r0ckmypants--disqus
r0ckmypants
r0ckmypants--disqus

I liked the first episode a lot (I watched it twice back-to-back to pick up on clues after that ending), and I can't even describe how happy I am to see Sarah Hay on TV again in a few weeks. I know nobody else liked Flesh & Bone, but I thought it was, to quote Erik here, a fascinating mess.

Did you ever watch the show? Jack had a new boyfriend and/or sexual plaything like every episode and Will dated, successfully and not, throughout the entire series.

I made it halfway through this episode before I realized I wasn't paying attention at all. I was meh on the pilot but fuck, this episode was boring.

Alex Newell is the only one I can think of

FINALLY! I literally only watched this show for her (never read the book and find Fuller overrated, sorry) and every week I've been wondering if I imagined her doing a promo tour the week before it started.

You could have started by giving us the Justin Theroux full frontal we've been waiting for since season one.

Ok, you can take that up with Merriam Webster or whoever, but the keywords are force and intimidate. Other players coerce and mislead, but it's the aggression behind Brad's words and body language that, for me and many others, made this more like bullying than what most other players do to get others to do their

Bully (verb): use superior strength or influence to intimidate (someone), typically to force him or her to do what one wants.

The original is in my top 5 favorite movies of all time, and I have no idea why everyone has been trying to make me (and the rest of the world) retroactively hate it by adapting Dirty Dancing into other shitty mediums: a TV series, a wretched stage show, now a TV movie. (Plus that stupid fucking sequel.) Can't we

This and Supergirl felt like the same finale, down to a female character coming out of nowhere to help save the day after hearing a man's anguish across galaxies.

If that were an option though, the studio probably would have already done it for ABC and/or Fox. The biggest hurdle is and always has been Tim Allen's salary, and you can't do the show without him. So it would have to be a network with money to burn, like Netflix.

Fox already passed, and I can't imagine a 7 year old show would be financially viable for the cable networks that air reruns (Hallmark, CMT), so I assume it's streaming or bust… likely bust.

Usually I call bullshit on actors saying "It's time to move on to new projects," assuming that means they weren't offered the raise they wanted or something similar during negotiations. But Morrison is one of the first whose reasons to leave made sense to me. She's been jamming in projects when she can, and not ones

The U4EA episode is a classic. I didn't pay attention to Melrose until the trashy/awesome CW reboot, so I may have to go back to it at some point.

Yeah, I watched a few scenes in the first half of this finale on mute. Tandy's blathering while Erica was in labor was painful to listen to after a few minutes, and it went on for the entire episode.

This is stupid considering how low its ratings were in those last couple seasons on Fox, but if it means less Dancing with the Stars, then I'm ok with it.

Oh, I know. I teach college freshmen, and next year I will be getting my first group of students born in the new century. I guess in this case because 90210 was such a huge part of my youth and adolescence, I forget how long ago that actually was.

Scott's death was a weirdly defining moment of my childhood. I remember being really sad but not understanding why. I was so young and hadn't lost anyone close to me yet, and I watched 90210 so often (I taped all the episodes for repeat viewings, because I was crazy) that it was like my first experience with death.

Anyone else here old enough to have actually watched BH90210? I was obsessed growing up, especially with Jason Priestley, but Farrah saying she was born in 1993 made me feel like a grandpa.

I know she knows that, that's why it was insane.