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FleetFoxOliver
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If I recall correctly, he didn't actually endorse Hillary Clinton (or anyone for that matter) until the primaries were over. Louis sent out an email telling people to simply not vote for Trump. He even went to the extent of badmouthing both Clinton and Sanders in the same email.

I honestly thought Ali Wong had the best hour of comedy last year. She's at the top of my list for most exciting comedians.

As a really big fan of The One I Love, I was looking forward to this and watched it the second it was available on Netflix. Unfortunately, I had to file this one under "Big Disappointment". The premise is interesting, but the creative team clearly didn't have an idea of how to stretch their rather thin plot over

For me, I completely lost it when he decided to make his own little contribution to the DJ set by playing his zipper.

I actually first thought she looked like a gothic, cabaret version of late-60s Bob Dylan.

I know he might come around later, but it made me sad to hear Paul-Louis act so childish during the phone call. Even though he's a bit of a stereotypical 'beach dude', his new-age attitude did have a beneficial effect on Hannah in the premiere and I had hoped it might translate to a more meaningful conversation here.

Maybe she is in America. But pretty much everyone here in the U.K. has heard of Sade.

I definitely think he's a better actor than Maron, who as much as I love had zero presence in front of the camera. Pete Holmes may be a little green at this point, but I think he's slowly improving. I actually thought he fared well with some of the more dramatic scenes in this episode.

I just came here to say that Mac Quayle's score in this episode was just terrific. With those haunting notes on the harp(?), it reminded me of a great Carter Burwell composition.

That does seem very apt. Thanks!

What was the classical song David put on the record song during his session? I love that piece but couldn't get it on Shazam.

Not incorrect, but still a little harsh. Call me old-fashioned, I don't think it's that classy to publicly badmouth a former employer unless they personally mistreated you somehow.

My brain immediately recognises her as the mum from Emma Roberts' mid-2000s Nickelodeon series Unfabulous. I was a big fan as a young teen.

It's funny how Renata's husband was introduced as the most blatantly scummiest of all the guys. Sure, he's still a bit of a tool - but his sleazy comments and constant boozing seems downright saintly compared to the creepiness of everyone else lol.

Yeah, I thought it was a brilliant choice to have him not actually damage the wall. In any other television show, he would have lost his shit and broken a mirror or hurled a mug against the wall. But Perry is a master manipulator and (presumably) quite good at covering his tracks. Of course he would make SURE not to

Enjoying the show more and more. But everyone is right in saying the talking heads and The Affair-style bookends of the police investigation really are a waste of time. Not only are the interviews clumsy and intrusive, but they make little sense from a storytelling/editing perspective. Are we supposed to assume

I can definitely relate to the period of immobility, but luckily I've never witnessed anyone crying on hallucinogens. I think that would probably freak the shit out of me.

Well, to answer your question, why not look at the real situation for young, unmarried mothers out there? The overwhelming majority of them are not wealthy but poor.

That's actually why I prefer to smoke hash almost exclusively. I find it relaxes me and I can still function like a relatively normal human being. Granted, I don't make a habit of doing it during work hours but… I've bent the rule in the past.

Well, he definitely became an immeasurably better person after meeting and falling in love with Shoshanna. Remember S1 Ray? Ew.