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Stephen Miller
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Unnecessary story time

When I saw the title, I asked my girlfriend "What episode of TV would you put on this list?" Without missing a beat she said "The Office: Scott's Tots." Apparently this one has traumatized many people.

I tend to agree with you, which is why I always avoid the mocking route. At the same time, I do see that there are multiple reasons to speak out about something: sometimes it's about standing in solidarity with the oppressed over the oppressor, and more about making a statement than winning converts. In those cases I

I love to see a positive(ish) response from a person of faith towards different sexualities. I am no longer a religious person, but for the first 16 years of my life I probably could have beaten Cameron in any "obsessed with faith" contest: church was my primary social life, I argued on the internet against evolution

I watched it sleep-deprived on a plane, and the soundtrack alone made me tear up. Haters can hate, I suppose.

So far the only thing I've read in the comments section have been tirades against people writing (still unseen) hateful comments. Is this some bizarre social experiment, like watching the same movie 52 times?

I loved the HIMYM ending (in concept at least, if not quite in execution), and agree that it's much ballsier than the sort of finale we've grown used to.

I'm excited for the Patricia Arquette spin-off, Before Menopause

He's going to tie this in with Boyz n the Hood, right?

With that said: giving the show a proper sendoff, and honoring Harris in particular, is going to be wonderful. I'll be bawling my eyes out.

I have tons of love for P&R, but I'm honestly a little surprised how head-over-heels everyone seems to be for this season. It has plenty of warm-and-fuzzy appeal, but I have to admit, when I watch it I tend to see the show's pitfalls on display almost in higher gear than usual: the ultra tidy endings, the diminishing

Having seen Saving Christmas, I can safely say that the moral, while totally stupid, wasn't nearly as harmful as AV Club reports have indicated. It was basically an "Everything is sacred if you view it with the right perspective" fluff piece.

Having seen all the Best Actor nominees, I felt Redmayne earned it through sheer technical skill (and that absolutely nothing else about the film should have been nominated). Though Keaton would have been a fun comeback story.

I've got very little to complain about. They gave my pet favorites (Whiplash and Grand Budapest Hotel) way more than I expected, and the big winner (Birdman) was a movie I loved. Aside from NPH's terrible Oscar Predictions bit, I can't think of a single thing that made me want to yell at the screen. What more could we

I'm gonna assume this is a joke?

I just teared up laughing at the idea of "Peanu Keeyes" while listening to "Someone Great" by LCD Soundsystem, so yeah, today is a weird day.

That conversation about how "we have our special people, and they can't die" is what did me in

I'd like to encourage everyone to not relisten to his You Made It Weird episode quite yet. I got a half hour in and had to shut it off, it's too fucking soon.

I won't speak for or against whoever wrote this, but I found Big Hero 6 to be far, far better than HTTYD 2. And I loved the original more than I love most people.

For what it's worth, I found the final scene to be hugely distasteful, and I am not the "kind of [person] that find[s] literally everything offensive." With the exception of some writers at Salon.com, I think far fewer of those people exist than comments sections seem to believe.