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MrJackHoliday
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I prefer the alternative title, Friends Don't Let Friends Become DJs, courtesy of the Tolerability Index.

Finally, a Flintstones car!

I suppose "Great Job, Internet!" can be used both sincerely and ironically.

I found Double Indemnity to be dated and outlandish to the point of being campy.

Everyone knows inductive reasoning is just liberal propaganda.

By that logic, are the Washington Redskins also pro-Indian?

I was expecting Rocko's Modern Life for R, but not even runner-up?

The Money was a brilliant exercise in the potential of TAWOG. The meta approach to existence and advertising was spot on.

Looking back over his early filmography, it gets harder and harder to imagine that his juvenile shtick was ever popular at all.

While the narrative arc of Mad Men might have drifted in the middle of the run, it allowed the characters to explore and interact in a way that developed the characters organically. This last season, and particularly the last few episodes, did a great job of forcing the characters to confront their existential

Does no one else feel like these last two episodes have some dark undertones lurking in them, particularly for Jeff? Last episode he berated Abed until hitting him, then this episode opens with him drinking in class, followed by a suggestion of codependency, concluding with giving a toast in the most arrogant way

That should absolutely be the tagline for the movie.

I found this episode particularly weak. The sketches weren't particularly memorable, but more so was that the ride share commercials made it feel like it was predominantly an extended Subaru commercial.

Good point. The show isn't about character development and story arcs, it's about bro hijinx. And that's okay.

Bernie was superb, and Jack Black's acting was spot on.

I only just got the Detlef reference after re-viewing the episode and having seen the Parks and Rec episode.

"So if you'll excuse me, I'll let you get on wit ya meetin."

"What I really like is, no matter what you order, they give you a side of spaghetti. Even if you order spaghetti!"

I could have sworn that Roger was contemplating joining that commune. Anyone else get that vibe?

I completely agree that Parks and Rec has not become as bad as The Office got. Even though the two shows cover similar territory (weddings, pregnancy, new jobs, etc.), the last few minutes indicated that the writers have a much better sense of the direction of the show than The Office did with all that Sabre crap, and