georgeprax--disqus
George Prax
georgeprax--disqus

I'm willing to accept Saul not recognizing the coincidence of meeting the agent at the airport. He's been out of the game for a while and he's been chomping at the bit to get back in it. Seeing him there probably got him excited to be able to do spy shit again. It does strain credulity a little but like you said he

I actually liked this episode a fair bit. Great bounce back after a mostly disappointing season. I mean, you know this show is going to make shit and boner jokes, at least they were good ones here.

I'm usually a League apologist, but yeah, this was pretty bad. I feel like it's more of a misstep then a sign of the show's direction. They just need to stick with a story arc and get Ruxin back really. When they were following Kevin's dick problems this season hasn't been so bad.

Oh god. I had just gotten roadkill burritos out of my memory too. Thanks for that.

"Winston, how do you not know if you've made love to someone?"

Is that really that big of a deal? It was plot setup in the cold open.

Serious question, if you already hate Gotham so much, why do you waste your time watching it and then popping into reviews of it right after it airs to shit all over it?

I think they're going for the Burton balance between dark and fun but they still have a while until they figure it out. That's okay though, I'm on board with what they're going for and am willing to give it an extended shot.

And a man isn't supposed to be able to drop from hundreds of feet without any significant damage. Labeling him as a superhero right after admitting he doesn't have special powers doesn't change the laws of physics either.

SHIELD has been good since like April. Where have you been?

Because it wasn't premeditated?

I know it's been cool to hate on the Simpsons for like 16 years now, and that Marge subplot left little to be desired, but that was maybe the best Bart and Homer have been in years. The review seems to go great lengths to try and undercut that despite seemingly complimenting it heavily. Best simpsons episode since

I know people are going to brush it off, Sonia already did in the review, but postpartum depression is a real thing and you couldn't really put it past Carrie, who's manic, to be able to do something like that. She spends the entirety of both episodes running away from her responsibilities. It isn't just about getting

Rayford Steele and Buck Williams? What a waste of great movie names.

No it isn't.

I have to say I didn't feel this episode as much as I did the first few of the seasons. Lots of good parts but it didn't come together for me. That being said, that may be the best ejaculate joke I've ever heard on network television.

He's been in two scenes. Give it time.

Definitely. It's still incredibly early in the show's existence. It's world building, finding its groove, setting up characters and their motivations. Even if tonally it's having problems it's still interesting to see all these characters in a different light and I think the show is doing a good job of setting the

I'm quite aware of Harry's Law's situation, that's the entire reason I brought it up. My point is that the idea that no one other than 18-49 viewers mattering because that's what the advertisers purportedly want is an antiquated notion and one the networks are starting to leave behind. And not just for PR. These

I'm not disagreeing with you that if it falls under a 1.0 it's a goner. But you're assuming that as an inevitability where evidence suggests it will probably stabilize fairly quick. Most of NBC's procedurals find their audiences early and keep them. It won't fall under a 1.0 with those kinds of ratings at Wednesday