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Don't worry. The Flash is bringing out its big guns this week with Captain Cold.

It can't be the real Batman. Batman does not eat nachos (or was it Batman does naughty nutshows).

Any word if the the film has a scene where Michael Keaton beats the crap out of Wesley Wills?

How to Cook Forty Humans

(pencil down pants) Bull's eye.

Definitely caught the donut-torture machine in the background in the first segment.

Definitely agree with "The Others". The episode could have done more than just "let's have the current day Simpsons end up dying and joining the Ullman-era Simpsons in limbo".

For those not familiar with anime, here's the titles that each character is referencing:

While I could see the episode getting a somewhat higher letter grade, I can understand the reason why it only got a C+, as the quality of the episode is mixed.

I believe that the bit with the trans woman is meant to be a this episode's equivalent to the infamous "shark rape" scene from Crippled Summer as well as Trey and Matt spoofing an incident involving the Uber service over the weekend.

That incident was somewhat on my mind when it came to the scene where Nathan's attempt to bring Handicar down by trying to sexually harass a customer instead led to him getting raped again.

They've been spoofing TV ads well before this episode, as Dead Celebrities has numerous nods to the ads that Billy Mays used to do and Mysterion Rises had a great spoof of the LeBron James "Rise" Nike ad.

Don't forget that one episode that is basically Trey and Matt wangsting over The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and comparing what Lucas and Spielberg did to Indiana Jones to rape. A major "UGH!" moment right there.

Checking the article on the Variety site, a number of people there have questioned whether this is legit or not, especially given how the article lacked any sources for their news (not to mention there's still the ordeal with the Infinity Gems and Thanos).

I could also see the continuity aspect as Trey and Matt realizing that the "six days to air" routine of writing episodes is losing a lot of its magic and that by setting up something that could be utilized for the plot in the next episode, they can put effort into writing something funny (as seen when a simple joke

Have to agree here.

Given how witnesses to the Six Flag altercation had heard some of the attackers shout "purge" and the rumors that the altercation was planned ahead of time (especially if you look up the term "Six Flags Purge" on the Twitter), I have a feeling that The Purge films played some sort of role in terms of the altercation's

Wouldn't that pretty much contradict the whole "no rules" concept of The Purge (not to mention it's pretty much those who should be the real targets of some Purgers creating bull crap just to save their own asses).

Really, Universal? Green-lighting a third Purge movie this quickly after the incident at Six Flags America a couple of weekends ago that was pretty much inspired by these films (not to mention the fact that the incident was organized by teens who shouldn't be watching this film in the first place)?

Either that or have the third one be about a lawmaker who decides to take advantage of The Purge to hold the New Founding Fathers version of Congress hostage (with some help from people who have been victimized by the annual event) in order to get them to see what's wrong with it in order put an end to it.