livingonvideo
living on video
livingonvideo

Don’t beat yourself up; everybody’s wrong once in a while.

Sorry, cantaloupe > honeydew. Besides I think of celery as the bland palate cleanser and tastebud saver after a bowl of wings; good fruit needs no such thing.

I thought the 3-D Art analogy was spot on (besides the common mistake in saying that squinting is how you see it, that’s actually the opposite of how to do it).

To answer both you and trevor, Disney’s Beast design is an amalgam of a buffalo, lion, gorilla, wolf, bear, and wild boar. Since interspecies offspring are not hybrids in the world of Bojack Horseman, such a creature would still be considered an abomination.

Oh man... I thought it was going to be a repost of “Together,” but this...

No hard feelings, I think that might have been a glitch as I don’t see the number going down on my end.

I meant to follow up on Mr. PB’s line about being five fights away from another divorce in an earlier season, but failed to keep an accurate tally. Anyone else here have the hard data?

I teared up in recognition during the “Tell me I’m good” speech. I wept for Sarah Lynn. Actually, this show gets me weepy pretty frequently.

The Belle room was her personal fantasy, dating back to her troubled childhood. What Mr. Peanutbutter gave her was his interpretation of it. While it was not how he intended the gesture, he essentially took a dream that she cherished and shattered it.

Alright, I’ve been dying to bring this up here since I spent way too long researching this yesterday after my rewatch of the series.

Is there actually someone else who still remembers National Lampoon’s 1964 Yearbook?

Good call. I could definitely picture a prideful Butterscotch burning his bridges with the Beats and publishers over some misconstrued constructive criticism.

I felt an “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” vibe from the episode early on, so combined with the Alzheimers and the penultimate episode spot I easily envisioned a similar but more tragic third act of Bea struggling and failing to retain her memories, her very “self” being erased, until there was nothing left.

I think the implication is that being rejected by his Beat Generation heroes soured him on the whole movement, then he was absorbed into the establishment after taking the cushy Sugarman corner office job, just as he feared.

Upon rewatch, “You can keep that half” beats it for Joseph Sugarman vileness.

The first time I watched this and saw the scribble face, I immediately worried that I’d see more and more scribbles and disappearances until there was nothing left as Bea’s mind fully left her. This is a Bojack 11, after all.

I didn’t pick that up until rewatch. The first time, I just wondered if they really tried to implicate O.J.’s father and son in the actual trial.

You say that now, but just wait until the show finds a way to humanize him too. Maybe Bojack will read his dad’s book next season and discover the damaged soul buried in its clumsy prose.

Jeez, I would have thought that until you said it. Knowing how this show likes to twist the knife, she’ll probably fall into full-on catatonia, and Bojack will be forced to decide whether or not to take her off life support.

I like to think it was an act of genuine kindness or mercy on Bojack’s part, but I also know he wasn’t privy to the previous half hour of backstory, so there wasn’t some new epiphany or understanding behind it. My cynical side says he realizes there’ll be no satisfaction in tearing her down in this state, and he’ll