roare
roare
roare

I think Frozen and Brave are about even in that they're both interesting and unique directions for animation with some obvious flaws. The fact that the former is held up as a huge renaissance while the latter is seen as a step back is confusing, to me.

Yeah, Brave is brushed off as light and weightless but I actually think it's one of Pixar's darkest films (and one of its flaws, I think, is that it didn't commit as fully to that darkness as it could have).

Don't get me wrong…Gliding Over All is fantastic and that was a great ending. But if I had to pick between a show that went with an epic cliffhanger to end its (half) season and a show that went with a musical number performed by a dead character, I'm going with the latter every time.

That's Conner O'Malley! He's pretty big in the NYC improv scene.

That was the Season 5 finale, but that was certainly the confirmed end. I think we pretty much knew the moment she left advertising that their marriage wasn't built to last, though.

Yeah, I actually think Betty got some interesting stuff in this half-season and I hope the show picks up on it next year.

I'd honestly say the Don/Megan marriage has been dead since Lady Lazarus. Once Don realized she was a real person and not the embodiment of his perfect wife, they were doomed.

Oh, I definitely agree. It was a Don moment through and through.

Reminded me of 30 Rock's "Well, it's been a tough day, but at least we're in Newark now."

Bert's musical number felt both like a perfect character moment and a "fuck you" to the whole split season concept. Perfect.

I'm not on board with the Mad Men backlash. This could end up as my favorite season if the second half is as strong as the first.

WHAT THE FUCK MAD MEN

I'm planning on finally catching up with Hannibal and The Americans. I'm also re watching the entirety of 30 Rock because hey, why the fuck not?

The trip to Disney World is pretty much required of ABC family sitcoms, and I thought this did a pretty good job of still making it seem grounded in the shows' reality.

The Hecks discovering their hotel room is definitely one of the shows' all-time best moments. There was such a down-to-earth joy about it that actually made me weirdly excited *for* them.

I applaud the intention, but an entire series set over one night in a bar is just too claustrophobic, I think. You have to have some really incredibly talent behind the scenes to make it work…and this show, obviously, did not.

I'm just glad that everyone will forget this show soon enough and "Mixology" can go back to referring to the great Community episode without any confusion.

I'm not saying I squealed when Pamela showed up but I'm not saying I didn't, either.

It's early but I think this season of Louie might honestly become my favorite season of the show if it keeps up at this pace. Something about it is just completely clicking for me right now.

Despite the vitriol below me I honestly didn't think this information was conveyed *that* clearly. I was confused as to who the fight was between after Jane and Louie's conversation and while I got that it was the teacher once she appeared, this *is* Louie and having a middle-aged woman play a student is totally in