Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG, the first scene in Rebecca’s kitchen when Beard sat on the counter in his thong and you could hear his butt slapping the granite… I laughed so hard.
Total kudos to Brendan hunt for being willing to do that!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved the final episode! Except I want to know if Roy and Keely will get together.
I'm OK with not knowing. Whichever way it went, it would have ruined Roy and Jaime's relationship, and I think the show thought the Jaime-Roy relationship was more important.
Anonymous wrote:I loved the final episode! Except I want to know if Roy and Keely will get together.
Anonymous wrote:Well, I personally loved the finale. Especially the Sound of Music number which made me cry with both laughter and sadness. So hilarious and I loved seeing all these guys doing something so looney.
Anonymous wrote:OMG, the first scene in Rebecca’s kitchen when Beard sat on the counter in his thong and you could hear his butt slapping the granite… I laughed so hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you catch Roy saying "it's tough without Cockburn", and the multiple shots of Cockburn's empty cubby? Total reference to Sudeikis missing Olivia.
what's the reference?
Anonymous wrote:Did you catch Roy saying "it's tough without Cockburn", and the multiple shots of Cockburn's empty cubby? Total reference to Sudeikis missing Olivia.
Anonymous wrote:Whew. Final episode was totally meh.
This show started with such promise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loved the Phillip Larkin poem!! Hurray for writers!!
I kind of liked Mae's rendition of the poem, but I think I really don't like the poem itself. Yes, parents give their kids baggage; but I think, often, they tend to fix the baggage their parents gave them and just mess their kids up in new ways (while also strengthening them in new ways.) The Larkin poem strikes me as a shitty, simplistic kind of nihilism.