steinjodie
Jodie
steinjodie

100 percent agree.  Fuck his politics but this is grade school.

Queued up before the cull. The intent was indeed to leave out of solidarity, so you can imagine my frustration when it got bumped to a run date that was after everyone else from the old guard had already left the building. That said, I must admit that I was pleasantly surprised to see that the piece ended up being

It’s “funny and relatable” that losing office supplies leads to felony arson? Man, The AV Club office must be some cutthroat scene.

These guys also gave us How To Train Your Dragon!

His gangster on Life (which I liked a lot) was one of his scariest roles. 

eh, that’s a little harsh. She was a host of the oscars and a fellow stand up comedian. I think she has a dog in this. 

Look after yourself and each other. It was tough times out there even before COVID.  

It’d be cool if these season/series pre-air reviews would like... mention WHEN the thing being reviewed airs. But they never seem to. Certainly not prominently.

So a teenage girl suddenly turning into a red monster is a metaphor for menstruation, right?

oh my god, the CYE set must be insufferable

What’s your go-to sick day/comfort movie?  

There’s also no other side to consider when it comes to shit that’s just pure evil. Hitler was just pure fucking evil. The Holocaust was just pure fucking evil. Slavery was just pure fucking evil. I could go on, but I think people get the point.

Braugher’s been cruelly robbed of an Emmy (and every other possible award) for seven years running and I don’t expect that to change, but man he is really going out on top, isn’t he.

Am I the only person who still really doesn’t like Doug Judy. He’s my second least favourite character after Gina and it’s in large parts precisely for the reason that makes up the lesson of the latter episode here, both are shitty people who constantly do horrendous things (Gina has her “friends” drink cement for

Billy Wilder not only had “Nobody’s perfect,” but also “Shut up and deal.” and “Mr. DeMille, I’m ready for my close-up.” That man truly knew how to write an enduring last line.

Now playing

Sometimes the obvious answers are obvious for a good reason.

The first episode is based on an incident from last year where a couple of NYPD officers faked being poisoned by Shake Shack, potentially putting the store and its employees in danger, in an effort to perpetuate a narrative that cops were under attack and were, you know, the real victims in society.

Jury’s still out on whether “I was their number one son... but they treated me like number two” is the best or worst line in the movie.”