Everybody’s making great strides this week on ‘Parks and Recreation:’ Leslie takes control of her womanhood, Ben gets away from his bedbugs, and April and Andy buy silverware (and marshmallow shooters).
I won’t be surprised if there isn’t some uproar about the smoking monkey in the episode. Amy Farrah Fowler only talked about it before. Tonight we saw it. Uh-oh.
Singing, bowling, speaking a foreign language … what’s something you do better drunk? (Psst: you don’t REALLY do it better, you just THINK you do. Because you’re drunk.)
A night dedicated to Carole King fell miserably flat on its face and collapsed upon itself. Whatever happened to the promise we wouldn’t be forced to endure a particular artist’s catalog, Jimmy?
Everyone loves the Looney Tunes. They’re a staple of American culture. But what happens when a new generation of animators interprets those characters? Well, we’re going to find out …
Every week brother and sister team Bob and Debbie take on a new topic. This week we talk about why the networks are so quick to cancel new shows, before they even have a chance to find an audience.
Remember FM radio stations of the ’70s, when DJs carried unique personalities and they cared about their station having an identity? Yeah, it’s sorta like that.
Laurie starts the Larmy, Jules is a wizard and Bobby has the wrong balls. It’s a lot of winning and losing on this week’s ‘Cougar Town.’
Not many surprises this week, even with a double elimination twist at Tribal Council, as the Ometepe tribe members continue to dominate the game.
With a title like “Reckoning,” one expects a throwdown. Especially given that this is ‘Justified,’ with a lead character once described by his ex-wife as “the angriest man I’ve ever known.” So why does it almost seem like we’re seeing a kinder, gentler Raylan Givens?