The recent imporov4humans with Jason Mantzoukas, Jessica St. Clair, and Lennon Parhm was the highlight of my existence.
The recent imporov4humans with Jason Mantzoukas, Jessica St. Clair, and Lennon Parhm was the highlight of my existence.
NOOOOO! DON'T GO! ANYONE BUT @SweeneyEmeritus:disqus, TAKE ME INSTEAD!
Haha you're right. The lies and smarmy ways Lester uses weasel his way out of every situation echos Walter.
Not since Breaking Bad has a show filled me with a combination of dread and uncertainty and had my heart racing as much as this did. Wow. Fantastic television.
Silicon Valley- Signaling Risk
Fargo- Eating the Blame (I reserve the right to change this if tonights episode is great)
Parks and Recreation- Moving Up
Why, thats a novel idea.
I don't think she was looking for anything in particular. She was just checking out his house for anything suspicious, saw the washing machine was moved and investigated it. But that was where Lester previously hid his murder weapon.
The end is nigh. Repent of your sins.
Stop trying to win us over Disqus, you're still awful.
That hurt my soul. The Rashida Jones thing has potential though, if they fully commit to the wackiness.
I'm a cynical bastard, but yeah, that looks like silly fun.
But Todd has statistical evidence these are universally beloved!
Smells like⦠freedom.
Malvo was downright gleeful in recounting the rottweiler story. He's just a barrel of fun that guy.
Gus's talk with his neighbor was reminiscent of the dentist story scene with the rabbi in "A Serious Man".
Sort of relevant: She said "fuck" uncensored on FX. I didn't even notice until someone pointed it out afterward. Kind of cool.
These fan campaigns are getting more ridiculous by the hour. I want Community back exclusively on the Sega Dreamcast!
Season 5 and 6 had their share of problems, but they were still enjoyable. There were no huge mistakes that was seen in later seasons of The Office for example. The show, like most sitcoms, just became too familiar. They seem to realize this and I have no reason to believe they won't stick the landing.
Every premise of every comedy NBC puts out these days looks like they could barely sustain a 90 minute movie let alone a tv series.