guelph--disqus
Guelph
guelph--disqus

As Martin put it, "I don't know why people are so excited for the Winds of Winter. It's only going to make people cry."

I think by the time they do reconnect, they'll both be so different they'll be essentially strangers to each other.

My guess for the books: Either Arya and Sansa team up, having each learned from the masters in their respective crafts, or Arya kills Sansa because she thinks Sansa betrayed the family.

The "I, Frankenstein" version, then.

Gee. I wonder who… owns that moon?
(turns away in shame)

Foley's delivery of "A beeeer" in reply is fantastic.

Bill Donohue of the Catholic League?

I'll put it out there: Ellie Kemper as Squirrel Girl.

I still want them to work the line "I am Kal-El, son of Krypton, defender of Planet Earth. State your business" into a Superman movie.

Going off the ending of DKSA, I'm betting "the master race" refers to Kryptonians trying to take over Earth. But, yes, what you and Skippy said. It's shockingly tone deaf.

I've been calling him Evil Chris Hayes.

My guess was that he was a carrier of a super-virus or something, but the metahuman angle probably makes more sense in this universe.

I have VHS tapes of it sitting around, but I think I only started watching because Bob & David showed up on Dennis Miller Live to plug it and were hilarious.

That doesn't surprise me. Everything about it screams failed pilot: the episodic structure, the final reveal that's also a cliffhanger, the unresolved romantic subplot, everything. It's not actually that bad an idea for a show, though I doubt it would cover much territory that Sliders didn't already, and its bargain

This. If they cut out the yelling part of those jokes, they'd work far better. I'm baffled as to why he does this. Normally I'd say it's to fill time, but he had to extend the last episode to 45 minutes to fit in the Snowden interview and frequently mentions how they have more information than they have time for in

If you hadn't posted that, I would have. My favorite part is Oliver breaking up when Wilmore asks, "Do you understand how rap works, Councilman?"

That actually came out in theaters? I thought it went straight to Netflix.

I'm still waiting for someone to savage Parallels, which I get the feeling was shopped as a pilot and then sold to Netflix as a DTV when no networks bit.

It's no wire rack, but it'll do.

Partly because much of it is already quoting other movies.