printthelegends--disqus
printthelegends
printthelegends--disqus

That's still the best ride I've ever been on. So fucking cool.

Just get both of them and do "Don Juan in Hell," where Frasier is basically tormented by ghosts of Lilith and Diane (and his first wife Nanette) as he tries to figure out why he can't make any of his relationships work.

Barney was sober for more than one episode. It wasn't a "Lisa becomes a vegetarian" level change but it lasted a while.

I liked the Maggie subplot. It reminded me a lot of the old Tracey Ullman shorts in a good way, and I like when the show plays with form and structure and the like. It doesn't always work, but I dig the effort.

Foghorn Leghorn… and pretty much every Hanna-Barbera character.

Maybe this is nitpicking to an absurd degree, but one of my biggest problems with Hook is trying to figure out how the Lost Boys discovered skateboarding and basketball. Jack had to teach the pirates baseball and it's way older. I don't know.

It helped that Hemsworth was pretty funny.

Did Jim Henson ever show off his sweet karate moves to Jimmy Dean?

I can't believe they haven't used that for an episode title yet.

I like to think Bob's Burgers, tonally, takes place in the space between the more grounded King of the Hill and the loopier Simpsons. It's like the missing link of Fox animated sitcoms.

I've never read the book, but the original play implies that older people have trouble seeing Peter, or can't see him at all (Mrs. Darling has to squint to just make out his silhouette in the final nursery scene). It even has an extra scene after that, showing Wendy visiting Peter in Neverland one year later for…

I'd argue they're the only good parts of the movie.

Simone is not without her charms.

Forgotten about? Speak for yourself. I've been championing this movie for years. I try to point it out whenever people rave about that piece of shit Hook.

A "Love & Mercy" style movie that bounces between Lucas making New Hope and Phantom Menace could be fascinating, actually.

I find it delightful. I think BttF2 is a pretty great movie, and it's cool that Universal seems to be having fun finding ways to commemorate it. I'm sure they'll re-re-re-release the movies, but it's nice they're doing these goofy little things too.

- My Dad.

The speech presumed Collins made it back safe and sound?

That break-up scene was unexpectedly brutal for me, and it's the most invested I've been in the Kermit/Piggy relationship since at least Muppets Take Manhattan.

Yay! Over the Garden Wall won!