Enough to leave incredulous comments on big internet sites, you mean?
Enough to leave incredulous comments on big internet sites, you mean?
There's some appalling garbage in "Delirious", and if I'd had sites like this when I first heard it, I'd have said so then.
Ah, so there was some intent other than to call women whores? It was operating on too high a comedy frequency for me, clearly.
Were some of them even jokes?
Is there a straw shortage in your local area after those multiple men you made?
"Hey, I don't really want to talk about music".
Better Off Ted was okay until you realised you were cheering on the evil corporation, that just continued to get eviler.
I'd probably have to be paid to have lunch with that shrill, not-funny-for-30-years asshole. I've been to funnier dogfights than I have his appearance(s) on TV recently.
I'm shocked that [ ] made a tedious "I'm shocked that [ ] wasn't mentioned." joke!
But that's a poor argument, I'm afraid - you're saying all art is perfect to its audience, and if we're not part of that audience, however constituted, we should shut up. It's an argument against any and all criticism.
Oh and also, the high budget of this show will drop from episode 2, when it moves to Vancouver.
I don't think the "let's see how this started" brigade is close to being as big or as vocal as your argument seems to need. Also, the parent show of this doesn't get anything like the criticism you suggest either.
The point of this show is to be boring? Cool, I'll pass.
It would be difficult to guffaw at a Kinison or Hicks album thirty years after they were recorded, as it's not been thirty years since they were recorded yet (okay, we've only got a year to wait for "Louder Than Hell").
Absolute garbage, I'm afraid. Open-ended series, like "Lost", did enough to turn audiences off with their tiresome mysteries that were stretched, and stretched, and stretched. The anthology series, which allows people to tell a story with a beginning, middle and end, is popular because it's a good idea.
Holy crap, really? Steely Dan is an amazing band. And I'm sort of the wrong age to like them (born in 1976, when they were still making their best music, and head full of grunge when they did their reformation).
And Living In A Box's "Living In A Box" from the album "Living In A Box".
The scumbag didn't even really design them - just gave a very vague outline to an artist. So my Whovian mate tells me.
Completely agree. "Hunted" was a great show, but it seems there was some behind the scenes problem somewhere.
Noted pop culture website blows once-amusing comedian, again