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ExtremelyBitter
extremelybitter--disqus

Debut single a cover of "Say My Name" as made famous by Destiny's Child?

Is it allowed to not be Goosebumps? Because my favorite RL Stine is the 999 Fear Street miniseries; in one book a kid and I think a dog disappear from the house and can occasionally be heard pleading for rescue but nobody can ever locate them. Then I think in a later book their skeletons are found in the walls of the

Them pushing the romance angle so hard from the start has to be the show's biggest problem—alien teenager civil rights struggles actually sounds like it could be interesting, but advertising the show as Alien Romeo plus Earthling Juliet just murders my interest dead.

I figured that day was a microcosm of Marnie's relationship with Hannah. She starts off envisioning this sisterhood weekend of healing with Hannah and Jessa and Shoshanna, and (it seemed like) invited them all to this healing weekend so they could change for the better. Hannah doesn't like this, so Marnie then

What made me most sympathetic to Marnie is that it did seem like she tried to lighten up a little during the day—she seemed to be having fun and enjoying the guys' presence, and didn't spend the entire day pouting. Hannah was pretty antagonistic from the word go, and essentially refused to do anything she didn't want

"I never loved you," was the part where I crossed over from thinking the writers were shitting on the character due to Abbot to wondering if Marnie was embellishing the story for dramatic effect.

To be a little more verbose: Shosh as catalyst really worked for me, because she'd always been a little stapled on to the group dynamic anyway. She's been irrelevant most of this season as she retreated into her college life, so it worked for me that sitting on the couch, listening to Hannah's bullshit and comparing

Drunk Shoshanna is the best character on the show.

The Comeback took a bit to grow on me, but I remember being surprised by how great it was by the end, how much I genuinely liked Val, and then getting mad it didn't get a second season. It's probably one of the few sitcoms to take full advantage of the fake reality TV documentary format, actually using it to say

Reign is the best kind of insane and totally deserves this.

I will start watching this show again if they do a Brooklyn 99 crossover.

I'm hoping for intentionally infuriating, but with this show I never can tell. This could be how Hannah turns a corner and realizes that long-term day jobs aren't just for the non-creatives, and that sometimes you have to pay the bills while pursuing your passion. It could be the story of how Hannah finds inspiration

So is Hannah outclassed, legit writer-wise, by her coworkers? I don't know enough to know if their past accomplishments are more, less, or about equally impressive as what Hannah's racked up.

I just realized: Did the show never directly explain what happened to the Pagan Baby? Are we meant to assume the mark had totally faded? The timeline on the episode seemed too short for that, or maybe more time had passed than I think. Are we going to find out Mary and Bash swapped babies… Somehow… And now a random

I dunno. Reign is awesome, this show is awesome, they should share fans of Things That Are Awesome.

Oh my god this show. I outright cackled at multiple points in the episode. If they could somehow conspire to stay at or near this level going forward, this show could be legendary.

Watching Community is a weirder experience now; I fell out of love with the show in season three, was intrigued by the potential for new show runners to yank the show out of its smug self-centered bubble and closer to where it started, disappointed when that didn't happen, then couldn't drop the show after season four

My money's on Dave Sanderson.

I've fallen a few seasons behind, so I still have a lot to watch, but it's sad to know that Shawn and Gus won't be regularly hanging out on TV anymore.

"Bakula will assume the central role of Special Agent Pride, a man “who embodies New Orleans”"