This episode featured the fakest fake snow I have ever seen on TV or film.
This episode featured the fakest fake snow I have ever seen on TV or film.
I would like to petition the Shondaland government to extract Huck from the Scandal universe.
THAT WAS AMAZING!
I'm sure part of it is the accent, but whenever Kevin emotes it sounds like baby-talk. Fits his mindset, I guess.
Jocelyn was really funny this week.
Yeah, there are a lot of these, but you guys don't seem to realize how MUCH 'Stay With Me' and 'Won't Back Down' actually sound alike. I don't think any of these rip-offs/homages come close.
I agree, but there were innuendos with the "5 minutes and I'm coming in… but take your time" and "there are things worse than death". But I'm also happy they didn't actually go there.
Really happy about the new wig.
I think this was the single funniest episode of television I have ever seen.
Why mention "star Channing Tatum" but not star Mila Kunis, who seems like the protagonist in this?
I will! You've got one character who can't sit through a professional interview and another one who gets herself arrested for peeing in public in the middle of the day, plus whatever brutal honesty Hannah's been up to, and Marnie's the one deemed insufferable? She has anxiety about performance, perfection and…
I just don't get why Marnie is taking so much shit from everyone, including this reviewer. I find her to be the most realistic, most self-aware, and least irritating out of all four girls.
I'm finding this season boring (so far). I loved parts of the show last season (especially the stuff with Richie) but this time around I'm not sure what it has to say past the novelty of gay men behaving like gay men. Apart from Doris, who is hilarious but underused, Dom's mustache, and the slightly titillating sex…
I'm baffled that we were asked to sympathize with Elsa in these last scenes. I had a lot of affection for the similarly successful-in-her-old-days Lana Winters in season 2, but Elsa's horrific past or tortured realization that fame didn't bring her happiness didn't manage to make her a sympathetic protagonist — and…
While I think that there were clear issues with the stage-to-screen script, the 3rd act's muddiness also came off as something that was completely retooled in the editing room. I don't know how much of it was really Lupine or Marshall and not just Disney execs irrationally trying to find a middle-ground ending.
Fair enough; public radio is public radio.
Serial is not produced by NPR, and neither is This American Life, which is produced by PRI.
They have a similarly magnetic aura though, especially when they play women who are trapped and unhappy (see: most of their roles).
He was. From what I've seen discussed (but based on public records I have not looked up myself, I concede) his father and brother were involved in more serious criminal activity - drugs, weapons, theft, violence and assault.
Oddly perhaps, "the simplest and most likely explanation" to me is that he's not guilty at all. Jay's story is stuffed with lies and inconsistencies and if you discount his accusations there's really nothing incriminating about Adnan's day or his recollection of that day as a normal school day. The prosecution's angle…