Oh jesus, yes, both the banner AND the T-shirt in Diane's birthday episode. "I had a ball at Diane's birthday underline ball why is this so hard."
Oh jesus, yes, both the banner AND the T-shirt in Diane's birthday episode. "I had a ball at Diane's birthday underline ball why is this so hard."
My sister and I correctly solved the mystery—took us 3 days and 2 viewings, but, as noted by @Mr. Banana Grabber, the town hall shot is a dead giveaway when Maggie is clearly the only ones with the guts to stop him. There's also the reverse-logic of the fact that every other single person in town would've been strong…
Quantum Leap.
Steven King's "The Shining" and "Pet Sematary" are two of the best horror novels ever (and The Shining is actually one of the best novels of the past 35 years), his "On Writing" is one of the best non-fiction books about writing—on a very short list with Bird by Bird, "The Empire Strikes Back" is one of the best…
THERE ARE NOT ENOUGH LIKES IN THE WORLD FOR THIS COMMENT.
But the best multi-cams (and Mom's one of them, I have a good friend who works on it & have attended a taping) will use that second take to swap in better punchlines for ones that flopped. That's why the audience is there in the first place, for honest multi-cams—to see if the jokes the writers thought were funny are…
Definite yeses to Ragtime, and the below-mentioned In the Heights, Urinetown (which would probably have to be a Showtime movie), and Sunday in the Park with George.
Parade would be cinematic as fuck, but Jesus Christ is that a dark ending. Unlike, say, "In the Heights" or "Ragtime," that one would never make its money back. Maybe on HBO?
Sweet Dee: Shaping America's Youth from season 6 (the 2nd half of which is essentially Lethal Weapon 5) is one of the funniest things I've ever seen. I know there are more Sunny-esque eps out there, but nothing—except two recent Rick & Morty eps—has made me laugh as hard as that.
The article in question Josh FAILED TO LINK TO, in case you just spent 30 minutes driving yourself nuts trying to find it, is here:
This is the orange juice commercial in question, for those racking their brains:
She also guest-stars on the comedy/horror podcast "Welcome to Night Vale" as The Faceless Old Woman Who Secretly Lives in Your Basement.
I've seen all 26 episodes of Cowboy Bebop and there's almost no resemblance between those two shows—there are only 4 crewmembers on the Cowboy Bebop ship, one of whom is an annoyingly cheerful ten-year-old. The only adult female was frozen in an induced coma for 50 years. There's no Alliance in CB, no Reavers, no…
I'm not a Bret Easton Ellis fan, but "Lunar Park" had a wonderful sadness and mystery at its core, and wasn't exploitative or super-violent like a lot of his other stuff.
Out of curiosity, I just checked imdb: Werner Herzog has only been nominated for one Oscar—for Best Documentary for Encounters at the End of the World. (The film lost to Man on Wire, which is also a damn fine documentary.) But seriously? Come on, Academy, Werner Herzog Needs to Win (an Oscar). Get on that.
Rick & Morty: "Summer, where are my testicles?"
I've got a lot of patience, and have seen a lot of very good TV. My take, after seeing "True Detective's" first ep: "Oh. It's like 'Hannibal,' except boring."
Well, Key and Peele are recognizeable *now*… (they play the gangsters!)
I first heard "Smells Like Nirvana" at age 12. I am currently 34. Up until I watched the video with subtitles last night, I thought he'd been saying "with all these BUBBLES in my mouth."
Oh, man, this is such an insane review to read if you've only recently gotten into Adventure Time and are on season 1, ep 21 (just watched the ep with the Jerk and the WhyWolves). Can't believe Netflix only has the first two seasons. Must… find… way… to get… seasons… 3 thru 5…