ramblerdan--disqus
ramblerdan
ramblerdan--disqus

The sudden turn seemed nutty to me. I know people get mean when they're hurt, but they had written Heidi as being so nice, and then she just smacked Gus away. Maybe it's ordinary assholery, but I think the character didn't deserve that the writers just wanted an easy way to get rid of her (and leave Gus thinking about…

He didn't suggest it. See 11:55. Susan Cheryl (director) names Elise, then the writer to her left says, "I'm very excited about killing Elise." In his usual tepid way, Gus stands up for Heidi by saying, "I don't know if that's, like, the number one idea." Then he completely folds, of course.

The writers really shat on Heidi's character at the end. Was it necessary to suddenly make her into a nutjob to somehow take the onus off Gus?

Good point. I keep asking myself, "Would I put up with Mickey's shit if she didn't look like Gillian Jacobs?"

And really shits on them.

That bit in the restaurant was really nice. Thanks for the reminder, BF.

I thought Sasso's character was a dick. He knew who ordered the wine and who ordered the sea breeze, yet made a point of pissing on Rust's character with his "and a sea breeze for the lady" crack.

Two years after the fact, I just watched this episode and finally get your avatar, ScottyEnn—and enjoy it even more.

Liked for "basically a human version of a sunny day," a very apt description of S1 Jemma Simmons.

Good thing you're not a Ted Nugent fan.

Off topic, but thank you Asinus for saying "myriad reasons" and not "a myriad of reasons." Sanity secure for another hour!

"Blimp"? I haven't seen the movie yet, but I think you mean "Zeppelin."

Beat me to it by seconds!

Jacobs' character eats a lonely plate of spaghetti near the end of the episode. "Night spaghetti" isn't a phrase I had heard of before, so it's a little weird to just drop it in the sentence like that.

That's AGENT McBland to you, bub.

He's not watching the right porn, then.

Or Barry could have asked. He's a smart guy who hangs out with scientists, but it's still possible he would need an explanation of a singularity. But Joe, had he been in the scene, would have been a better choice.

Hm. As a Star Trek nerd, I assume everyone in the world is familiar with singularties.

> And I really need to start on Broad City
You won't be sorry.

Cookie misspell "cromulent."