tommcallister--disqus
Tom McAllister
tommcallister--disqus

I realize that AV Club's podcast coverage is almost exclusively devoted to comedy podcasts, but consider this comment a vote for widening the coverage just a little bit next year - I'm sure many AV Club readers would be happy to be exposed to some new shows in different genres, especially because so many of the comedy

I don't understand the reviewer's thesis that the things lacking in most sports talk programs are yelling and superficial analysis.

I started downvoting your tiresome campaign for comment-voting justice.

These innacuracies are so egregious, it's almost laughable!

I enjoy Kroll dramatically more when he's not doing a character. Can't stand the baby voice and El Chupacabra is one of those characters that I think crosses the line from funny character work to Mad TV-style shouting.

For some people, including me, that's about 2 hours and 50 minutes too much.

I know I don't count as an answer to this, but I basically check in every week a) as a listener first, and b) in the vain hope that my own podcast (which I promise not to plug, but I know a few people have mentioned it in comments past) ends up in the "New to us" section.  As an aside, does that section not exist

Check the comments on last week's episode, which will confirm the value of a good publicist/marketing firm for pro athletes— even though Aaron Rodgers is one of the biggest, most recognizable stars in the biggest sport in this country, and his name WRITTEN ON A CARD IN FRONT OF HIM, a dozen people (or more) asked,

Yeah, O'neal says FNL is synonymous with small-town humility, and although that's probably true now, that's certainly not because of the book, which is really all about small-town ugliness. The people in Odessa largely hate Bissinger because they look awful in the book.

The sexuality doesn't make him a terrible human. He's just a well-documented raging asshole, and has been for decades, according to basically everyone who has ever met him. Even his friends can only bring themselves to say things as charitable as "well, at least with Buzz, you know where you stand."