mercury33
mercurygirl
mercury33

I remember participating in a nearly 100-page comment thread on Television Without Pity about whether or not Charlie had to die. 100 pages of comments.

I stopped watching Arrested Development when they killed off Ethel Beavers.

I partially agree, but at the time I can see how she might have been that ignorant. As a young white (very ignorant) person at the time, I didn't understand the connection between this trial and the Rodney King atrocity. And I was a student activist who was thoroughly disgusted by what had happened to Rodney King, and

This episode made me cry. Black-ish usually makes me laugh and think, and the show thoroughly earned this very serious (and still funny in parts, somehow) episode. We know this family so well by now, and I felt like I was sitting in the living room with them. Damn. I felt like time was suspended.

I think they will portray the length and tedium of the trial in some way that furthers the story. But I think they are focusing more on the complicated race and justice issues.

It did seem a bit overboard, but it reminded me that this was a real thing that happened, and that Ron Goldman is constantly overlooked.

On Burning Love that happens.

They'll probably be part of the mini-series or made-for-tv-movie category, so they will be up against the casts of Fargo, AHS, and anything HBO comes out with before July. I'm sure I'm forgetting other series. The Emmys already love Sarah Paulson for AHS.

"I didn't try smoking, even though the other passengers said it would calm my nerves. Ditto for those little vodka bottles."

The Goldbergs is purposefully vague about 80s chronology so they can have fun with it. That's why every episode starts "It was 1980-something…"

Gotcha! I definitely replied too soon here.

I thought shipping started with Star Trek?

Agreed. It was a hilarious live clip (I thought my husband was going to start crying he was laughing so hard) and it probably could work as a straight sketch, but next week it will work even better as a reference in a sketch.

I miss Elliott.

Don't forget character actress Margo Martindale.

Glee! It's the feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart into its pants!

I get teary every time too! There's something about them all coming together and singing with that double meaning. It was, for me, the most poignant of all of the possible series finales.

The S3 Christmas episode is one of my favorite Christmas specials, period. And remember when it first aired it was during one of those times of stress when we weren't sure if it was coming back? I always get a little sentimental at the end. I love that Community, for all its weirdness, makes me truly love the

The same study found that 13% of general Americans think Judge Judy is on the Supreme Court. It was multiple choice, you had to choose which of 4 choices was the Supreme Court member. It was Elena Kagan, John Kerry, Judith Sheindlin, and someone else.

OK, I love this story!