Pushing Daisies I thought did super well during the first season, it just hemmoraged viewers and especially in the second season when people forgot it existed.
Pushing Daisies I thought did super well during the first season, it just hemmoraged viewers and especially in the second season when people forgot it existed.
I thought the gag there was that it was an absurd phrase that still felt sufficiently plausible for the show's heightened pre-death reality.
I wasn't sure if the implication at the end was meant to be "hey so you remember that icy cool agent you saw in the hallways? Well here's something scary enough that she's totally lost her mind, you should fund us to take care of that." Granted maybe I just assumed they were looking at her kind of disconcerted rather…
There was that one beat in season two where they went to Coulson's hometown and… I'm still not clear if they massacred that generation of high school students but I could have sworn they implied the bad guys hijacked the radio waves around there and announced more or less that Coulson was an ongoing concern?
I thought it's interesting how few white people seem to be involved in this project. (Is Martin Freeman remotely in this film or were they just going with a random agent name for Civil War and it happened to be a Black Panther supporting character? They never actually directly interacted if I remember correctly.
I absolutely am one of those, I just never really got the appeal of some huge characters in that Spawn/Ghost Rider/Punisher/Wolverine vein.
Infographics are a reasonably popular way of conveying data. That said I still can't tell what's going on there since it might have predated the ease of graphics in MS Word.
That one kind of interests me— LMM did cast an Asian woman as one of the female leads but I don't think any of her major replacements in the role have also been, even if I think some of the supporting unnamed roles have had some Filipino members. So far as I know aside from having predominantly POC as the characters…
I loved her appearance on Crazy Ex-Girlfriend and I hope they managed to
talk her into reprising her role— she effectively was just there
to deliver the big Disney song of the show but she could really easily be reintegrated into the cast. (The big moment of "One
Indescribable Instant" has her deliver the final…
In the UK earlier this year there were tons of billboards that conveyed nothing besides "It's illegal to use a legal name" and that also must have cost a ridiculous amount of money since I stumbled across a ton of them in StreetView.
It totally is.
They kind of implied when they reviewed last season's finale that it would be back didn't they? Granted that was before apparently the cull.
People are much more inclined to defend Josie and the Pussycats out of all of those right? Whether or not you liked it, there was a distinct thing they were going for even if that wasn't present in the source material. (Also it seems like they made the active choice in the last TMNT series to make the character…
I sort of prefer the idea that Hannah is essentially Mr. Burns from when he teams up with Lisa on The Simpsons, where even when he's trying to be nice that just makes him do even more evil stuff without even really trying.
I thought that Simmons had a great beat in that argument with May where they assumed she was being corrupted when she made it clear she was essentially leaving them in the dark while she clawed her way to a position of power.
It has long been my secret dream that they use Jimmy Woo and the agents of Atlas as an excuse to have a temporal crossover between Agent Carter and SHIELD.
They already did the thing where we got rogue Fitz, it seems like it would be a little pointless to do it again, but more? Then again if they're going to bring back a character/actor they already killed with a robot there aren't as many women… (Maybe Lucy Lawless? It would be kind of cool if they did a proper arc with…
I thought the guy was pretty likable but I just don't really get why people care about Ghost Rider in general and how it isn't just a huge icon of its time.
I did actually try to ponder that. One reason why I always dug PD was since despite Olive being the romantic interloper character the show always tried to make a point that she was still a fundamentally good and often likable person.
Live Chuck did dedicate her life to caring for her aunts, somehow doing jury duty, and doing charitable things for the homeless? Of the main characters she was also the most engaged with doing good acts for the recently alive again.