thoseeyebrows--disqus
Those Eyebrows
thoseeyebrows--disqus

Don't forget the Blonde Redhead song during the big Evil Morty reveal at the end of "Close Rickcounters"!

And Chappelle's Tupac sketch, sort of.

In the series finale we'll learn that the real architect behind Leda and Castor was Johnny Gentle, Famous Crooner.

I like to look on the bright side and appreciate that at least they're not explicitly pretending it's not Canada.

I'm still cautiously optimistic that Colbert will find his groove soon enough.

"Priscilla must be freaking out now that Janey lost those glasses and that ponytail."

One of these guys you can find in da club, the other you want to beat with a club.

Well now I can't unhear that. Thanks for making this song slightly more bearable.

And Sanders is from Brooklyn.

True, but to be fair periodically releasing half-assed, obnoxiously patriotic books as a cheap cash-in is part of the right-wing pundit persona.

What's the yaaams?

So most other shows, then.

That Kickstarter had some of the best rewards ever. Wasn't one of the upper tier rewards the chance to impersonate the developers in an interview?

"What are you doing here."

At the very least I thought it was going to mark a tonal and structural shift in future episodes, since it explicitly identifies pretty much everything that's wrong with the show in its present state. But nope, all that introspection was undone and turned into a big punchline by the end of the next episode and it was

That's certainly true of BoJack, and definitely applies to aspects of some of the other newer crop of ambitious animated shows (like the diligent character work and slow-drip intricate worldbuilding of Gravity Falls and Rick and Morty, or the latter's emotionally charged pop music montages). I would consider earlier

True, though to be fair he does clarify later on that the real source of these shows' subversion is their use of specific genres and tropes which are justifiably considered "kids' stuff," not just the fact that they're animated alone.

Yeah, Kimmy Schmidt is really interesting in that it's more cartoonish than 30 Rock but also takes its characters way more seriously than 30 Rock ever did.

This newswire is getting me really stoked for a Laika-produced EarthBound movie that will never happen.

Arrested Development may have whiffed, but Wet Hot American Summer managed to get everyone back more or less seamlessly, and they had an even bigger and busier cast.