willwriteforfood2
ChobaniPineapple
willwriteforfood2

I didn't need a barf bag, but I'll not be watching the car door scene again anytime soon.

That's what kept me going through the first season. I'm not a comic book reader so I wasn't familiar at all with Daredevil or any of the street-level Marvel superheroes but I was hooked on Daredevil from the second episode, with that long, single-shot fight scene and especially how Matt kept getting beaten up and

Which explains why Grant is now shilling for McDonald's.

It took me a year to get through the entire fourth season of The Wire, just because every episode was heartbreaking.

Oh man, as soon as he hit the first falsetto, I hit the fast-forward button. My ears, they bled.

I feel like you could watch the first three seasons of Lost and stop right there. You'd get all the good stuff, really, and you wouldn't have to deal with the inevitable "WTF did I just watch?" aftermath.

I saw this movie in Boston and the audience just sat in stunned silence at the end, except for a few audible sniffles (I admit, I was one). Then there was a steady few minutes of applause. Incredible movie.

No! Marnie and Desi's complete self-absorption are what make the show such a great hate-watch.

I straight up laughed out loud at your comment. Well played.

I think he believes not only that being a servant in a great house is something aspire to, they should feel lucky to be a servant in the Crawley house, because they have titles and they're relatively kind to their servants. Clearly he's a classicist, so for him, to be a servant for the titled is as good as people of

Game of Thrones is mesmerizing. In the first season, I'd rewind and watch it several times just to catch all the beautiful details. Just gorgeous.

The eyebrows! I laughed out loud when they were first used in the opening credits.

For some reason it was never on my school reading lists, so I didn't get around to reading it until well into my late 20s. It gutted me. I wonder if it would have had the same effect on me as a teen, but it's still one of those books that, when I pick it up and page through it, brings me to tears. It's really worth

Jaysus, that would be a moral dilemma for the ages. Pay to see the movie if you knew it was going to THAT guy…?

I've gotten the "hey, smile, you're so pretty!" comment more times than I remember. I think the guys who do it think they're charming and brightening my day when I'm really bracing for the "can we go out?" or "why aren't you smiling? I was just being nice, you bitch!" comment. It's after those comments I don't know if

Oh my god, that coat matching the hat. So smart!

I got pretty excited at the interaction between the editor and Tom. So much better than Miss Bunting!

I was shocked at the B rating and watched the whole episode annoyed that they were wasting their six episodes with such a bleah one. Mostly I was annoyed that they used the lazy "scary Muslim" trope to further a plot that made no sense.

Jaysus, did you even read the article? If your takeaway from that statement is that a woman in a bar reading a book is fair game because she's in public, then you are absolutely the problem.

I feel like Anna, Mrs. Hughes and Mrs. Patmore all came verrrry close in that episode, when Daisy berated Mr. Mason for bringing Mrs. Patmore veggies. They all stood there looking at her, waiting for her to wind down. She's so clear on how other people should act, but has no idea how she sounds to others and how