Not only did Kim not ask Jimmy to help her with this, she specifically asked him not to involve himself. And now she's got to help him deal with the fallout from is con job against Chuck or her career goes up in smoke.
Not only did Kim not ask Jimmy to help her with this, she specifically asked him not to involve himself. And now she's got to help him deal with the fallout from is con job against Chuck or her career goes up in smoke.
Don't question the Orb!
She's in witness protection. Shhh!
Though there's still a formula — TV commercial for Totino's transforms into a different genre entirely — there's enough variety and a sense of escalation in *which* genre takes over the ad. And they made some smart choices that lent the sketch a strong satirical, and dare one say, feminist edge.
I feel like most modern comedies are really loosely scripted, and they keep grinding to a halt so everyone can do a bit that's just occurred to them. It means the characters are less important than the actors, and the comic personae are pretty ill-defined or just plain inconsistent most of the time.
He plays hapless, socially inept types really well — it's the common thread linking his "virginal boyfriend of Leslie Jones" and "incompetent stand-up comedian on Weekend Update" bits — but I haven't seen him do much beyond that,. (He did seem to play an effective dudebro in a couple sketches, especially that weird…
Sasheer Zamata hasn't really gotten to do much besides play the straight woman, so maybe this will open up some opportunities for her. Leslie Jones is good in one sketch a week if it's built around her shtick, but they're trying to make her a new Eddie Murphy and it isn't working..
My NBC keycard doesn't work anymore. it got lost in a butt.
When was the last time they did that one? I don't think we've seen it since James Franco hosted.
Yeah; she had good characters, but she was also clearly "the glue" in a lot of sketches.
Clinton may not be the solution to the problem, but she also wasn't going to make all the problems worse and then invent some new ones, and then set it all on fire.
*Phil Ken Sebben* Innuendo! Ha ha ha! */Sebben*
That's what happens when you expose yourself to this level of scrutiny.
These threads never get a rise out of me.
I had a crazy idea once that we should vote for House, Senate, and Presidency, not for candidates, but for a list of positions: for each candidate, you'd get an anonymized list of positions, in columns, and you'd check them off.
It's another BB tie-in; we'll soon discover that she's the fence for Marie's shoplifted goods.
It was implied that she was hearing the paperboy hit doors down the street with newspapers, but her PTSD made her identify the noise as gunshots.
Though back in Season 1, the police did find bloodstains in his "kidnap th Kettlemans" van.
Plus, doesn't Chuck control a huge chunk of the firm financially? If Chuck just quits, Howard's out $17 million.
It was a little rushed, but I thought it made sense from a character perspective. Rebecca sees Jimmy's actions in a very negative light because she feels (rightly) used by him, and from Jimmy's end I think Chuck's refusal to let his obviously loving ex back in proves that Chuck is still an arrogant SOB, unchanged at…