Bring the guns out. BRING THE GUNS OUT.
Bring the guns out. BRING THE GUNS OUT.
Also "if Penny had all her crazy but none of her redeeming charm". Annie was such a terrible person.
Casey Wilson got a lot of press for Gone Girl, but that's not really "starring"…
Futurama Syndrome: "What comes out of the ground, ain't the thing you put in. Sometimes…dead is better." (by way of Pet Semetary, by way of South Park)
*whisper* Junior…
Twirl with me! Woooo!
They're enablers!
This episode was a weird mix for me. I generally can't stand it when there's a single straight man and everyone else is working so damn hard to make his life so hard for no reason (much like Christmas in the Car). It just feels contrived to take characters who are zany, but not stupid and then turn the dial way up on…
No worries. I got it. Until I thought more about what Louise might have meant, I'll admit that her claiming that she never gets scared pinged false in my head when she first says it.
The season premiere of FG had a subplot where Quagmire gets a local cooking show, but only because of Peter's crazy antics, and not because of Quagmire's cooking abilities. Eventually, Peter getting more attention causes a rift between them, and Peter gets his own cooking show centered around his antics, which proves…
Dragon*Con had a vendor selling BB shirts and one was of Tina saying "Your lips say no, but your butt says yes." I wanted it, but also wondered if it could be taken all sorts of bad ways out of context. Oh, Tina… :|
But, importantly, not mean-spirited toward one another. It's both nice and terribly sad that Bob's Burgers is a standout animated sitcom family where the jokes aren't derived from how much everyone hates one another. Given, that's not always awful. Rick and Morty comes to mind as one animated sitcom dripping with the…
I'm pretty much on the "Louise wants to finally be scared for fun, not that she's never been scared in real life" band wagon (good argument, everyone), but I'd be remiss if I didn't point out that one of the first examples of her being actually scared by something was in the first season's "Weekend at Mort's": After…
No. Comparing the two from Boyz4Now and Hauntening, they look to be drawn the same. I think it was just Linda making an incorrect comment and being convinced she was right in that way that people sometimes do. Maybe it was more of a riff on how parents misunderstand pop culture to the annoyance of their kids (re: Tina…
Don't forget "Weekend at Mort's". Louise was scared enough to almost send Bob to a fiery death.
I still laugh at that.
Based only on these reviews, I've been really holding my breath for Angel. If I didn't have some hint from these write ups that he's apparently REALLY important, I would have no clue why on earth he's featured so prominently to the point that Gus thinks this is a way better use of his time than, you know, using his…
It seems pretty spot on since they introduced the plot points of Stoneheart and the near total shutdown/circumvention of government ability to address the crisis. In fact, Palmer's entire scheme with the safehouses/foodbanks and his speech are pretty neoliberal. Meanwhile, Feraldo's plot with the martial law retakings…
And I thought we established that vamps sleep and nest during the day to the point of being stupidly inert while Fet was standing next to them in the spa (and the whole reason why the pathogen couldn't take effect immediately and they had to follow the damn thing to the psychiatric hospital and wait), but then…
I thought the same thing. Total Plot Aim. Fet even has time to spout a quip while aiming at a standing target and misses, despite episodes of straight kills.