lojinxes
Lojinxes
lojinxes

Fantastic and fitting title here. Having wassername loudly monologue and occasionally sneer for 45 minutes of the finale was awful. Once the show ditched all elements of real mystery and desire to be scary, it occasionally reached levels of genuine entertainment. The decision to try to tie it all up in on the

Leland Palmer was Santa Claus. The difference between family-sitcom and nighttime-terror-soap is just an Angelo Badalamenti score.

You misunderstand. I thought it would be head and shoulders above everything else ON HULU. Obviously, there is just no way to make up the viewers lost from Fox. They'll never come close to that again. Fox used to include Hulu views in their L+30 data, and even as one of the biggest shows on Hulu, it just wasn't a

I would've thought the fact that you could only see it in one place would've given it a boost. It was supposedly popular on Hulu last season as well, and that was with 2-3 million people watching/DVRing on Fox. Since there is nowhere else to watch the show, I imagined there would be an enormous boost in the Hulu

That's excessive (obviously), but there is a point in there. For a show in the 4th season, the first since being booted from network, the buzz isn't what it once was. No shame there, it just happens. In 2015, those that choose to review shows (critics, I suppose) are likely doing so because they've got some

I wish people never learned the word. If you like what you see, a show is subverting or transcending tropes. If you don't like what you're seeing, the show is tired and tropey. You don't really need much to draw a line either way, it's all up to a viewer's fancy. In the end, it's all about the characters doing

Well, 'viewers' then. As far as I know, Hulu is the only place you can see these episodes. Coming in second behind a 20 year old cartoon you almost can't avoid running across on basic cable doesn't seem super impressive. The general 'presence' of this show seemed less ever since the Hulu debut. If not for the

Since these reviews seem to spend the better part of Tuesday at the very top of the AVC reviews, I find myself checking in on this show I once watched but haven't seen seeing mid S2. This whole potential breakup has, if nothing else, created a bit of a stir for a show that had all but fallen off the radar. Still

Drop 'this' and 'and' and you've got a nice little reverse haiku there.

Not to step into the middle of… this… but what are "popular Hulu episodes today" and how do we know they're reliable?

Good show. Terrible ratings, though. Guess Fox is just punting on Tuesdays now.

Ah, sunnuva…

I was really hoping this show was going to feature Phil and Carol meeting a new bunch of neighbors every season. With the exception of January Jones being surprisingly un-Betty Draperish, and Todd reminding me of the late, great Enlisted, the supporting cast does very little for me. I thought with their absence (and

Dear God, the Swedish Chef has human hands. How have I never noticed this? And why is it freaking me out so much?

It's always done pretty well on Hulu. But more people watched WWE, and it won't even be close. That said, the # of comments in an AV Club review isn't a great indicator of viewers. Community used to get over 1,000 comments, and was almost always low rated. This show will never have as many viewers as it did on Fox,

Kudos to Kasdan and co. for managing to greenlight a Fred Savage show in the guise of a Rob Lowe show.

This show is funny, and the performances are strong. But good grief with the subverting of the genre or expectations or you name it already. All credit to their work with Cpt Holt, but where I'm told there is some groundbreaking originality, I see sitcom 101. It's not the show's fault, it's very good. It's just

Oliver Hudson and Charisma Carpenter as the parents of college age students is kind of ruining my week.

Oh man, you just made me have to watch. Rules of Attraction was a fantastic book, and an underrated (if somewhat messy) movie. I was totally willing to pass on the rest of this silly show, too.

I always give Pilots a pass, but this was pretty uneven and a tad predictable. That said, Lowe is perfectly pleasant, the actors (and editors) have good pace and timing, and it could be fun for at least 12-15 episodes. I worry it would wear thin long term, but perhaps the show will surprise. If it gets a chance,