas — and poked fun at what I'm sure some of the

Archie was also perfectly willing to be friends with other races, he just had backwards ideas about them and would be against something like interracial marriage, etc.

There's also that slight possibility that it's meant for kids, and we don't have to like it.

Yep. It sure was.

Also, without doing the math, some of these folks may have been fans of the original show when they were kids.

Why doesn't anyone know what a mullet is anymore? The new MacGyver simply has long hair, dammit!

I'm pretty sure La La Land is not a movie that I would enjoy, but those are two extremely charming and attractive leads.

I keep hearing great things about The People vs. O.J. Simpson, but having lived through that whole thing, I simply have no interest in watching a show all about it, no matter how good it may be. I desperately wanted the actual trial to end back then.

"…the pouty, angry-toddler scowl of Gerard Butler"

I will never not be amused by the title "Giant-Size Man-Thing."

It's a hard word.

To boil it down, TGS on 30 Rock is shown to be a terrible show. While Studio 60's show was supposed to be not only a popular show but an "important" comedy show.

I don't get Pete Davidson. He's somewhat funny when he shows up to do stand up style comedy on Weekend Update, but in sketches he looks like some college kid who won a contest to be in a SNL sketch. Jimmy Fallon may have been the king of "breaking" during a sketch, but Davidson seems to constantly be wondering how he

Since I saw those early theories, I also wasn't surprised by the William reveal obviously, but I really don't know if I would have figured it out. And if a show gives you a mystery and the means to possibly unravel it, is that necessarily bad writing? A shocking mystery with absolutely no way of predicting it is

Maybe he inevitably comes to believe Logan and decides he really was just fooled by her. Or maybe he never sees her again and decides he was imagining it over the years. Then he sees sentience really is possible after all and decides to go find Delores and gives her another chance at it.