kyle4--disqus
Kyle4
kyle4--disqus

This was painful to watch, it seems like the writers are just continually scraping the bottom of the barrel now for situations to place this cast they turned into cartoons in. Nellie is completely unfunny to watch and the whole plot about her waltzing in and stealing Andy's job is stupid even for the Offices'

Two weeks ago's ratings: 1.81 million
Last week's: 1.65 million
This week: 1.59

I've pretty much hated everything about this season and what the show's become but seeing Erin and Andy lose their shit was satisfying. It was nice to see Andy call Nellie out on taking his job, refusing to back down and then quitting. Maybe it was because I can't stand Tate's character that this episode redeemed

Despite everything else she did in this episode what annoyed me the most was when Teresa was explaining her charity and the sick boy and she had to pipe in with "We love him" in that fake voice of hers. She just can't stop interrupting or making a comment.

Seven years waiting for a new Fiona Apple album, it better be great! June can't come soon enough.

I enjoyed the book (even with the tacked on romance that felt like Collins added it after reading Twilight) but these actors look a little too well fed for the parts. I didn't expect the cast to pull a Christian Bale for the film but some weight loss to portray the district's poor state would've been nice.

This is one of the few albums I'll be buying this year. Its been five years since the last Shins album and Simple Song sounds like a natural progression of the tracks on Wincing the Night Away. Excuse the Evanescence comparison, but I never got the impression that Mercer was taking over the Shins and firing everyone

I really liked this episode, it's a shame AMC doesn't have the budget to make the rest of the season have production values like this one. The ball finally got rolling and Andrea became a badass (Kirkman should keep on writing episodes). This season would've been a lot better if this happened halfway through instead

Completely agree with you. Maybe I've finally just grown tired of the Office but I hated everything about this episode. Hearing Tate's screechy voice after awhile was like nails on a chalkboard (which was odd because I didn't mind her in the past couple of episodes.) Spader rambling on was boring, as was the

This is exactly what I expected from this show and this episode was a complete 180 from last week. Everything from the cinematography to the pacing made this feel like a different series. I actually cared about the characters one on one moments (Andrea and Glenn), I was happy that Carl feeling guilt for Dale's death

This isn't a definite yes but last week's episode had nearly 15 million viewers. With ratings constantly on the up and up I'd say it's likely.

Canadian here. Looks I'll be watching the Jets game tonight.

I thought for sure after Rick changed his mind that Shane would go, "Oh, not this shit again" and just do it. I expected to hear a gunshot when Rick was hugging Laurie.

One person said about the Walking Dead that it's a show built around great 3 minute ending sequences with a boring preceding 40 attached. I agree, how can a show about zombies be so flat? There's so little character development (Andrea's a civil rights lawyer?) and stakes that the hour each week they spend blabbering

Stevie Ryan always looked like too much of a Hollywood hottie (in the vein of Megan Fox) for Youtube. I always thought a production company was paying her or something.

Syndication is where they'll get their money now right? There's been a steady decline in viewership this year, bottoming out with 4.38 million viewers two weeks ago. If those numbers keep up do you think it could be cancelled to leave way for a spin-off or do you think they could keep the show afloat next year?

Do you have a blog? I wouldn't mind reading some more of your critical analysis.

The whole concept of a store launch with bloggers there to write about a "triangle tablet and phone" is just mind numbingly stupid. A huge part of the allure for me previously was how the zany characters somehow managed to compete in a real business world (like when Michael was told Dunder Mifflin was the highest

Meryl Streep is far too theatrical for my tastes, every role she plays seems like it's for the sole purpose of winning some award. I thought Rooney Mara was far more deserving since she became nearly unrecognizable as Salander and fully committed to the part. Viola Davis has also consistently given strong performances

Even shorter then you mentioned, season one had six episodes (though the first one was 67 minutes long).