mnbska--disqus
mnbska
mnbska--disqus

Eh, it WAS a funny premise, but how long did it take to get there? And a previous appearance had him just basically pissed off at Scott for like twenty minutes. No jokes. Just mad. Maybe it's my ADD.

I sure hope so. I really do. I liked the Billion Dollar Movie, but every time I see him interacting with other people playing "straight" I cringe. The Comedy Bang Bang podcasts are horrible. He's in the dust. In one CBB, at one point he abandons his bit and becomes George Burns (and finally becomes funny).

I dunno, whenever I see Tim Heidecker about to do anything, I walk away. Especially a podcast. I don't have time to sort through my reaction to not-comedy. Kinda like Ben Stiller's not-mad routine. Eventually your reptilian brain takes over and says "this feels not funny. Therefore not funny."

PUNCH! ……… "Act now."

Best dad movie ever. I can't wait to get in a big fight with the family, and have one son tiptoe downstairs silently to watch this with me while I drink cans of beer.

Maybe it's a Titian of some woman in purty pink panties! "Madam J. Rottencroche"

When people get shot in this movie, do they stiffen up, clutch at the wound, and grimace while falling sideways? (sometimes they stare at a palm full of ketchup)

No, it's more fun to chase the tiny diminishing returns, never mind the opportunity cost of doing something else with far more quality-of-life benefits.

They can't, because they're the biggest target. Their CEO admitted as such in the early 2000s, and since then they've done everything the critics wanted them to do. Honestly, they really do respond. To their board, it's part and parcel of being the fast food leader.

I agree. it's the bizarreness that takes me out too. Same problem I had with Happy Endings. Everyone was just too cute and sped-up. You need someone real in there to ground it. Just one real person will work; see Arrested Development.

Yeah, I read The Guns of August which terrified me with the stories of the rapidly escalating retributions for real and imagined partisanship. From the amateur WWII podcast histories I've listened to, it sounds like occupying forces just did more of the same. So besides the Holocaust, German forces (forgive me for not

What do you think of the idea that WWII, being an extension of WWI, saw atrocities (outside the Holocaust) that were identical to the awful stuff Germany did in WWI to "shorten" the war?