zacharymichaels--disqus
Zachary Michaels
zacharymichaels--disqus

"It's half family legal drama, half crime drama. Both halves have a lot of dark comedy."

There's something facinating about how they're trying to bounce back from a campaign based in really dated masculinity with a campaign based in a different kind of really dated masculinity.

It would prove that Jimmy rightfully believed his brother's symptoms to be psychological in nature, and thus would attempt to relieve his pyschological burdens, even under false pretenses. So his taped confession would not be grounds for disbarment.
I think anyway. Not a lawyer.

So who has had the best Breaking Bad reapparance so far? Huell was great, but he had to come up sooner or later. I'm going to go with Ken for being such a "Ohhhh that guy!" moment.

Maybe it's an alpha male thing.

I wonder how he feels (would feel?) about the major crime kingpin being the owner of a chicken restaraunt chain.

It was Kim. She sounded mildly intrigued.

My pet theory is that he goes to the past with Ashi, dies from old age as the trip back undoes his immortality, Ashi kills Aku with the sword, and then roams the world alone, indulging her curiosity and spreading the story of Samurai Jack.

Interesting, and kind of ironic, that you find the family drama plot between coniving lawyers is heavy, and the murderous drug war plot is escapism.

To be fair, it wasn't actually much of an ethos for those dudes. More like a bit of grimey texture.

I was thinking more that Hank would have brought it up at some point when he was trying to stick something to his suspicions.

He tried to use video game language critique that was already past it's expiration date, and apply it to a whole other medium. He argued that it was "filmic dissonance."

I think you are underestimating how often it's the "all a dream" theory.

Grant didn't make him do anything. Forrest even went out of his way to talk to Grant despite AJ telling him not to.

My pet theory is that somone asks him what it's like to actually be Forrest McNeil, and it sends him to an unresolvable existential crisis.

I thought he figured it was the path of least resistance to keeping the show moving.

Short answer: Yes

I'm surprised Deadpool was so popular with AV club members.

I liked the multiplayer too, but I'm shocked a lasting relationship much less several could have been formed from it. Maybe I missed the boat by only jumping in with Remastered.

Something about Armenia's very blunt, imperaitive opening followed by a super generic positive makes me giggle.