I don't believe for one second that Catherine would be let anywhere near her mother in the White House with a camera in hand. I know it's a comedy, but this one really really strains credulity.
I don't believe for one second that Catherine would be let anywhere near her mother in the White House with a camera in hand. I know it's a comedy, but this one really really strains credulity.
What really irked me about Jack's philosophy was that he placed such an emphasis on making returns only after increasing their company expenses and blowing a shitload of cash on a luxury office. It's the same kind of backwards logic as hiring the best sales team only to give them the easiest stuff to sell.
Damn, this episode was almost too painful to watch for two reasons:
Apparently he's a smoker, which isn't a character flaw at all. As a matter of fact, it only makes it more impressive that he's been able to age so flawlessly.
I try not to judge too harshly people who buy or sell sex. If it's between consenting adults, what's the problem? But, yeah, that dude is defo gross.
I think he might have "fallen in love" (i.e. become infatuated) with her early on and decided having her on tape in those compromised positions could always come in handy for leverage.
All jokes aside, I wouldn't be surprised if he saw a distinction between the filth on Two & A Half Men and Horace & Pete. I don't think it was the cursing he had a problem with, more the substance of the show e.g. the rampant misogyny in Lorre's show. He even said it was the "hypocrisy" of it all that he despised.…
Steakflower! Jesus Christ, thank you so much for that.
And the James Marsden character she marries…
I died at Amy Sedaris' frantic line-reading of "Maybe he'll have a weird brother for me?!?!" while she patted her chin.
Aw happy to help! I personally think the third season was peak Breaking Bad (or maybe the fourth?) but to each their own :)
Of course, it's early to be making these sort of comparisons… but I think that BCS is definitely a more consistent show, while Breaking Bad has better highs and worse lows. Vince Gilligan's "let's follow the Ouija board" style of storytelling led to some of the most ingenious plot twists but also resulted in some of…
I think he heard them using the power tool that unscrews tires when he was spying on Hector last episode. In the very least, that sound effect could be heard for the audience.
I don't think it was a case of giving priority to either Looking or Togetherness. It's clear that HBO's policy is to give these low-key shows two seasons to find their footing before deciding whether or not to pull the plug. Last year, Looking had finished its second season while Togetherness was still on its first.
That last scene was unnecessary, proposterous, stagey, on-the-nose and far and away the most entertaining this show has ever been. The writers would do well to do away with any pretences in the future and fully embrace the cheesy melodrama. I just want to see Paul Giamatti chew the scenery like there's an Emmy in the…
Came on here just to mention the music. Never thought I'd live to see the day when Titus Andronicus played on a high-profile TV Drama.
"Same reason people like to watch…"
*om nom nom*
"… to watch Lions at the zoo…"
*om nom nom*
"…it's because they, um, they—OH FOR GODSSAKE CAN YOU STOP EATING THE PIZZA?!
I remember first hearing that in 25th Hour (great movie, by the by).
This was one of my least favourite episodes of the season, but it still had some pretty good moments. But the road-head scene, just like Hannah's indecent exposure last week, didn't really sit well with me. They're playing these scenes like awkward social comedy, when really it's just borderline sexual harassment.
Well he did book that big pharmaceutical commercial. Maybe he's perfecting his craft for future auditions?