lojinxes
Lojinxes
lojinxes

I suppose we've might have different ideas of cheating. In early S3, he told Elizabeth he ended things with Cece to be with her exclusively, and vice versa. (He then asked Winston and Nick to lie for him to help him keep his own lie going, but that's neither here nor here). People cheat, people get past it.

Even granting the fact that it was a unique situation, there's a lot to explore. Beyond the cheating, there was lying, and, more importantly, the fact that Schmidt never actually chose Cece over Elizabeth.

He slept with another woman. Repeatedly, we were led to believe. If we don't explore some of Cece's reservations before diving in again, I'd be disappointed.

But there are… things… that need to be addressed, no?

Cole train!

And what the hell kind of jetstream did British bloke catch hold of that he beat Jess back?

They've found better ways to present/half mock the Ford ads as the seasons have gone on, but I think Nick saying 'I'm going to punch you' as Coach had his pitch last year was my favorite.

13 episodes… +/- episodes Ruxin appears in via Skype? Set it a 6?

My general tendency is to agree with you. I've literally read reviews of sitcoms on sites like Vulture and felt really confused about the goal a particular writer had in mind when reviewing a show. It was just obvious their intent in watching was simply to be offended. Given this site and the politics it presents,

I just have to point out the critical flaw in this reviewer's position. It is a fact that the ACN team is morally infallible. This has been proven time and time again. They simply know better than everyone else. Therefore, the reviewer is inherently incorrect when she puts Don's actions and motivations into

Normally, I'd read a review like this and roll my eyes out of my head. I've seen 22 minute comedies criticized for falling short of reviewer or commenter standards of political/social opinion. But, given the show this is, and the implied social superiority of these characters, it leaves itself wide open.

I merely stated (without singling out any one comment, mind you) that I saw enough of what i felt to be an obvous intent, from the title to the ridiculous fight scene, to completely mute anything that may have been seen as some celebration of the stereotypes thrown out there. I then didn't understand how people would

The episode is called'Girl Fight'. The wink was pretty evident going in. And judging by the girls' embarrassment over the whole thing (not to mention their desire to manipulate the guys into their own passive aggressive snit), there isn't so much an indulgence of stereotypes as there is a sense that all avenues

Different times I suppose, but Go On at least kind of viable until after The Voice ended, right?

17 comments? This bums me out. The show is by no means great, but I guess I was hoping folks were still into it. Not doing well in the ratings despite one of the best lead ins in TV, and just kind of a so-so show. Had high hopes for this one, hope it sorts things out

Actually, that was not the catalyst. It was just a 'dumb fight' that would have passed over, like normal, with no great incident. Schmidt interfering was the real catalyst that triggered the release of several years of bottled up' dumb fights'. And the guys halfheartedly punching each other wasn't out of any anger.

Well… I see it ending. Prob not particularly ugly, though.

Props to those that setup the shots. The scene of Jess and Coach approaching Schmidt about the purse seemed just like Schmidt sitting on his bed. Then Nick entering to talk to Kai seemed merely like Nick walking into his room. I had to force myself to look for signs of the other roommate in each of those scenes

Deschanel just has a way with the funny-cry. It just always works fantastically.

Likely be a case of diminishing returns. Using her here and there is best.