pkellen2313
pkellen2313
pkellen2313

Dave may have won the year for me with that Brad Pitt episode

The big question I had after the s2 Yellowjackets finale about the present day timeline was, am I  just tired, or do I not understand why anyone did  what they did in the whole episode?

Forget trying to steal an election, Kari Lake is trying to steal Belinda Carlisle’s job as lead singer of the Go-Go’s.

I admit English is not my first language but let’s try to deconstruct her statement and see if we can decipher what she was really trying to say.

These are the same old white people who are afraid to come into the cities cause crime, but now they are going to overthrow the government sure bitch.

A couple of these are genuinely awful, so I have to wonder why you'd pick them over the genuinely good 'Dead Zone' movie.

“Get a fucking grip” doesn’t really land when you write a bad-faith answer with all-caps mixed in, FYI.

For the season as a whole, I liked the stories with Roy training Jamie, Colin coming out, and Trent joining the team to write a book. I generally liked the way the Richmond season unfolded. Sam’s plots were good as well - I liked the awkward conversations between his father and Rebecca. And of course, everything with

This is the best thing I’ve read in days.  Like all of this could have also happened between three coworkers at the local Hot Topic, and the stakes would have been completely the same.

What more could people possible want or expect about a show about positivity, growth, and unwavering support?

You caught me, I clearly loathe this TV show I have written 25,000 words about and given uniformly high scores to.

Just three more seasons. Which still sounds like two too many.

Especially the dogshit ones your husband writes.

nah, i think Manuel Betancourt is right. This show has gone to shit. the hourlong running times have killed this show. Sam Richardson is a good actor in other stuff, but in this show, his scenes are a embarrassment to comedy. We will always have season 1!

I’d have included Takashi Miike’s Audition from 1999 to the list.

and don’t watch anime

I definitely feel like both shows have lost their way a bit the last two seasons, although they still have their good elements and episodes. In each case, they’ve both gotten away from the tight plotting that made them great and bought into their hype a bit too much: Ted Lasso that it’s a feel-good show that should

Mary Tyler Moore in “Ordinary People” is terrifying.

I remember getting an interview at RIM in the mid-aughts. I was a broke university student looking to get a co-op term at one of the hottest companies in the world. I borrow my parents’ car, pay the $30 in gas, and drive from Toronto to Waterloo. The mid-manager there spends the entirety of the 15-minute interview