verycrunchyfrog--disqus
VeryCrunchyFrog
verycrunchyfrog--disqus

Several is more than two and fewer than "many." I'd call this many billions.

I'm not sure she was evading justice, but she evaded death for 40 years. The actor who played her husband looked vaguely familiar. I see from IMDb that he played a judge in about 5 episodes of The Good Wife. Probably where I've seen him before.

"She’s an astute person, but here we hone in on her obliviousness. It’s not just in relation to Rob. Just look at the entire way she handles the suicide of another teacher at her school. She mangles his memorial, and gives a tone deaf speech to the students." This aspect of Sharon really bugs me. Her complete lack

Somehow, I seem to have created two names for commenting on Disqus. Some TV/movie viewers will note their connection.

Ha-ha, ya caught me! I meant VHS, not VCR.

Oh, I didn't catch this. Rewatch coming up pronto!

Coon and her husband, Tracy Letts, sat behind my husband and me at a play at the Steppenwolf Theater last summer. We had previously seen her on the stage in Letts' play, Mary Paige Marlowe. She was fantastic, and I hope she'll find time to keep doing theater.

Lots of male roles?

Late to the party, but I agree about the one-way street aspect. That was Frankie's point as well, and the AV re-capper seems to have overlooked it.

BInge-watched it this weekend and may have to rewatch some of the episodes. The ending seems to leave the door open for a sequel. Any word on such plans?

According to Wikipedia: "[Page] earned critical accolades for her performance in the 1959 production of Williams's Sweet Bird of Youth opposite Paul Newman. She originated the role of a larger-than-life, addicted, sexually voracious Hollywood legend trying to extinguish her fears about her career with a young hustler

First thing I ever saw Tucci in (Alison Janney, too), and I've always loved it. Tucci also co-directed it with his friend Campbell Scott, who has a small role.

"But he’s immediately saddled with the greatest diva of them all: Frank Sinatra."
At least he got to work with Victor Buono again, though!

I'm with you. The writing did not live up to the premise of several sketches.

A series I have yet to watch, but intend to. I remember Dillane as Virginia Woolf's husband Leonard in "The Hours," where he was equally understated but affecting.

'This show uses “fuck” and “fucking” so often that it mostly goes unnoticed,'

Not sure I can take much more of Kevin's stupidity. He should be dead several times over by now.

While the Don set-up was a bit convoluted, it showed how well Elizabeth had come to know Don and what buttons she could push wit him, namely his sense of shame and responsibility. She also picked up on the minor cracks in his marriage to Young Hee that would make him think it was plausible he'd actually slept with

In many opinions. I wouldn't even rate it a C+.

Thank you — too long a break since seeing the episode where Philip and Oleg staged the break-in.