tonywatchestv
Bart, That's A Bran Muffin
tonywatchestv

Somewhat existential question: Is feeling like you're not in immediately dangerous cold water not an asset?

UNsinkable means INsinkable? What a country!

"Why Cloris, you'll never be over the hill, not in the car you drive!"

Good read! Since you welcomed questions, could you touch on the tales of men pretending to be women to get onto the lifeboats? I'm of the understanding that this has no actual historical record, but that various male survivors were ostracized upon return and accused of doing such, and that's where the myth was born.

To be fair to Netflix, how do they successfully market an 'off-Broadway one-man show' to a wide audience? Minhaj is a correspondent on The Daily Show - a comedy - and produced a performance that was largely very funny. As a Netflix exec, I'd have done the same, and as someone who'd never heard of this guy before, I'm

Funny enough, my first encounter with Louis C.K. was that famous "Everything's amazing and nobody's happy" bit on Conan. I honestly just thought he was a very funny anthropologist/author with a new book.

What a bunch of clowns.

If not, then they're about to find out just how hard not quoting a South Park reference really is.

Sorry, reading that back, I was a lot more heavy-handed in my conversation than I meant to be. I see what you're saying, and meant no argument in my response.

I had always heard that the decision to split it into two movies was strictly a studio call to double the profits. I seem to remember Roger Ebert taking issue with this, but can't seem to find it, or at least look that hard for it. In any case, that's a much better reason.

I've always felt making Lotso into a cookie-cutter villain was an interruption to the series' climax. He had been given as sad a back-story as any of the other toys. Having Woody take his hand at the end in the furnace scene would have solidified the spirit of the story, and with Andy later pausing and improvising an

I'm just not sure what you're going for. Toy Story 3 was made a decade-plus of the previous installment, and was essentially made for (and about) adults who were once kids. Maybe the word 'traumatizing' is just misused?

The 'kids' who grew up with Toy Story 3 were the adults who watched it as kids, and nothing traumatizing there.

Spectra

Fair enough.

I've always been on the fence with Nick Kroll in comedic terms, but always respected the odd directions his show went in. I liked his Degrassi spinoff, and as a Canadian, always appreciate a caricature that's actually funny ("Our milk comes in bags!"). Aside from Kevin Smith, I'm curious how many 30ish Americans are

WHAT GETS WET TO KEEP YOU DRY, BATMAN??

I'll remember Adam West as that guy in 20th-century history who probably had the best sense of humour about himself.

Wow. Ew.

I get that, but this is the *only* site on the internet in which I value the comment section., and I'm far from alone. Is that not a standing ground for people with say-so so creative?