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Perhaps my favourite Peggy scene, and also I love that Roger keeps getting gouged due to carrying obscene amounts of money on him.

Mightn't Mr Jon Hamm have a say w/r/t "consistently puts out the best performance on Mad Men (and arguably television)"? Not to suggest that you are unquestionably wrong, or to proclaim that I am unquestionably correct. I only wish to present my gentle counter offer.

Why do so many critics - and, indeed, commentators - insist on asserting that Peggy is "surpassing" Don, or has? Two things you can usually count on in a review or comment section: Weiner is accused of being a bit too "on the nose," and there is a reference to how Peggy is surpassing or has surpassed Don (and

I didn't really think Uncle Jack worked as a villain. They introduced a cardboard Neo-Nazi because he and his gang were the only ones you could imagine providing the viewer with sympathy for Walter. [Spoiler, I suppose]: in the end, he wasn't even formidable. I have felt significantly more tension this season for Don

But it's good mood food, which is obviously a great and not at all grating ad campaign!

At least they've dropped that Slate nonsense of "What did you think about [event A], Todd?"

I assumed it had something to do with the computer-guy-as-Satan business, and the themes of temptation.

I would say they stumbled into Mad Men and Breaking Bad because no one else wanted them and they were desperate to get into original programming. They have been blowing it now that they have to actually evaluate between different projects.

I imagine that he will begin ordering veal more frequently.

Joan is bought off with a new office, and Peggy with a raise - Dick Whitman is back in the whorehouse, and just like the first time nobody loves him.

I've only ever been compared to Christian Shepherd.

This isn't anybody's Sherlock Holmes.

I quite agree.

Perhaps if he had spent less time naming children after comic book characters and so forth the IRS would have been more forgiving.

Yes, he's not incapable of it, but that is an anomaly rather than a standard. He would prefer to do Marvel/"Sherlock Holmes" or road trips, I suppose. But the man should enjoy his comeback.

I must respectfully disagree with your disagreement. In these films, Sherlock Holmes spends his time jumping out of exploding buildings, jumping off of moving trains, and dodging cannon fire. He dresses up like a woman. He engages in street fights with people that make him look like Jason Bourne, fancily disposing of

Robert Downey Jr is a curious inclusion in this article, I think. 1) He plays RDJ in every movie, including those farcical "Sherlock Holmes" affairs, to which I apply quotation marks to indicate that they are by no measure films about or featuring or representative of Sherlock Holmes; 2) He hasn't just suffered two

"Civil rights is the beginning of a slippery slope."

That may be true, but even when applying these meta constructs to their episodes, I think it should still work as an episode of Community. It should feature the characters behaving in ways that are consistent with the rest of the show, which was largely the issue with season four - that and season four wasn't funny.

I'm baffled by the positive response. The episode seemed like a hyper Community in the season four vein. Exhibit A: Abed's behavior during the announcement that they had possibly found buried treasure. B: The Jeff and Britta marriage proposal scene. C: Most of the scenes.