genericsuperhero--disqus
Generic Superhero
genericsuperhero--disqus

I have an intimate knowledge of their two hits. Thanks music playlist played overhead at work!

Additionally, his ego has to be what's terrifying the GOP the most. Trump isn't going to go far enough in this thing to actually lose. He'll drop out right when he's had his fill, and that prospect has to be giving the GOP fits.

Because if anyone could win an "ANYBODY but this guy, please!" election right now, it's Hillary Clinton.

I kind of like it, but that's because I'm coming around to the return of retro elements like 70s soul to the mass pop landscape. It's an enjoyable song on a base level, but it has so many elements about it that create an annoying monster. Add in the usual obsessive airplay on pop radio (or retail/work radio, if you're

Well, yeah. I don't want to condone the whole "passively (but not really) trying to sleep with the young daughter of the woman who rejected you" item. It's fucked up on so many levels, but it also seems like the ultimate act of self-destruction by BoJack.

I feel like both of those are accurate to an extent (though your note feels more concrete than mine), and it honestly brings a ton of depth to the last sequences. It hurts to watch, but you can see rejection in absolutely everything BoJack does, no matter how vile his actions would turn out.

His relationship with Diane has kind of evolved into something else entirely, and it's shifted the sympathy. I used to find Mr. PB a tremendously annoying, seemingly fake character, and it drove all of the tension between BoJack and Diane during the first season. Strangely, this season brought me toward appreciating

I'm morbidly curious to see that happen, but I kind of want to see it played out less vulnerably. I'd like Penny to see just how terrible BoJack can be, particularly by observing the chaos around him. IF your prediction came true, I'd want no romance, and more reminders for BoJack that he's still broken.

I'm not sure about "close friend" though. What Charlotte noted was that she and BoJack didn't really know one another, and I'm starting to think that they weren't as "close" as we were led to believe. It would certainly fit with BoJack's desperation, and it honestly makes his efforts to relive a moment with Charlotte

I'm starting to see Mr. Peanutbutter as much less of an idiot than I did in Season 1, especially since he's shown a surprising amount of heart this season. I found him tremendously obnoxious in Season 1, but he's become a likeable, even sometimes-sympathetic character. He's still dumb, but he seems to honestly mean

I was getting this vibe as well. The show has built up this enormous web of events that COULD be the catalyst for BoJack becoming what he is, but this episode tears down that wall aggressively. It's still there in fragments (Episode 12 opens the possibility that some event "created" who he is with the re-mention of a

He had a chance to pull back with Charlotte (closer to a typical comedy where the hero gets rebuffed), and he clearly didn't. He had a chance to draw a line in the sand and pull back with Penny, and he clearly didn't try. I expected the fake-out or a pullback, showing BoJack is a "horrible person with a good heart" or

After that line, I don't think I could handle another Olivia Wilde appearance. It was too intense.

BoJack telling Penny to go to bed was like the moment of the collision. The sinking feeling that followed that was terrible.

Caught in a lanslide

To this day, he still holds a grudge over losing the 2001 award for "Best Mullet."

I'm really getting tired of morally judging people that entertain me.

She's a better great-grandmother than most.

Sexual endurance?

I think, if Fox wanted to truly copy the Daily Show, they'd aim to laugh at absurdity instead of taking pot shots at the Left. As a left-leaning voter, I know there's plenty of absurd goofiness on my side of the political aisle that could make good ammo, and that's why Stewart and Co. occasionally venture to that well.