I don't recall that one. Care to share the Youtube link?
I don't recall that one. Care to share the Youtube link?
I saw both Jodorowsky's Dance of Reality and Edge of Tomorrow. Liked them both quite a bit and about at the same level (about B/B+). Both had flaws, but I enjoyed them. Also watched Roberto Rossellini's Fear (1954), which was okay but not up with his best, Rivette's The Story of Marie and Julien, which I felt was…
I also love the slave auction sketch in the first season. That one walked the line of tastelessness beautifully. I loved the slavers being offended at Key & Peele's dismissal of people with alternate body types.
I caught up with Key & Peele recently, too. I think I might like it a bit less than some people here. Most sketch comedy shows are hit and miss, but I think there are maybe too many misses on this show to call it one of the great sketch shows. Their recurring characters in particular are weak and I would start to…
That is what that song is, isn't? I couldn't quite place it, and I swear on the commentary they call it Rock and Roll Part 2, you know, the Gary Glitter song, which I knew was wrong.
Classic Simpsons?
It looked to me like they dragged him offscreen and killed him.
Hey, he shot a guy, too!
He's the really lame X-Man, Sharktooth.
Yeah, I thought this was the worst episode of the series. The Experts B seems more like it.
You shouldn't have had to have a pet to appreciate the harsh irony at the end of that episode. And pretty much everyone on Earth works a job they hate to survive. It's a fairly banal sentiment.
Yes, and him pointing at the boobs in his magazine when pretending to examine the situation.
I can't place "back to Winnipeg!" anywhere.
It's touching, but it doesn't come close to slaying me. Lisa's Substitute to me is The Simpsons' emotional peak. Frankly, I don't think much else anywhere hits the same note that Jurassic Bark does. It's a very daring and unique moment in storytelling, period. I'd say something like Lisa's Substitute is pretty close…
Who robs cave fish of their sight?
The character did appear a lot, just not interacting with the other characters.
I've heard some of their other singles, and I never heard another one that even approaches "Take On Me."
He's thinking of Taco.
I remember when the episode first aired I felt that the show was being way too harsh to the Muppets. I was a teenager and still enjoyed them plenty.
I love him in his appearance in Tom Goes to the Mayor, too. And his little bit at the beginning of the Tim & Eric movie, as Chef Goldblum.