youngwonton
youngwonton
youngwonton

I've said this on this site before, but I watched and enjoyed every episode of Mulaney. Not nearly as horrible as people make it out to be.

Their names are actually Adam Clay-Two Thousand Pounds and Larry Mullen Sr.'s son…unless you were just poppin' my stones.

Speak for yourself, moron!

Unpopular opinion: Funny People is my favorite of Judd Apatow's directorial efforts.

I'd wager she's doing it more for the weekly exposure on a network television show that gets 6-7 million viewers an episode right before her movie comes out than the money.

Before this episode, I was never fully on board the "Pamela is the worst" bandwagon. She was actually winning me over with her whole "A La Carte" speech. She was being clear and decisive about what she wanted.
But this episode placed me firmly in the "Pamela is the worst" camp. Make up your mind and be honest about

Frankie and Abed have played well off of each other since the first episode, I don't understand why they haven't had more interactions this season like the ones they has in this episode.

Dio can you hear me?
I am lost and so alone.
I'm asking for your guidance.
Won't you come down from your throne?
I need a tight compadre
who will teach me how to rock.
My father thinks your evil
but, man, he can suck a cock!
Rock is not the devil's work,
it's magical and rad.
I'll never rock as long as
I am stuck here with my

Right, because that's what I was saying.

The end credits music on this show is consistently fantastic, from Danny Brown to Run the Jewels and now Alabama Shakes. The music supervisor gets an A+.

SNL is judged so much more harshly than any other scripted show on television and I really don't get it.

That was beautiful, thank you for that.
I particularly enjoy the idea of a man who fought in World War II, now into his 80s/90s, who also has seemingly encyclopedic knowledge of MTV's The Real World. Amazing.

Sessue Hayakawa?

My first, middle, and last name are all "white people" names. That was my point. And considering how much white men love Asian women in this country, it wouldn't be considered weird or surprising at all - if, y'know, people thought logically, and didn't automatically assume every person with slanted eyes must have a

Whoa, whoa, Karen Gillan isn't just some hot redhead.

I initially thought your first sentence was saying that you used to periodically check whether you were Asian or not.

I'm intentionally bad at math, just to subvert that stereotype!

I think it's a good thing. I think Dong is not a great example because, even though he's sort of parodying Asian stereotypes, he's still overwhelmingly defined by his Asianness. The more roles for actors like John Cho or Steven Yeun where the part is not defined by their Asian ethnicity, though, the better, as far as

Considering, as Kristen said, that Asian males are almost exclusively cast as goofy/nerdy comic relief or martial arts villains, yes, it is a good yardstick. It (hopefully) means people are taking those of us of Asian descent more seriously.
There are a lot of sociological studies that show that in America, in

We all love Dong, but you don't have to be a slut about it.