fleetfoxoliver--disqus
FleetFoxOliver
fleetfoxoliver--disqus

Isn't the guy from Passion Pit married to a woman?

What was really brutal was that they didn't even undercut the heartbreak of the scene before proceeding into the punchline. They played a few somber piano keys as Dinesh's face fell, followed by Gilfoyle's "You're the dogface" riff.

It'd be hard to argue that an R&B recording artist had never heard that song before… but I see your point. Admitting to it actually playing in the studio at the time of recording is as clear an admission of guilt if there ever was one.

I hope the alluded storyline of his girlfriend staying over actually plays a substantial role in the third season. He's really never given anything more to do than be the punching-bag/straight-man in scenes of conflict. All the other children have their own arcs going on.

Or just not give a fuck. Old people are probably the only ones who might witness such a horrible act and be back to their usual shenanigans the following week. Seniors are #DGAF

THANK YOU! Bugging me all day.

I knew that was The Box! As someone who just moved to New York, I only recently discovered that place at a friend's birthday party. And, yes, the RL version is a lot less tame.

He has said before that he loves House of Cards, which has a pretty cynical (and ludicrous) take on American politics.

That was my initial reaction too, but as the story continues to unfold, the "imfourteenandthisisdeep" hacker politics of the show are revealed to be more a product of the protagonist's paranoid schizophrenia and sense of self-loathing. Mostly.

As cruel as his speech was, I kind of have to agree with him. I can never really be around bulldogs because I end up feeling too sorry for them. It sounds like they are constantly drowning in their own snouts. Like, how are you alive? Someone put this creature out of its misery!

Ha! Well said.

Perfection. Funnily enough, it was that sight gag that opened the floodgates for me.

I just saw this recently and was pretty underwhelmed. Individual scenes were fantastic and the acting was top-shelf; I didn't even really have a problem with the tonal shifts. It just felt as if the plot lurched forward too quickly or, rather, descended into chaos too quickly. I remember noticing in the third act that

Another example from the same screenwriter: The Wrestler.

Yeah that's what didn't make any sense to me… Their logic falls flat if their babies are indeed born without immunity.

Anyone else think the trip was done on purpose…?

As much as I loved it, Horace & Pete should not come back.

Totally. It was always refreshing to see him play a character with actual confidence and not a pitiable punching-bag for the rest of the cast (e.g. The Office and Silicon Valley).

It's a Caribbean patois, you know, she's from Barbados…

That insult was hall-of-fame material. I think it may be my second favourite Jonah-insult after Zach Woods' a couple seasons back: