Yeah, I immediately thought of Breath of Fire III. https://www.youtube.com/wat…
Yeah, I immediately thought of Breath of Fire III. https://www.youtube.com/wat…
Charlie shows up in episode 3, A Proportional Response. It was brought up (I believe by Richard Schiff) that there were no persons of color in the main cast and they wanted to fix it but do so organically. They then made the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs and the National Security Adviser persons of color as well.
I'm going to go with American Beauty, a film that was exceptionally well received at the time, is chock full of 90s white male angst, that hasn't aged well at all, and was really an encapsulation of the decade as a whole.
R.I.P. Assbutt
Person of Interest's title sequence also closed with an image of the Person of Interest from that episode. Sort of a fun clue for what was to come. They also played with the title sequence on the show—a lot. You always knew you were in for a special episode when the title sequence changed.
I mean, it's probably the best line delivery of his career, and his entire performance on the show—arguably his most memorable performance—is based on that scene. I don't think the lines, alone, are what we are remembering here.
I said "Oh God they're going to blow up the kids"
For me it was Galaxy Quest.
In defense of Glenn Beck, he did say some things that showed real self-awareness. That said, he strikes me as someone who enjoys being a contrarian, and now the only way to do that is to be a rational human being.
I imagine Tammy hating her, then finding out something cool about her, and trying to become her best friend, which upsets jocelyn, who becomes lost without Tammy.
Hey Marshmallow.
….B+.
MGM rebooted the brand in 2013, but they're mostly doing ultra-low budget releases.
He's the TV version of David Morse.
This is the first time the show zagged when I thought it was going to zig. The fact that I was genuinely surprised was something I appreciated. If the show really wants to be a thriller, it needs to 'thrill' sometimes and this episode absolutely did that.
It's always a little bittersweet when Johnny Tightlips appears, being the one original Phil Hartman character they un-retired.
OBJECTION! GROSS!
It became very clear early in the episode that it was not Keith David, but it was someone doing a what is some sort of combination of Keith David and Dennis Haysbert, so it's not surprising to me it was Gary Anthony Williams.
Both are dishes best served cold.
His first episode of Bob's "Topsy" was the perfect use of Eichner.