personally, I would've been ok if he disappeared for the whole episode, only to return with the fraternity de-pantsing at the very end. That, IMHO, would've worked out better.
personally, I would've been ok if he disappeared for the whole episode, only to return with the fraternity de-pantsing at the very end. That, IMHO, would've worked out better.
You fail to understand the kind of humor Chevy's into, which is pratfalls and physical awkwardness. To him, that's comedy gold, not all these dramatic moments and dignified character pieces.
Personally, I didn't like the Halloween episode as much as the others. I don't blame Ganz's writing though; it's mostly due to what I feel is substandard editing — at least, substandard for Community.
I can't agree more. It's got the same beats, the same jokes, but they seem devoid of proper set-up or context. Take the whole mansion-as-gameboard transitions. It's a reference to the transitions from Remedial Chaos Theory. In that episode's case though, it was established that they were playing yahtzee, and that the…
Actually, I like it about as much as I like the pilot episode. Which isn't saying much; I only got into Community after Troy and Abed's Spanish Class Rap.
Thanks to Kozmo and good girl for explaining the strange logic of why big corporations lock in to what the rest of the Internet knows as the most unsecure browser on the market.
Thanks to Kozmo and good girl for explaining the strange logic of why big corporations lock in to what the rest of the Internet knows as the most unsecure browser on the market.
She's working for a large corporation. Most of those have extremely restricted environments for security purposes; one such restriction could be limiting available browsers to Internet Explorer.
She's working for a large corporation. Most of those have extremely restricted environments for security purposes; one such restriction could be limiting available browsers to Internet Explorer.