exhan
exhan
exhan

These are not people, these are characters. We are not doctors. There are real people out there with Borderline Personality Disorder. And the idea that there are people who watch something on TV and quickly assess someone as having a psychiatric disorder, is very bothersome to me. We shouldn't fucking look at people

Best ACTRESS in a COMEDY, not best COMEDY in an ACTRESS.

My 18 year old cousin who's still in high school referred to this episode as "dirty". A lot of the people I know who watch it, think of it more like Sex and the City, or Entourage, given it's a similar vein and it's on HBO. This episode will throw those people through a loop.

I can't picture Tina Fey or Amy Poehler being able to handle Hannah's role on Girls. It's too open. Given that both Tina and Lena are playing dramatized versions of themselves on their shows, in terms of purely acting, are you saying Tina is a better actress? Because I don't think she has the material to support it.

An almost ironic, and timely username, given Charlie's actions in this episode.

If you make a life out of correcting people's film illiteracy when it comes to terminology, you're going to have a tough life. People say "zoom" a lot for things that are most certainly not zooms.

In that context though, she's the CEO's ex-girlfriend and she came to his party and gave a performance. A cover of well-documented egomaniac Kanye West's Stronger. She was serenading him in front of everyone, at this informal business gathering. Allison Williams can sing, yeah, but it was totally inappropriate.

Yes, let's apply buzz word psychiatric assessments to our favorite TV characters now.

It felt as if my skull was cut open and a neurosurgeon was poking different sections of my brain with a scalpel. There was a real range of emotions I felt from this episode, and that's saying a lot, because I barely felt anything for the first season of this show. This was definitely one of the best episodes of

I don't think I can express in words how good the last two episodes of this show have been. To me they have been Mad Men-level good. They've given me stuff to think about the way an episode of The Wire has my mental juices flowing after an episode. They're actually starting to fucking say something with this show,

Nope. Lil Wayne's albums are Tha Carter, Tha Carter II, Tha Carter III.

I mean, for anyone who's seen the documentary The Carter, you'd know that Lil Wayne is almost always high off of cough syrup, and doesn't write down any of his lyrics. That's not me condoning  this, it's me saying he probably had only a cursory knowledge of who Emmett Till was, and rapped about it stupidly.

Louie had their Parker Posey episode. This is Girls' Patrick Wilson episode. I want more stuff like this, this was far and above the best episode of the series to date. It felt more mature, it had more weight, it felt like the show was trying to say something for once. 

Because Jemima Kirke already has her accent, I think that's part of his character's attraction to her.

It's not as if he's some classically trained actor, he's Irish and has a hard time masking it.

I didn't notice it in the article, and can't comb through all of the comments. But Thomas John referred to Hannah twice as "Dannah", and neither Hannah or Jessa corrected him or called attention to it. I just found that to be amusing and very telling of Hannah in a way. I went so far as to rewatch the episode to make

Jay Pharoah was in the Starbucks sketch at the beginning, as the voice of the machine. Nasim only had a line or two, while Jay was the star of that sketch, albeit in voice-only.

No, because Sudeikis is leaving, as well as Hader and Armisen shortly enough. If you put Killam in Weekend Update, you're really short on talent for sketches.

Nasim Pedrad is hilarious and once again underused, she was in one sketch, if I remember correctly. While Cecily Strong and Aidy Bryant are shoe-horned into everything.

Aidy Bryant is good in the Girlfriends sketch, it's Cecily Strong who really phones it in.