He'd already performed naked. I think after that, wearing a dress is nothing to bat an eye at.
He'd already performed naked. I think after that, wearing a dress is nothing to bat an eye at.
It can be, "It can be both," and, "It can be two things."
It can be both funny and empowering.
Yeah. A lot of people hate the focus given to the Lars/Sadie relationship, and there's a good reason to, but I would take an episode that actually progressed that dynamic or settled it for good over this one any day.
You hear it unaccompanied in the middle of the episode. It's pretty clearly Olivia Olson.
There's some really weird symbolism involved in Sadie, who's apparently based on Rebecca Sugar in college, singing along to Olivia Olson, who also sang Rebecca's first songs written for broadcast.
I feel like I got a little misled by the preview in this one. Sadie singing to herself while doing inventory was such a humble moment for the character, not just because of the situation but also for what she's actually singing: "When I point they look and when I talk they listen." It really gets to the heart of her…
I find it weird that over the course of ~18 episodes they've gone from portraying Rick and Morty's relationship as overtly abusive in the pilot to portraying Beth and Jerry's somewhat unhappy marriage as the *real* dysfunction. It feels like a little bit of a betrayal of the show's spirit?
And there's nothing more hacky than suicide!
I was maybe a little exaggerated in my OP. There's a big difference between allowing children to perform dangerous activities when they understand the risks and treat the occasions with the proper respect (as Steven has grown into over time, and Connie has as well) and taking along a kid who falls off cliffs at a…
Because all illegal streaming sites have a built-in expiration date?
I kinda wanted Full Disclosure Part Deux from a resolution to this plot thread: something big, messy, and even a little traumatic. This was a little too pat, although I genuinely liked the way Dr. Maheswaran discovered the sword and lectured Connie rather than accidentally taking the wrong bag like a sitcom plot.
Do you think Dr. Maheswaran would be the sort of doctor who hates Scrubs?
Actually, Stevonnie exists. Whatever, go nuts.
Re: the character designs: I'm not entirely sure how they'd do it, since the characters already don't have consistent "heights" and I'd feel a little uncomfortable with them being sexualized in any way.
They've driven a car out of the ocean in a bubble before. I wouldn't think too hard about it.
And there was that right-wing nationalist teenager who assassinated Inejiro Asanuma…
My first thought upon realizing that Dr. Maheswaran was checking up a Gem Fusion was "How did his legs get into… his brain!". Maybe Under the Knife isn't as far off a real emergency room as she thought.