johnnyunusual--disqus
Johnny Unusual
johnnyunusual--disqus

Great season penultimate episode. Hasn't been a weak episode in the bunch.

His Girl Friday is a great choice for Mike. It is about a lying conniving newspaperman who is trying to get someone romantically and professionally to come with him and he doesn't care who's life he has to ruin to do it. Sound familiar? Though Jimmy definitely treats Kim with way more respect and thought than Cary

Man, Bret Easton Ellis' Debbie Downer reimagining takes it in a very different direction.

So the stupid twist is that the crazy woman is the guy's daughter, right? That's not even in question, is it?

My university self will miss you, ultra bright orange. It made you easier to find if I dropped you on the kitchen floor.

I for one like this crazed greaser in a dress statue. Is it a reference to a David Lynch movie or…

Then do I have a Black Mirror episode for you…

Kurt Vonnegut Jr. once said " 'We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be.' Unfortunately, this works 2 more ways: 1. This also means if you "pretend" to be a good person, you might become one. 2. You also might become what other people say you are. It can be hard to sight

Yeah, out of all of the opens, that image seems the most perfect so far.

Wait, is Saul going to be a robot clone of Jimmy? Make it happen, Vince!

Got to say, he probably made the right call though.

Interesting take, but I feel that if it is the case, it is a subconscious decision (or one he would deny to himself) and that he believes it is because his brother could never be a good lawyer. The irony here is that for all of Chuck's pride as an honest and just man, he had sold his soul a long time ago and he never

I'd say the offer is relative generous, considering that Jimmy doesn't have a lot of cache beyond his brother. And I think his Chuck wanted to give Jimmy a fair deal. He may be a backstabber and have depressingly little respect for his brother but he still loves him. Which is why his plot is so sickening.

I agree, but that said, considering how badly he treats Kim during the whole Kettleman debacle is telling. That said, I love that we rarely see how much of Jimmy's views of the man are accurate or inaccurate. Man's something of an enigma.

That was such a great ending for the last episode. Things did not go the way I expected based on the last episode and I love the fact that the series is so good at being intentionally ambiguous about how much Jimmy's view of Hamlin matches the reality. Here, this episode implies a lot more sympathy for him, though he

My favourite thing about the "Do you think this was really filmed in Atlanta" gag is as soon as a very annoyed and tired Bart says "I don't know. I don't think it matters." Chalmers, completely oblivious just answers with a small "yeah." I cannot explain why that is so funny to me

I'd argue Edna, actually. I think for all of the shows later season flaws, she was largely kept out of the role of caricature that, say, Ned Flanders was often put into.

Thank you SO much for returning to this show. Adventure Time might be the best kids show on TV, but this show has been solid week in/week out and is sort of the perfect counterpoint as while it also has a rich cast, it has a much narrower focus, in the best possible way, keeping things generally at Steven's eye level

Hang 11 uses an Ennip Morricone tune from the movie Danger Diabolik, I think. It's from some MST3k movie, anyway.

Seeing as how they are all old men now, they are keeping their show to a brisk 16 hours.