I legitimately thought this was the best episode of the season, and it wasn’t close.
I legitimately thought this was the best episode of the season, and it wasn’t close.
This was a very C/C- episode. With all of the sketches you figured out the premise within 30 seconds, there were no unexpected twists for laughs, and then performed adequately until the sketch concluded.
My favorite unintentional laugh of the night was in the Stu/Stan parody song, when Pete went “Ladies and gentlemen, Elton John!”, a couple people in the audience let out an audible gasp in excitement thinking that Elton was about to cameo in a sketch for the first time...but nope, just Bowen Yang in a wig.
Sure...it was that, and not the fact that Topher was offered a role in Spider-Man 3 that was gonna shoot at the same time.
The title of this article sounds like a Jeopardy! clue.
That depends. As someone who’s been watching since day 1 I’ve found Season 4 and 5 to be the weakest from a narrative standpoint. Nate’s character devolves into WTF territory, the character of Gabriel is not at all interesting or compelling, even after it’s revealed how he ties into the main storyline.
Degrassi TNG: “Time Stands Still 1 &2”, and “Back in Black” from Season 4.
And I personally hope we never do, unless it’s the series finale or something. There’s no way that we’d be able to see the “real” Good Place in a way that wouldn’t be unsatisfying to the audience. The show has been smart to avoid it altogether.
Yup. iZombie was a quaint, enjoyable little show for 3 seasons, and then in the season 3 finale they went for a large “reset” button on the show’s scope and it quickly became more than the show could handle.
EVERYTHING about the cure storylines in this show have always been the weakest part of the writing. They only exist for very specific plot purposes and are then done away with.
Kimmel’s clip gently ribbing her about her accent was the definition of harmless, which he used to segue into a joke about Guillermo. You could argue the joke could be considered poor taste by some people, but so what? These late night comedians have to come up with topical jokes on a daily basis, and some will be…
Completely agree. Dennis always seems to focus WAY more on the “social justice” aspects of the episode each week, as opposed to the writing and, you know, whether it was actually funny.