Yeah, if only we had coddled bigots just a little bit more, if we'd just worked the balls, they would have stopped being bigots.
Yeah, if only we had coddled bigots just a little bit more, if we'd just worked the balls, they would have stopped being bigots.
You're right that asking people to not be so overtly shitty to other people is not nearly as bad as actual neo-Nazis. Hot take, friend.
The phrase is "not for nothing." It's essentially the same as "for what it's worth." "It," presumably is worth something—or, if you will, not nothing.
"Both sides are dumb! Having a real opinion is inferior to thinking nothing and pretending to be above it all! South Park is genius!"
Right. Nothing untoward implied by black women in those particular outfits on a plantation. Nothing weird or bad ever happened consistently for centuries to black people on plantations. Nope.
Joey Ramone has a street named after him in Manhattan and a giant mural on that street.
Jam Master Jay has a street named after him in Queens.
They wrapped in November or December. The show was done months before the first episode aired. A ten episode season like this can be done (and usually is) well before it airs, unlike network stuff where there's twenty-plus episodes in a season.
What was this tryhard bullshit? There's nothing less funny than obviously trying to be funny, especially when it obscures meaning.
You need your birth certificate and Social Security card to get a license in NC.
I really liked that weird nervous breakdown. It would have been too long for anyone else, but I think Will Arnett killed it.
Tobias tips black workers because he is black. In addition to all the hints in previous seasons, there are at least three or four this season.
I saw someone being home, and I imagined it was a possibility, but I really doubted they were going there. I expected a borderline surreal interaction with Mitchell, having just read the note, or Sylvia, making the note situation more awkward before trying to get her out so she doesn't see Don show up. It seemed like…
I was gleefully enjoying Sally Draper's First B&E, and then holy shit. Mad Men's a slow burn, but it can get the heart racing when it needs to.
And you called it.
After a season or two, maybe these two guys and a girl open a pizza place.
Yeah, it's not like Mad Men would ever reference a sitcom one of their cast members plays a supporting role on.
The Don/prostitute thing was in a different episode, not this one. You might be right about it being a callback to that instead of a reference (although seriously, it would not be the first reference they've made to a sitcom featuring a Mad Men cast member in a supporting role, so I don't know why you're so insistent…
I would agree, except that it's in the episode that aired the same night as the new season of Arrested Development—in which John Slattery plays a supporting role—aired. And in the same episode, Megan's boss refers to a script from earlier in her career that she criticized because it needed to be decided whether her…
I love the number of Arrested Development references this episode (Roger—who was in the new season—referring to himself as Pop-Pop, the script Megan's boss talks about from early in her career, possibly Duck's family speech).