I ask this exact question every week. It's why I tuned in, and I'm starting to get frustrated. I get the need to show the before and do a bit of world building, but they've set up the before, now show me the after.
I ask this exact question every week. It's why I tuned in, and I'm starting to get frustrated. I get the need to show the before and do a bit of world building, but they've set up the before, now show me the after.
I'm glad you like the episode too, and it's totally a bottle episode. Camera movement does not determine whether or not it's a bottle episode. Cast and location determine whether or not it's a bottle episode. If the episode uses only existing/standing sets (no new sets or shooting on location) and regular/recurring…
Also, Joey would never force himself on a woman. I always got the sense that if a woman turned him down, he'd just shrug his shoulders, say "her loss" and move onto someone else.
It's so hot, especially the way the song starts to kick in right after they slap each other. All that tension and frustration that had been built up just comes out. Also, David and Maddie's first kiss in the garage is wonderful, as is the dream Maddie has about him when she's dating someone else.
And sing along. It's one of the last great theme songs you could sing along to.
I hadn't realized it until just now, but most of my favorite "Friends" episode are centered on Ross (or at least he features heavily in one of the subplots). "The One With the Embryos," "The One with the Holiday Armadillo," "The One Where No One's Ready," and "The One Where Everybody Finds Out."
And the Holiday Armadillo.
Good TV is good TV, it doesn't matter when it was written/created. In high school I liked plenty of shows that went off the air before I was born.
The walk and talks are going to be around the set between rehearsals or someone talking to Lucy and Desi before filming a show.
And even if it was on amazon.com, I'll bet the website would list which movies were included in the set.
It wasn't called PTSD during WWI, the term would have been Shell Shock. All I can think of is that a large swarm of bees would sound enough like an incoming shell to cause a flashback.
It's up to Moose and Squirrel to foil their plan.
That is my biggest problem with the show. I tuned in to see how crack changed a neighborhood and the other forces that played a role in bringing the drug into the neighborhood. I tune in each week hoping that this will be the week crack appears and starts to cause massive changes.
I am waiting for crack to appear and change everything. The show needed to do some world building to show what the neighborhood was like before crack became a force, but I feel like they've done the set up they needed to do and I'm just waiting for the story to really get into gear.
For me it's all about Grantchester. I love seeing the two of them solving mysteries. I also have a thing for red heads and seeing James Norton (especially shirtless or in an undershirt) makes me very happy.
It's a typo. Not an insult. I should have typed: "We get them from time to time, just wait." What normally happens is that conservatives come here for a day or two, then leave never to be heard from again.
And then have someone say, "We know the president is busy and we respect the demands on his time" to explain why they didn't invite him, if they need to.
We get them from time to wait.
If it still works, you could sell it on ebay. There is a thriving secondary market for iPods.
I recently watched "Fast Times at Ridgemont High" and we realized that places like the Ridgemont Mall were the ones that were closing. Upscale malls are still doing okay.