Her inability to look at it from a PR rep perspective made me think of the Mike Tyson quote. “Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth”
Her inability to look at it from a PR rep perspective made me think of the Mike Tyson quote. “Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth”
Good, bad, or indifferent, this was the episode co-written by Keeley Hazell. I presume it’s more than a little about Keeley Hazell.
And now we know that a “Hey, Jude” live performance ends whenever the singer decides it ends, and not before. You *will* participate in all “na-na’s” until then.
“This show was fresh and enjoyable in its first season, but is it now less good in its third season?”
The thing that bugged me most is, isn’t Keeley the head of a PR agency? This was an amazing moment to show her actually being good at it. When people have public scandals, they GO TO PR AGENCIES. Instead Keeley is shown dithering and ultimately not doing anything. The show missed a great opportunity to show Keeley…
While I’m here: I don’t understand the complaints that Keeley is being reduced to her sexuality this season. She’s had more than one important moment of growth as the head of her PR company. She had to fire a good friend for doing bad work, and she had to discipline a coworker for being inappropriate in the office.
I’m genuinely not sure you’ve watched the show before this season, because most of the things you’re complaining about have always been there. Ted being folksy? Uh, that’s kinda central to his character? The weird comment about how people don’t know Grohl learned to play drums on the pillows? It’s not like the dude…
I don’t think most people recognize how personal this episode was for its creators. I’m not going to go into details but it’s all discoverable with just a quick look at the opening credits. The episode may have been a bit didactic but I can overlook that because certain storylines are not hypothetical and are clearly…
Week after week I read these reviews out of morbid curiosity. And I don’t think Manuel actually ever liked this show or liked it for the right reasons.
Judging by this review and some of the other comments below, I feel like I must be in the minority in liking this episode (and season 3 generally).
I think that’s THEIR point.
I actually liked that team talk about the ethics of the “Great Awankening”, and how anyone who chooses to look at those photos and videos is just as culpable as the hackers who released them. What I find curious though that there is no mention of the responsibilities and security failings of the service these photos…
“Last week I was thrilled the show went back to its season 1 roots” - C+
“This show has completely lost its way” - C
At this point it feels like you’re trolling. Jesus Christ, you’re the worst.
The only thing that’s lost its way here is the quality of the reviewers on this site. Truly the bottom of the barrel here.
Agreed. I think anyone who believes that AFC Richmond is actually getting any better at football over the past three seasons hasn’t been paying enough attention. What I do see is the team winning small victories - mostly moral victories, like scoring a goal so that Arsenal didn’t shut them out in their latest game -…
For most of last season, I grew less and less interested in Nate because he was turning into a real prick. But over the off-season, I had a chance to think it over, and I realized that his arc is more realistic than I had thought. The arrested development he suffered by having a distant and authoritarian father and a…
Where’s the discussion of Jamie’s speech in the locker room and overall character development? His transition from showboat to team player is one of the highlights of the series. Watching him give the assist rather than trying to score the goal himself was one of the top moments of the episode.
The gaffer-tape beard slayed me.
Comment from my wife after last night’s episode: “Who knew that an episode that kicked off with a pegging reference and continued on to footballers with red string around their gentlemen’s regions would be so great?”