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Gorfious
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I was close to hyperventilating most of this episode.

A smart bug?  Personally I find the concept offensive.

which now bears the official Krugman seal of approval

I've often thought that action heroes and horror monsters are essentially mirror images of each other (I'm sure someone else has developed this theory much better than I have).  Sounds like this movie is making it more explicit. 

Here you go:

But the difference in titles is important.  Until the very end of the episode Walt thought Jesse was a problem he could handle.  He didn't like the Old Yeller metaphor because he still saw Jesse as just a problem dog, not a rabid one.  It took a direct threat to his children to convince him otherwise.  Walt may have

All you motherfuckers who were implying for the last couple weeks that Walt was just going to casually murder Jesse can go fuck yourselves.  It's always been a real red line for the Walter to cross, and it was going to take something dramatic to make him cross that line, like a real and direct threat to his children,

Some of us managed to miss those promo shots, so thanks.

Somehow I find it even more offensive than actual "barely legal" porn.

I was just rereading some of Biastioc's greatest hits today.  I didn't realize that he was the creator of "no incest".

Tatami Galaxy pulls it off fairly well.

Oh, THAT David Mitchell.

Hot Fuzz is perfect in a way that the others could never have been.  So I'd reverse the loving it the most while believing Shaun is the better film, except that I also love Hot Fuzz the most.

The movie itself seems to think they might be.  Nick Frost ends up giving the exact same "a few people had to die for the greater good" reasoning that The Network did, but it's clear that far more actually did die than became blanks.

Based on my suburban upper middle class Mormon neighborhood, I have no sense of Mormons being behind on technology.  Growing up everyone always seemed to have the latest gadgets. That may be more a class or urban/rural divide.

oh no

That was my introduction to the wonderful, I feel fairly safe in assuming, man.  By others comments he was already somewhat known.  I'd love to see his early work, but the comments of the unregistered are hard to find.

Why did this article link to reviews for the more recent films that it mentioned, but not for her older stuff, say, The Lovely Bones?  Is it because The Lovely Bones contains one of the greatest comment sections in the history of the AVClub?

I was in my freshman year of college when it started and I'd have to agree it was the perfect age.   The ratings were so low the first year that all the commercials were in the exact same spot week after week after week, bit it was worth it.

Q: What was Walter White's advice to his infant daughter?
A: Holly tread lightly.