phodreaw
phodreaw
phodreaw

Wonder what the male equivalent of asking a friend to fish out a Yoni ball would be.

Speaking of the lack of high stakes drama, Jane's fling with her male writer counterpart Ryan at the male counterpart magazine to Scarlet was all kinds of well-trod rom-com and didn't bode well for the rest of the season, so it's very reassuring that he's not made a return appearance and the show can focus on its

Didn't pick up on his crush, but that may well be, as @avclub-ce7da3812ed2a993e2194cd75e94b18b:disqus noted, because of how he was written from a functional as opposed to a character basis, and I never paid all that much attention to him because of that.

Until that dry-cleaner hug it seemed like Alex was the designated gay friend, or at least the platonic friend who for once is actually supportive as opposed to harboring a secret crush.

I'm so tickled that this and the Fosters are the lead in to the 700 Club.

His regular intelligence briefings already contain "about a quarter of the information President Barack Obama received" with "less material, less nuance, less dissent", and rather than, say, bone up on the goddamn things he's supposed to know about in his capacity as Commander-in-Chief, this fucker has to have his

Not to mention the volume difference between commercials and the actual program, which got so bad that Congress actually passed legislation on this.

I don't blame you at all considering every other movie or TV show seems like a reboot, re-imagining, or some other reformulation of someone's beloved childhood whatever.

On most other cooking competition shows it feels like the competition aspect overshadows the actual cooking, especially when the shows go out of their way to play up the personalities of their contestants and any friction between them rather than their culinary skills.

The Wall

Compared to modern crap like Millionaire, 500 Questions, and The Wall, which are less "game" than they are "show", ginning up drama with interminable personal anecdotes, flashy lighting effects, and musical zingers, these classic shows got the formula right: ask a lot of questions, keep the game moving, and have a

That or blebbing.

I always watch with the closed captioning on, not just for BBCAmerica but for all programs.

So is this a preview for the eventual release of MSGS?

That or a shortchanged marathon.

On this episode I learned the phrase "style it out."

Ellie said it best:

Tyrant ran for three seasons.

Removing a U.S. president from office is ridiculously difficult, especially when, under articles of impeachment, a majority is required in the House to impeach (i.e. bring up charges, indict) and a two-thirds majority in the Senate to convict, and the chance of that happening with republicans controlling both houses

The first time I saw Peter Sagal I was sure the balding man with the severe eyebrows was a different person from the genially voiced host of WWDTM.