watcherwatcherwatcher--disqus
watcherwatcherwatcher
watcherwatcherwatcher--disqus

Blasphemy.

Yeah, I guessed it and immediately felt like an idiot for saying something too obvious. And then, of course, I felt superior when I was right.

I don't always listen to You Made It Weird, but the latest was a live show, so I listened. Pretty mediocre, except the final quote from Pete to Natasha Leggero, which cracked my shit up:

I kind of like the fact that it's on the trashy E network in a Kardashian-style show. That's what people know of this family, so why should it change? It really normalizes a transition in a format that people are used to and broadcasts it to a cross-section of people that may not have watched a serious docu-series.

Yes!

I did read the books, but clearly not very closely!

Yes!

That's what I thought, too. It seemed that they all misread the clue as an airline instead of a country that they had to name.

I kind of liked the first book as mindless entertainment, but they really do get stupid. Funny, the first movie turned out exactly like I imagined it would. Not really any room for creativity when it's so generic.

I wondered if it was a misspelling or mispronunciation on her part. How frustrating it must have been for her opponent to have won using an acronym!

Seconded. I used to really like the podcast, but even that is becoming insufferable unless the guest is someone I really like.

Awww. :(

And the nice bartender showed up in both stories. Pod guest!

I'm still hoping for a commentary of the commentary.

I liked her, I liked her Rush story, and I liked that Alex liked her. Most importantly, she didn't take her sweet-ass time to pick clues, she was confident, and she was smart.

Breaking All the Rules (1984), which I've always wanted to see and have never been able to find, and Breakin' All the Rules (2004), which seems to be everywhere and super easy to find.

Because Gene Wilder?

YES!!!!!!!

I'd make a phone call asking if a decision's been made. Repeated email can seem like you're hounding them, but a quick call can show initiative.

No joke, making broad and unfair generalizations about Jeopardy contestants in their 30-second interviews is one of my fave parts of the show. I am gleefully vile in regards to those who harmlessly share cringe-inducing anecdotes. It feels almost as good as getting one right when none of the contestants answer