jayaniakor--disqus
Jay Aniakor
jayaniakor--disqus

One of the greatest line deliveries in a sea of amazing line deliveries.

Although to be fair, that was Titus' hallucination of her. In real (fake) life, she was a sweetheart to him, albeit a very strange one. But that hallucination was beyond hilarious.

Based on who Maya Rudolph's mother is, I'm almost certain she must have met/knows Warwick in real life. Which makes this characterization all the funnier.

Every line delivery she gave was absolutely phenomenal. She was having her own incredible journey and we were just along for the ride.

"And I've done EpiPens on BOTH of them."

When acting teachers/coaches speak to their students about COMMITMENT, they should simply play this episode. Haha.

Which was a nice callback from an earlier episode when he was asked about whether he had ever been on speakerphone for a conference call and replied, "Sir, you should be able to tell I have not." Haha

As a Jersey kid born and raised—I too yawn at lazy Jersey jokes. But these were GOOD. And this show has a good track record of them. Jacqueline's "If I can see New Jersey, that means IT can see ME!" had me rolling.

I could watch Maya Rudolph/Dionne Warwick eat wet baby corns all day. That was fantastic.

Outside of certain animated shows (Adventure Time, Bob's Burgers, American Dad, Archer, etc.), UKS has the highest repeat watchability factor for me. It is just so dense with jokes/material that you hear something new every time.

Every single moment of that audition video was GOLDEN. I could not stop laughing. If I were the casting directors, I would have hired him on the spot. Maybe not for that commercial, but definitely for something. Haha.

That is definitely not what it means in today's younger/Millennial context.

I might believe this were it not for Fey's real life attitudes.

I just don't feel as if they were in any way connected to what they were trying to satirize (hence the completely confounding "ghosting" jokes). It was the stereotypical "get off my lawn" perspective told in 30 minutes of absurdity.

My point was that you don't have to be Malala to have experienced life and have something to say about it.

Having something to say and being willing to listen and learn are not mutually exclusive. I think the brightest people usually do both.

Your ideas here aren't mutually exclusive.

It was definitely mocking modern feminism, hence the "7th wave feminism" dig. I'm sure it was done with empathy, but I'm also pretty sure it was done with a condescending, "kids don't know any better" vibe as well.

I'm pretty sure feminism is a human rights' issue.

Why not both?