pootietang13
PootieTang13
pootietang13

It’s even worse than that. They’re basically saying “How dare you profit off the exploits of a child molesting family...without giving me my cut, that is!”

Season 2 of Fargo is quite possibly one of the most perfect seasons of television ever. The ending unfortunately didn’t live up to the rest of it, but 90+% was just stunning.

He did such a good job in Fargo!

Next you’re going to tell me Hagar the Horrible loves his wife, Garfield doesn’t mind Mondays and that literally anyone still reads the newspaper funny pages.

For all I knew Dilbert was done in 1997.

Great job! That’ll show those “liberal” fat cats in Seattle. Harass a barista, help propel Starbucks to record sales and then give them a nifty tax break for Christmas. Starbucks and their shareholders wish you Happy Hollidays for your business and political support in reaching record earnings per share.

Having actually read the article now, I want to disagree with it and say the only proper role in this film for Woody Harrelson would in fact be Carnage, and Woody Harrelson Carnage would be one of the best things we’d ever see in a superhero film and even with that fact in hand this is still a bad idea for a movie.

Easy. Russian mafia wrecks his car when he refuses to sell it and then kills his dog. 

TWD just spins its wheels season after season. What is the “end game” plot-wise? What are they attempting to do? Get somewhere? Rebuild a society? It’s totally pointless and viewers notice.

Most of the films that made the blacklist that actually get made end up being fucking awful, which I guess if it’s indicative of what movie executives think is “hot” just proves the old stereotype of movie executives being a bunch of out of touch, coked up idiots

I’m a long time lurker and first time commented, but I’ve really been enjoying the discourse on the AV Club so I figured I’d jump in. I think what makes men’s reactions to this story so strange to meis that I felt such deep empathy for every character in the story. I’m a 25 year old woman, and when I was early college

I watched, and enjoyed both seasons. Our trial begins soon, I believe.

How do they know whether we watched shows with our significant other or family? That part of the list is a little creepy.

As for those series that promised twists but were otherwise light on plot and characterization

“The President’s head is missing, huh huh huh! *hits bong*”

At this point the only thing that might tempt me to watch another episode of TWD is if I heard that 5 minutes into the next new episode; Rick tripped, fell on his trigger finger and blew his own damn fool head off...then the bullet ricocheted like crazy and killed everybody else except for Darrel.

“Oh, look - it’s Sean Bean. He’s gonna die soon” is this millennium’s “Oh, look - it’s Brian Dennehy. He’s a crooked cop.”

All your base are belong to us.

Ajit Pai is a fuckboy.

Well, there was Sixth Sense back in the 90s. That movie basically invented the term “spoiler alert.”

The fact that I actually watched the movie and never heard about the twist until the end is a testament to how different the world was in 2001 or whenever it was I saw it.