klawman--disqus
klaw
klawman--disqus

I have to say, I read the ending differently than you, Libby. Yes, he grabbed her hand to stop her monologue but also to acknowledge "you're right".

Agree and disagree. Yes the world spins madly on but what is it supposed to do? Is Louie supposed to be so profoundly moved by Vanessa's monologue that he changes course, starts a long term relationship with her and rails against fat prejudice for the rest of his life? She's right, he IS embarrassed at the thought

I agree with the subtext that all of this technology (and all of these technology obsessed acolytes) aren't really making anything better or easier and last week's "Telehuman" scene was a great example. With that said, I thought Jared's adventures with Mr. Car were incredibly broad and slap-stick. It was funny at

From the first chugging guitar riff and slow wailing of Man in the Box (video seen first on Headbangers Ball), I was hooked on AiC. Call it the precursor of grunge, the first commercially successful album of grunge or whatever, AiC was my gateway into the music and will be forever my favorite.

I agree. Truth be told, the smartest TV decision would to be to completely excise that plotline. It wastes a TON of time and adds nothing. Not good news for GRRM, who would then be even more under the gun to actually make this story go somewhere!

Frankly, I'm curious to see how the TV crowd reacts to the virtual reboot Martin did with VAST pileS of pages devoted to all the characters in Dorne, Danaerys slow, slow, slow ascension to dragon rider and all of the other virtual wheel spinning that takes up the most of A Feast for Crows and A dance with Dragons.

Don't forget her turn in Hung. I admire her acting skills but, outside of Justified, I really haven't liked any show she's been on. Perhaps a better agent is what's required here…

Perhaps I'm quibbling but after NDT's (accurate) dismissal of the physics in Gravity, I was disappointed in the animation of the "ship of imagination". As we pull out through the solar system, the ship passes through the asteroid belt, showing a density that matches something from Star Wars, passes through Saturn's

First I offer the typical/expected "I'm an atheist/agnostic" confession and, no, I don't need a primer on definitions or lecture on taking sides. In short, I look up into the night sky with more than a kindergartener's understanding of the Universe (multiverse?) and realize that no one will ever KNOW and, frankly,

You have a point there… Last week was "I've hidden my clones for 20 years, now I'm going to blow the lid off by using them to murder witnesses under police protection."

I have to say I thought the case in this episode was idiotic. So the criminals harvest artificial hearts, modify them so they can KILL THE USER AT A DISTANCE and then extort the new owners. Then the moment anyone is able to do an autopsy on a hold-out, they find the serial number on the heart and the whole

The mob didn't go away when Prohibition ended however their scope, influence and income were decimated. …Until they planted themselves squarely in the illegal narcotics trade.

It's not that the cartels will suddenly become florists or something. It's that 95% of their revenue will be obliterated. Human trafficking, DVD piracy? Those may be completely heinous but they don't provide anywhere near the income that moving drugs into the U.S. does. …and, yeah, it's not Mexico that needs to

I'm impressed with Netflix' dedication to the four people who would still want to watch this asinine show!

I absolutely loved the exchange:

I hear they shaved a gorilla!

C'mon, no one has piped up with "Mercy Killing" yet?

No argument… But even a hack can have a funny moment.

I only knew Eric Andre as "that dude from the ABC show my wife used to watch" but I found myself laughing at the firecracker bit, almost ashamed of myself.   Honestly, that Panel was not very funny and the mask bit was supposed to be going for that Do It So Long, It Gets Funny Again thing and wasn't making it.  Then,

Agreed.