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Robbieml
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And General Hospital, and Two and a Half Men, and some movies.

Brilliantly said. Cersei is literally the proverbial pigeon chess .

Yes, Lyanna means Robert can't find out about the baby or he'll kill him - with his hatred for anything Targaryen and all.

Excellent answers! One that comes to mind (sorry if it's already been mentioned somewhere in the - so far - 2237 comments):
Raul Julia as Gomez Addams and Anjelica Huston as Morticia.

I think I'll never get over the episode when Dave played hymns at Mrs. Kim's. He and Lane were all kinds of perfect together.

APRIL?! Why April?! GOD.

Besides everything else being said here, you don't have to be American to be able to comment on American politicians. Or American anything. All you gotta do is inform yourself as much as possible on the topic.
I'm a Medieval English Lit. professor. I got a phD on it, but I'm neither English nor medieval. Am I NOT

That Brad cameo caught me completely off guard, it was amazing. I squealed a "YOU DIDN'T!" in such a high pitch only dogs could hear me.

She's… NOT in the Goldbergs. Like, very much not. She never has been.
Are you thinking of Erica's actress, Hayley Orrantia?

"The Thoroughly Messed Up Millies". GOD that was great.

YES, very true; my mind is going to modern day rom-coms, which is totally making me undersell the entire genre (I have very little patience for the rom-coms we have nowadays).
I may also be trying to get very technical, when in fact, finding ONE label for great stories (such as all of Austen's) is impossible, not to

I agree, there are many comedic parts; however, those are not the core of the story. "Having comedic bits" is very different, I think, from "being a comedy". A "comedy of manners"? Sure, most definitely, specially in the book. But I wouldn't say it's a "comedy".
A rom-com is, I believe, primarily a comedy about a

Well, to be honest, I was thinking that while the "rom" part is quite predominant in Sense&Sensib., there is no "com" whatsoever. While there are amusing moments, neither the movie nor the book it's based on set out to be a comedy in any way.
If anything, other than a romance, I'd say it's a period drama.

But Sense&Sensibility is hardly a rom-com.

But isn't what makes a movie a "comedy" different from what makes a movie a "romantic comedy"?
I completely agree, it's definitely not a comedy. But I'd say it's a rom-com alright. You can also make a strong case for it being a romance instead of a rom-com.

But is it a rom-com? I'd label it a few other genres before "rom-com" even crossed my mind.

And Bernadette continues being as awful to Howard as ever. The only reason she was slightly less horrible this episode was because she didn't get much screen time.

I'm checking it out now, and I'm already deeply disturbed just reading her measurements on her profile. 5'7" and 42 kgs (92 lb)????
Also: "Tipe of entity: The European". What… what does that even… what?!

I think you can in Europe.

She lives in Canada now?!