likeawolverine
Hench
likeawolverine

"I may just beeee the Powder room, and you are the fiiireplaaace". I would watch the hell out of Rooms: The Musical. No wonder it won Best Musical.

"You did this? How could you be so irresponsible?!" "ehh, it's my first day." "Since I've never seen you before, maybe it is your first day. Very well, carry on." "Uh sir, that's Homer Simpson. He's been working here 10 years." "Ohhhh really? Why did you think you could LIE to me?" "it's my first day." "Welll, why

"It made me feel like God. I don't wanna be God." I would not mind if Jimmy's dad showed up again. David Schaal took what could've easily been (and kind of was) a caricature of a boorish, emotionally distant father and made him interesting.

The jump from Dev's friend talking about the failure of his marriage and the struggles of parenthood to Dev getting sidetracked by the scented candle in the bathroom killed me. That's some good dark comedy right there. The visual of Eric Wareheim taking over the bounce house was great too. And "Don't yell out people's

I have been enjoying the spotlight on lesser known muppets like Uncle Deadly, Yolanda, and Chip. And Scooter having mommy issues to match Seymour Skinner or Ted Buckland (or a less extreme examples) is pretty amusing to me at least.

Yeah when she started with "you can't see me", I figured she was saying it in the metaphorical sense to add to the farce and was ready to roll my eyes and move on. But then she meant it literally and I was so glad.

That whole "blind date" sequence felt like something right out of a silver-age comic book in the best possible way. And Patty figuring it out because she's not an idiot made me like the character that much more.

I didn't see the "Toby is an adult" reveal coming. I figured there had to be some sort of twist because there's always a twist, but I was not expecting that. It retroactively made all of the previous references to Dean's "parenting" of Toby that much funnier.

Yeah, I was getting some serious April vibes in that last scene (in a good way). "I don't want to label her. I just want to be her friend. This class blows, I quit. I knew I should've taken coding".

The cut from "I don't even know where the hell she came from" right into the expository theme song was just great editing. I love this show more and more every week.

I'd been looking forward to Settle For Me since the promos for this episode started and it did not disappoint.

"Then me and my friend were about to press it, but the man said not to press it, but we pressed it anyway! And we ran and we hid in this giant tire, we had… and my other friend was already there." "All right, all right, now, you're over stimulated. Let's get some beer in you and then it's right to bed." Homer becoming

Was I the only one who got the read that Craig's dad is gay? He mentions in his speech to Craig that he knows how fighting who you are makes you miserable. And then during that last montage, we see him unable to sleep and looking at his wife, which stands in contrast to all the happy couples in the montage. I mean, I

I had grown sick of Say Something around the time it was featured in The 33 trailer for some reason, but it's use here was perfect.

The runner where people kept inexplicably giving Tweek and Craig money for being gay was my favourite part of the episode that wasn't the incredibly on-point soundtrack. Great episode all around.

I've been waiting for Ciera to make a move all season and she did not disappoint tonight. That her move also reawakened Chaos Kass was just an added bonus. Stellar episode!

I think it was to keep "original Bayon" intact. They're probably hoping that Savage will fall back in with them now that his other ally Woo is gone.

Man, even moreso than Grant Gustin, Melissa Benoist was really wasted on Glee. She's great here and really elevates this pilot for me. And I have faith the other aspects of the show will only improve.

Jeff Perry brought it tonight. By the end of his last scene with Fitz, I had chills. Like wow.

Dean viewing his relationship with Claire through the prism of a will-they-won't-they TV workplace romance despite being in the "real world" where people and things don't actually work like is probably my favourite aspect of this show so far that isn't the brother's dynamic and I really hope (probably futilely)