gonegirl--disqus
gonegirl
gonegirl--disqus

This episode had the most important lesson/moral so far, something we should always remember:

Has there already been a discussion about the problematic aspect of having apparently the entire homeless population of Chicago being dangerous, violent, and afflicted by demons?

I was genuinely convinced that the denouement was going to involve everyone getting in trouble for electioneering in a polling place (which is, yes, illegal in Missouri), then possibly avoiding punishment by bribing the election officials with danishes.

Alan Ruck really does do some excellent sadface.

I swear that Danson (in The Good Place and Bored to Death) and Steenburgen (in Last Man on Earth and Wilfred) have been doing some of their funniest work ever in the last couple of years. They're in prime "don't give a fuck" territory, and I've developed serious respect for them as a comedy power couple.

That's too bad. Their drinks were mind-blowing.

There really are some gay men who it's okay to brutally beat and leave for dead in a field in Wyoming.

Yeah, that weirded me out, too. In the comics, The Voice doesn't work that way - he can't just "magic" someone away like that, though he can make them drop dead.

I was mad when the church didn't explode in the first episode, but a sort of Needful Things-style chaos unfolding? That, I can roll with.

I lost so much respect for this show because of this episode.

I threw up at the movie theater, into my soda cup, during Drag Me to Hell.  Specifically, the part where the old gypsy woman's corpse falls on top of Alison Lohman and all of this thick, green discharge begins pouring out of the corpse's mouth and into Lohman's.

Given the other huge problems the show has, this is maybe totally irrational - but I'm increasingly enraged by the fact that the students on the show do not appear to attend class regularly, do homework, or study for tests.  I have a deep desire for this season to end with the reveal that none of them can actually