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your town is next.
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If not for all the glaring story problems with Spider-Man 3, I think Topher Grace could've walked away with some deservedly positive recognition for once. He and Franco were clearly trying to do as much as they could with the clumsy script and bizarre choices Raimi was making (most of which I'm convinced were

I could've almost bought Kirsten Dunst as a "girl next door" teenager, if not for the raw essence of "I smoked half a pack of Marlboros between takes" that she exuded.

Well, except for the guy he got to play Spider-Man.

"He is in that place where mental illness blends with religion and right wing politics."

Jesse Hughes brings out the worst in Jesse Hughes.

Strong words about white classist privilege from David Brecken Gates, Jr.

Maybe it's something they added down the line. But the episodes I saw ended with: Closing notes from Kimball about the episode's exploits, possibly some Above-The-Line credits (producers, etc), then a PBS shout-out to sponsors. It then goes back to the show, with outtakes playing under the remaining crew credits.

I was actually watching a couple episodes of Cook's Country over the weekend, and yeah. It's clear that he's just a dick, and they can't wait to not have to talk to him anymore.

He wasn't the problem, but he was a problem.

Looks like you have some questions.

The premise did seem to fatigue a little midway through the season. Largely because they seem to be building/expanding on the conflict but not yet making headway with overcoming it, which makes it feel like its stalling out. But when you get to the last handful of episodes, they power through and it gets pretty fun

ALSO! How are they casting Robin Hood with a guy 7 years younger than Dornan, the dude playing Will Scarlet, who is one of the youngest of the Merry Men?

I'm smack dab in the middle. For me, it was International Superhits. I was already drifting after Warning, but when the band you grew up on puts out a "Best of," that seems like a sure sign to call it a day.

You're a little late. They already bought up every scrap Manhattan real estate as a tax haven over the last 8 years.

What the hell is wrong with you?

It was on a dare.

Nah, I'm betting he's compensating.

The dude hasn't had a megastar career, but I imagine Mark Hamill has, like, three regrets tops. One of which being The Guyver.

To echo Dale below, I wouldn't be so quick to groan at how the show is using Joe. Joe is integral to the overall narrative, as the trigger that set these characters on their paths, and as an eternal agent of chaos.

I was saying for a while that, following Stewart's departure, they should have merged TDS and Nightly into a single hour-long program that played to both hosts' strengths. Noah can do rundowns of the news, general one-liners and emceeing, as he's best left to himself—interviews are not his strong suit and he doesn't