kerapace
Keratin
kerapace

This show gets ~30-40 reviews a year. That's way more content than most other shows with regular coverage on this site. That stuff costs money.

It's possible that contracts with streaming services come with some sort of exclusivity agreement that prevents them from releasing things on DVD.

This is a pretty good breakdown. For a long time I was confused about the effect of the Bombs because, just looking at the ratings of individual episodes, the numbers for all CN shows appear to have gone down significantly since early 2015. But it's clear that daily new episodes boost the numbers for an entire week

For a show that contains so much overt wackiness, Adventure Time is a show that errs on the side of understatement, almost to a fault. Recent episodes have taken this too far for a lot of the fanbase, but you might get something out of it starting from the beginning.

That's gotta be a parody of the Kids' Choice Awards.

Wasn't the hugest fan of this episode but I'll take it over any of the Ron and Tammy sequels.

It kinda looked like her outfit from Varmints.

I think Jake was just cool with it.

"What's wrong with meeee?"

The best part of that was BMO falling out of the sky at the end.

This episode really felt like "Breezy"'s not-depressed twin.

The shark dying of old age was perfect. It felt very much like a charming NPC encounter in a quirky RPG.

Well, they've been very explicit about video games as relationship metaphors before— remember the very end of "Too Young"?

People were shipping it all the way back in 2013. If they'd decided to air SU alongside AT it could've been the week of resurrecting dead crackships.

I love Sam Alden's sense of whimsy. This and "President Porpoise" had some of the most charming asides of the past few seasons of the series, and the Jake song in this episode is probably my favorite Jake song *ever*. I would have never guessed his style to be like that from "The Mountain", but man he has shown he can

People joke about this show being super-psychedelic, but the bit with the forest spring seems like the first time they've unequivocally depicted an acid trip.

Was that a Phantasy Star reference?

I've said "No comment!" to all of my friends who watch the show but haven't seen the episode yet.

This was surprisingly reminiscent of an interactive fiction game. I always like it when shows explore self-consistent mechanics without explicit exposition, letting the viewer puzzle through things for themselves. "Is That You?" pulled a similar trick with multiple timelines, but this worked more naturally, giving a