"my friend's daughter had sex, and you know what she did on her prom night? SHE DIED."
"my friend's daughter had sex, and you know what she did on her prom night? SHE DIED."
I always thought he cried because he thought the Atari meant his parents were cheating on each other
Can we talk about her perfect the music is in this show? Styx's "Come Sail Away" during the high school dance where Lindsay asks Eli to dance and the Grateful Dead's "Ripple" during the show's final scene come to mind. They both capture the time and are so perfectly suited to those moments in the show.
For me, the fact that Kyle Mooney does his mumbling 5 year old voice for literally every character made this one a dud from the get-go.
Yeah, that end was really ridiculous, even for this movie which had plenty of crazy before then. It felt like they ran out of places to go, and without giving too much away, did we really need a redemptive moral arc for the woman who shoved cookies up another woman's crack?
Read the lyrics to that one - it totally clicked and became my favorite song on the record when I realized what it was about. The words and instrumentals totally capture the way he described the album in interviews: "I have this image of pieces of humanity floating in space, lost forever"
I think it'll take some time to digest this album, but damn, "For the Kids" alone has already made me so glad I listened. Stunning.
I'm so terrified and excited for the final chapter
That's definitely true. I guess I was just afraid to mention that the ones I didn't like were ones people seem to love - Slacker, Dazed and Confused, and Waking Life. I think the difference is that Boyhood and the Before trilogy invest heavily in character development, whereas these ones focus more on style and the…
Linklater is a bizarre one for me in that some of his films (Boyhood, the Before trilogy) are among my very favorites, and others simply do nothing for me.
Mofongo.
Or when "dead" Taran Killam totally walks back on screen before becoming a corpse again
The thing I didn't understand going into sharknado in that the sharks are really just victims in all of this too. I had imagined like a coordinated formation of sharks attacking the city, but it turns out they're just kind of flopping around and the majority of the damage comes from their massive bodies being hurled…
All that picture does every time I come here is make me feel worse about lying here sick on the couch instead of working out…
I once got a scam phone call and proceeded to answer them in the voice of Consuela from Family Guy. "Nooooo, noooo, I have no money." They actually hung up on me and I haven't gotten a scam call since. That's how you get on the real Do Not Call list.
This makes total sense with how I've been interpreting it. I think the real point of the song is to show how people make empty statements about revitalizing the community (with upbeat names like "Hope"), but then remain judgmental and negative of it below the surface. It sounds to me like satire of the two-faced…
An artist doesn't owe an interview to anyone, especially not to explain their work. Whether you feel the song gets its point across or not, it's fully within her right to let it speak for itself.
If necessary I could be convinced to accept Kristen Wiig instead
Get your own!
If it's anything like Björk's video explaining how a TV works, I'm in.