ruckcohlchez--disqus
Ruck Cohlchez ?
ruckcohlchez--disqus

There's a reason for the phrase "as dumb as an actor."

There's a reason for the phrase "as dumb as an actor."

And yet, in the 1920s and 1930s, we were somewhat amenable to the fascists because they were anti-communist.

Sad!

I think the actual ending was the right choice; the film would have been a little too devastating with the alternate ending, and the mere suggestion of it with the cop car arriving got the appropriate reaction from the audience.

Oh, man, I forgot that was him. I mostly think of him as Suzanne McNeil's divorce lawyer, and occasionally as that young doctor on Masters of Sex.

But "Practice Date" came before "Greg Pikitis."

The Good Place and Superstore both are quite good.

Ronnie Gardocki!

I thought it worked fine in The Office, if a little contrived, even though they were pretty blatantly paring down the new arrivals steadily and immediately.

No; the review got to some of the reasons why in that the whole plot was something that should have been averted from the get-go, as the ending really underlined. And the plots were a little too on the Wacky Sitcom Hijinks side for me, particularly Jake and Amy's. Gina was great, though.

Click on the word "Detroiters".

Never know the best place to post this, but here's your Detroiters recap.

I dunno, it sounds like you're excusing what Chuck does because at some point in the future and following some causal chain we have no knowledge of, Jimmy will do bad things.

It's not that Chuck doesn't want Jimmy to succeed. Chuck wants Jimmy to succeed, but only if he can do so with scrupulous honesty and bootstrapping hard work.

You're using future actions to justify Chuck's behavior, which I don't think is fair.

I'm pretty much in agreement with you. Both as a person who's never had much use for the rules and one who's had a rough relationship with an older brother (it's much better now, thank Christ). I just think the how and why of your behavior toward others is important. Chuck treats everyone as beneath him and treats

Someone else used the Jean Valjean - Inspector Javert comparison and it makes a lot of sense.

That's exactly what I thought of too.