There's a few mentions of the period of perpetual night, so I'm wondering if some really long nights or long days might be used intentionally to keep the timeline confusing.
There's a few mentions of the period of perpetual night, so I'm wondering if some really long nights or long days might be used intentionally to keep the timeline confusing.
Part of me wants the show to take a supernatural and weird turn, but another part wants it to remain a dark murder mystery. I feel like the music and the atmosphere really work either way.
The alcohol problem is definitely still present since he had to try to sober up once he found the body. I'm struggling to gauge the age difference, but part of me is wondering if he's her father.
I'm fairly new to football, but I used to always forget whether D'Brickishaw was a real player or one that was made up for the original sketch.
"They're gonna die!"
But slapping was her way of expressing her crush on the lead from Boys 4 Now…
I loved Holt's satisfaction with changing Wunch's autocorrect to "butt". Also, his pronouncing of sauced.
The scene with the musical number put a lot of emphasis on Bob's butt.
Chris Parnell's 0-100mph zaniness after Jake caught him with the cocaine seemed really weird. I've never known coke to suddenly make you unable to stop blurting out incriminating statements.
To be fair, Elon Musk always sounds like he'd rather be somewhere else.
I find I encounter a lot of people who aren't aware that it was a stunt and are surprised to find out he's still acting. If all you watch is big budget movies, then it really might as well have been real.
It's a can of worms I hate opening up, but Loose Change also comes to mind…
Or we could have Tim Horton's on our money and subsidize our currency through advertising deals…
We haven't yet used the image of people curling. It would mesh well with the dudes playing hockey on our fives.
I may be going to far with this one, but I'd almost call Michael Moore the left's equivalent to Ann Coulter. They both say shit that they clearly don't actually believe because they know it will get the other side riled up and draw plenty of attention.
Kumail Nanjiani?
It was a while back, so I may be remembering it incorrectly, but didn't Hank watch with glee when they sent their clone slugs to fight the Monarch's henchmen way back when? I remember Dean didn't take it well, but I thought Hank was loving it.
I figured that JJ's dealings with the investors was going to factor into the inheritance that Rusty gets in the epilogue. Pretty sure JJ's dead though.
I read the whole ending as a bit of a hard reset on the Venture Bros mythology. After all, they stuck to henchman 24 staying dead all this time, I don't see why they'd make JJ or Sovereign a special case.
I feel like if they didn't feel the need to show Joe falling over and the kids' reactions to it before AND after the commercial break, they might have had time to show some of the other kids.