jmyoung666
jmyoung666
jmyoung666

I enjoy every artist you listed more than that New Radicals song (I have not heard anything else off that album, so cannot judge the band fully). That song grates. I enjoy a number of songs by Beck, Manson, and Love/Hole. Hanson not so much, but mmm-Bop is much more tolerable than "You Get What You Give"

I completely agree. This song annoys me on every level.

I believe it was an earlier episode featuring the Question, but one of my all time favorite lines from the series is "Just as I thought, 32 flavors."

That F'ing New Radicals song makes me want to commit violence every time I hear it.

Did they include the Tapeworm?!?

Yeah, I actually saw it when I watched the finale. Had not noticed earlier. However, that was not my question. I am 44, so granted, I was not working in an office in '82, but I really didn't think automated mail carts were in use until at least the late '80s

If a mail robot is what I think it is - an automated vehicle traveling slowly in a pattern around the office while beeping a warning - did they actually have those in 1982? If not, what was martha referring to?

I have to say that I love Louie and think its fantastic but there have been many episodes in prior seasons that weren't particularly funny and it was amazing. They are often surreal or just plain weird and occasionally dramatic.

Wasn't she reading "Sax" and the Single Girl? I thought that was the joke.

This is not saying men shouldn't address these issues, just that they are listened to more often than non-white-hetero-male perspectives.

I also think you need to read the article more carefully and stop being so sensitive. Nothing in this article suggested that white men should not be making these statements. She was lamenting the fact that they are the only ones being listened to.

Heavy men do not have the same problems heavy women do.

Holy shit. I have yet to watch this episode, but I had no idea that was her during the 4th season (I only know her from Arrow).

There was one episode last season where he totally lost it and there were also other smaller moments that suggested deep-seated paranoia.

Those are all dismissable because there are no credible claims or evidence of any actual wrong-doing.

None of those are stories, they are the most obvious examples of FOX BS.

I believe you are referencing the idea that half the population is conservative, which is debateable, but beside the point I want to make. A very small portion of the TV audience watches cable news. Fox is king of a very small mountain.

I would actually put Seinfeld ahead of all of those.

NBC dicked Newsradio around at the time by constantly changing its time slot, but for sheer laughs per half hour, Newsradio is my all time favorite non-simpsons sitcom.

Newsradio > Seinfeld.