schroobschroob
schroob
schroobschroob

Ahh, the Seventies: when you could leave your kids in a restaurant and the police/DCFS weren't called….

Everyone in Brooklyn?

I def missed his show, but I hope the topics and discussion get meatier. Christine O'Donnell was a tame choice even in comparison to modern political gaffes (and nothing in comparison to historical scandals).

I think it's the assumption because only Albert and his wife had the photos and Albert flipped out on her. It could be the wife, though.

An anthropomorphic crime fighting dog, no less.

Bev's potty mouth always makes me happy. Plus, Super Immigrant Plumbers.

I'll admit it: I sneak food into movies. Mostly because the incredibly overpriced junk they have tastes like wax. #getoffmylawn

Don't get me wrong, I'm not dissing Frank Stallone. But that reference was more of an 80s reference than a 90s reference (I think the song they played was from Staying Alive which is totally 80s).

Delia's dress was too much like Madonna's MTV Awards "Like a Virgin" performance dress.

I don't think she'd want to go, but Gordon could blackmail her with threatening to expose her affair (to say nothing about her hooking up with Gordon while he was her client and married). Or there could be a bribe (where she could take the money to start her own firm, which might be necessary if she gets the heave-ho

I think they're illustrating the instant celebrity of the people in the story. Take away the modern context, and it's four kids who grew up on the fringes of fame; they see their stepdad selling Thighmasters, they have friends who have famous parents, but they don't know what it is to live in the eye of the storm.

Or there's the Jerky Boys…

Does anyone else find the "look of the night" promos a little bit disconcerting? I remember last week Delia and Abby has their emotionally charged fight, which was followed by the segue into that hyper-upbeat promo. This week it was Delia's cold silence.

Those black shoes were a problem.

I thought the all white theme was a nod to Delia's honeybadger attitude toward wedding traditions. And finally her realization that she felt so out of control that she rebelled in subtle and not so subtle ways.

Barnard Stark and Tad Cooper need their own buddy comedy show.

Boy, did you call that one!

Flashing back to my comment last week, Delia gets the top bunk. But only because Abby may be hiding under the bed.

Cutthroat Bitch!!!!!!!!! (there can never be too many blonde bitches on TV)

There's no way Eddie was playing Frank Stallone…no way! Now Michael Bolton I would've believed.