tristiac
Tristiac
tristiac

Yes! I can't believe Todd glossed over this. How can an episode called Advanced Gay be that regressive? I mean if I would be embarrassed to show that episode to my gay friends then there is a problem. And I would be.
Maybe I'm just disappointed because I expect so much more from the show but those caricatures weren't

That movie was written by my friend's dad, and I always sort of wanted to ask him about it but never did. Anyway I never really had any questions beyond "what?"

I'm with you guys. Nobody, but especially a comedian, can be that cheerfully optimistic on the outside without hiding something truly dark in his soul. I don't know that I would even believe Chris Hardwick if he were written as a fictional character, much less that "real" person he presents himself as.
I used to really

What? I'm puzzled by the ecstatic reaction to this episode. I thought this was a fairly weak one. The "message" part of the episode was muddled and not particularly amusing. They've satirized the media far better in previous episodes, the michael moore joke was repetitive and obvious for this show, and the class

I'm with you. I was highly amused and this really doesn't seem out of step with what we've been getting on the show up to this point. Frankly I'd rather the show stay cartoony, instead of deepening any of those suburban characters to make them more like real people. Nothing about the premise, the characters, the tone

" And as with everything Franco, that surprisingly hairless mirror he held up to his observers was no accident"

ID4II:ID5

I agree. The whole premise of this article is flawed. Has he squandered his pop-star prime? What? Timberlake was hardly a game-changer in pop. He was good, don't get me wrong, but let's put things into perspective here. It's not like there's a void in pop radio because he hasn't made any more music.
I just don't see

Yeah! What the fuck is that "the" doing there?

Yes that was inspired. +50 internets to Sean O'Neal!

I quite liked the first one because I had no idea what it was about when I started watching, definitely the ideal way to go into this film. I thought it was shocking and brutal.

Sure, but the movie ended before we saw the part where Indy succumbs to painful radiation poisoning and his eyes fall out.

Well, I hope you’re all satisfied. You bankrupted a bunch of naive movie
folks, folks from a Hollywood where values are different. They weren’t
thinking about the money. They just wanted to tell a story, a story
about a radioactive man, and you slick small-towners took ‘em for all
they were worth.

::sticks you in a fridge, nukes it::

"Beginning today, we’re expanding the focus of the column to entail the
sum of pop culture: movies, books, music, poetry, comic strips, haikus,
cities, cultural movements, commedia dell’arte, plays."

Nah, this is just the natural lifecycle of a tv show that airs for a while. No show, and especially genre shows, maintain their strong initial viewership as their seasons progress.

Huh? I thought we knew this already. Or had I only assumed this was the case the whole time?

Yeah, did he really think they make sound stages that big? There's a helicoptor shot in it that zooms in to the two actors on the street.

He didn't seem to blame the girl for that though. He framed the whole ordeal as an unfortunate situation more than anything. Without knowing much about the guy beyond what he said in that interview, I'm going to be high-handed and attribute his views to a lack of a positive (or any) father figure in his life.

And at the risk of sounding lascivious, she's kept up her body quite well.