spacelizards--disqus
spacelizards
spacelizards--disqus

Props to The AV Club's film writers for finally giving white, male American filmmakers their due.

Pokemon Red. I had a copy of it in elementary school, having been given someone's old Gameboy and that game. I was just about to fight the Elite Four when I left my backpack somewhere. I got it back the next day…but my Gameboy had been taken.

Pokemon Red. I had a copy of it in elementary school, having been given someone's old Gameboy and that game. I was just about to fight the Elite Four when I left my backpack somewhere. I got it back the next day…but my Gameboy had been taken.

So even if actual gameplay isn't dated, or the story, or the graphical design, a whole generation of thousands of games should be ignored JUST because they were made on systems not as powerful as current ones and had low resolution graphics?

So even if actual gameplay isn't dated, or the story, or the graphical design, a whole generation of thousands of games should be ignored JUST because they were made on systems not as powerful as current ones and had low resolution graphics?

It's more popular, but is hardly discussed online and has no Emmy traction. So it's caught on with its viewers but is a non-entity pop culturally, sadly.

It's more popular, but is hardly discussed online and has no Emmy traction. So it's caught on with its viewers but is a non-entity pop culturally, sadly.

Parks is the only veteran comedy on NBC with any chance of getting another season, but I agree it's likely to end this year.

Parks is the only veteran comedy on NBC with any chance of getting another season, but I agree it's likely to end this year.

Does every story need a ending to work? Serialized television is building to something, but not necessarily a ending. It builds the universe, the characters, a running story. Many great shows were cancelled before they had a ending - should we not watch those shows either, out of fear of lack of closure? In the case

Does every story need a ending to work? Serialized television is building to something, but not necessarily a ending. It builds the universe, the characters, a running story. Many great shows were cancelled before they had a ending - should we not watch those shows either, out of fear of lack of closure? In the case

I'm not exactly proud to admit I laughed at this episode. Multiple times, and I can't tell why. Maybe it's so silly and dumb and illogical it loops around and becomes moderately funny. Still, I am so not proud of laughing at a show this bad.

I'm not exactly proud to admit I laughed at this episode. Multiple times, and I can't tell why. Maybe it's so silly and dumb and illogical it loops around and becomes moderately funny. Still, I am so not proud of laughing at a show this bad.

Suggestion: just call them all Lando.

Suggestion: just call them all Lando.

Whenever I watched The Clone Wars, early in its run, it was awful. Ugly animation and "here's the moral of the story!" storytelling doesn't work when the moral is being given by Anakin "Darth Vader" Skywalker, future murderer of Younglings and current murderer of Sand People. Also a moral paragon!

Whenever I watched The Clone Wars, early in its run, it was awful. Ugly animation and "here's the moral of the story!" storytelling doesn't work when the moral is being given by Anakin "Darth Vader" Skywalker, future murderer of Younglings and current murderer of Sand People. Also a moral paragon!

Yes, multi-cam, live audience sitcoms all suffer from that format. That's why Seinfeld, NewsRadio, Friends, Cheers, Newhart, Frasier, All in the Family, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, and The Dick van Dyke Show were all so horrible.

Yes, multi-cam, live audience sitcoms all suffer from that format. That's why Seinfeld, NewsRadio, Friends, Cheers, Newhart, Frasier, All in the Family, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, and The Dick van Dyke Show were all so horrible.

Yeah, I saw those episodes of Press Your Luck on GSN and I think that's what they should cover. It's such a great story, and actually WATCHING it and seeing their reactions.