Bell Biv DeVoe…Bell Biv DeVoe…Number one in the charts…Bell Biv DeVoe…
Bell Biv DeVoe…Bell Biv DeVoe…Number one in the charts…Bell Biv DeVoe…
I guess a certain streaming service changed its mind about whether a certain streaming service was responsible enough to stream certain content.
Pat Buchanan: Any great art being done in the movies, do you think, now?
So mean.
I'll be cashing in my Club Nintendo Prize this weekend. I only made it to Gold, and I only own a Wii U, so my options are limited. (It's really a shame that they haven't made GB/GBC games available on Wii U, because I would love to play the handheld Zeldas again.) I've narrowed it down to Mario and Luigi: Superstar…
I don't understand. Get over what in general?
Would it be better if it was harder for the offended to make their voices heard?
See, I found that to be one improvement in the post-Sorkin years - the Bartlet White House became more fallible. The characters were pushed harder, the antagonists became more formidable, the president occasionally screwed up (his trip to Oklahoma, the North Korean pianist).
Stephen Bowie's minority report, "The Case Against Breaking Bad", inspired much sputtering, furious confusion from BB fans.
Not even in the top 50%? You can name 22 presidents who were better than peace-keeping, scandal-free Jimmy?
The Producers was not "subpar". It was respectably at par.
Transparent is not a good show. While the story of Maura is compelling and well-acted, it is too often ignored in favor of vague, poorly structured stories centered on the three children. The supporting characters are hastily introduced and narratively inconsistent - personalities and motives fluctuate wildly without…
Not a great episode, but this exchange is one for the ages:
Surprised you all got this interview. He ain't really one for meets no how.
Nintendo keeps insisting that its latest take on The Legend Of Zelda will […] reinvent the stagnant series.
Give us Barabbas.
Star Trek V was maddening and in need of some serious rewrites, but it had occasional spirit and a few charming moments.
Both "A Flight to Remember" and Newsradio's "Sinking Ship" really shook me up when I watched them at age 10, or so. They were the first instances I can remember of stories that made me think about the finality of death. I didn't find them scary, exactly, and I wasn't so naive to think that anyone actually died…still,…
"Parker and Stone both appear to possess that rare and wondrous thing, a
sense of humor that sees the ridiculous in everything, regardless of how
they vote, if they vote."