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Razor
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This is like that stupid Comcast on Xbox stuff. "Hey, watch cable on your Xbox, but you have to already have Comcast cable."

I had no idea there was a Ferris Bueller TV show.

I really think the show started to find something kinda-sorta resembling a groove once it moved to Wednesdays. There's nothing even remotely close to Community, Parks & Rec, 30 Rock or even Up All Night here, but I think I've laughed at Whitney more this season than The Office.

It was actually the same guy that played Not Moby in HIMYM… he's scheduled for more Community episodes at "Faux-by," as well.

It's not like Laurie is a stereotypical cougar though, the two have had a really sweet chemistry since day one and the only thing that has kept them apart is an age difference, which becomes far less relevant once you get into your 20s.

Some theories suggest the infection moves zombie blood throughout its body to keep it from pooling in the feet.

It's been announced, it's Danai Gurira of Treme.

The only death in the show that's been the same as the book is Amy's… if you're looking for a panel-by-panel adaptation of the book, you should've figured out that wasn't going to happen by episode 3.

My guess is he didn't believe him or didn't want to believe him,

Their brains melted. Your organs aren't going to last long in a hot car on an Atlanta highway in July.

The books moved too fast at first and Kirkman's the first to admit that. I don't think an 8-year-old kid is going to shoot a father figure just a couple months after the world goes to hell… but once he survives the prison and everything that happens there, I think the kid shedding his childhood and becoming downright

Water and food supply, hot water, livestock, some semblance of the old world.

According to "Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Zombies" by Matt Mogk, zombies would be much more silent than we'd expect them to be.

This show is hardly the first to have zombies taking down larger prey.

Yeah, but the point was "they killed Rubicon, but kept this." 'This' has quadruple the viewership of Rubicon.

And the Grammy for trying too hard goes to…

HOTD has one of the best "BOO!" moments in the history of the genre early in the film, but then nothing happens for an hour and the payoff was weak. Innkeepers isn't perfect, but I found the characters very likable and the tension increasingly high. I'd give it a solid thumbs up, whereas HOTD only gets a pat on the

I liked Punch-Drunk Love and even the overly sappy Reign Over Me, but I don't think those really count as Adam Sandler movies. Going strictly by the "wippity bippity doo" Adam Sandler movies, I agree on The Wedding Singer.

I saw them in 2007 (I think it was 07) with The Cliks and they were great. Of course, there was the "here's something off our new album," but even that was better than when most long-running bands pull that shit.

Brody's smart enough to not underestimate Carrie's intelligence and clearly knows she's been watching him. How closely? What exactly has she seen? At that point, his best bet was absolute indignance, "yeah I converted to Islam, so what?" Even when he has an answer for everything, she still doesn't believe him (and