sundaynightaddict--disqus
sundaynightaddict
sundaynightaddict--disqus

Yeah, even though she didn't release the *really* damning stuff, there was enough in there to create a whole lotta major scandals.

I loved that it was one of the rare moments we see of her being human. For once she seemed like she felt genuinely privileged to serve the people. Few people can be 100% horrible 100% of the time - I was starting to think Selina was one of them.

Glad I'm not the only one. Took me a second to laugh at it because at first I thought it was literal not figurative.

For me, he's so much funnier than T.J. Miller, who seems to get the loudest buzz.

I thought the first 10 minutes of the episode, with Richard desperately trying to turn engineering-speak into regular folk-speak, was one of the funniest things I've seen on this show. And watching them spend all that money on fruitless efforts had me screaming about the fact that they just should have hired a UX

I'm really hoping that last year's Emmy nod for the largely ignored Bloodline will translate into one for Kyle Chandler this year. He's just so fucking good.

The joke about the band being named "Spotsylvania" in the commercial almost makes me want to watch it.

I can't decide if I love the fact that the actor playing Nolan is perfectly channeling Ben Mendelsohn's simmering menace or hate the fact that they are having him act as a carbon copy when he admittedly didn't spend that much time with his dad growing up.

The double space after a period debate is painfully familiar to me. I am 40 and learned typing on a typewriter in school. The double space was so firmly embedded in my psyche that it has taken me about 5 years to completely obliterate it from my writing when I realized that *not* doing it was a thing. Nobody told me

If you had been privy to the conversation I had with my mother about how to tweet, it would never get old for you. Just hilariously painful over and over again.

As somebody who edits content for a professional services company, I find that painfully accurate.

I'm surprised at how compulsively watchable Nick is. I was expecting to hate his character, but he's easily the most interesting right now.

It depends on whether you can tolerate vapid entertainment rather than just objectively good shows (I can) and how much time you have on your hands (I have a lot).

I feel very confused by the timeline on this show. Maybe somebody mentioned it off-hand, but I feel like I have no idea how much time they were corralled in their neighborhood and how much time has passed since the beginning of the outbreak.

I definitely got the impression that she was just trying to play him to create an opening for something to happen.

I have a hard time seeing her play a teenager now.

Not to mention the STELLAR illustration of Ray on the side of the truck as he's driving/singing. I was screaming with glee.

Even once I understood what was happening, I was confused by the pregnancy timeline. She already knew she was pregnant when she got on the boat with Jamie. Then they have whatever adventures they have in France (which would presumably last at least a few months or more, I would think) and she's still not showing at

Agreed. Not to mention the strong hereditary component.

While I really dislike CGJ's portrayal overall, I did enjoy the scene where he goes bonkers about how Mark Fuhrman framed him and Schwimmer just looks flabbergasted (as did I, sitting watching it).