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Fox's 'Gotham' TV Series Will Feature Bruce Wayne and Villains Like The Joker and Catwoman

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Well, this is a confusing turn of events. Despite initial reports that Fox's Gotham TV series would be a Batman prequel focusing on Commissioner James Gordon, it looks like Bruce Wayne and Batman's classic villains will actually be the series' focus.

Fox Entertainment Chairman Kevin Reilly broke the news on Monday, telling The Hollywood Reporter, "This is not one of the things where you bought a franchise and then none of the characters people know. ... We will follow Bruce Wayne right up until the point where he gets interesting."

According to THR, Reilly said Gotham would be an origin story for Bruce and also alluded to villains like The Joker, Catwoman and the Riddler showing appearing, while "the plan is for the series to ultimately end with Bruce Wayne putting on the cape and becoming Batman — much as Smallville did with Superman."

Last month, Popculturology's Charlie Bielinski broke down some issues facing Gotham, noting that supervillains in a pre-Batman age would be one of the biggest. "The problem is that even if we encounter some of Batman's most-feared foes in the run of this show, it will be difficult to explain how the police department can handle supervillains," Bielinski said. "If none of Batman's rogues show up in this show, then all it becomes is another cop show with the most-famous comic book cop patrolling one of the most-famous fictional comic book cities sans superheroes and supervillains, which doesn’t sound very promising."

Well, it doesn't look like Gotham is another cop show now, but how will they explain what guys like The Joker are doing running around Gotham before Bruce Wayne becomes Batman?

It also doesn't seem like Reilly has any stake in tying Gotham into Warner Bros.'s Justice League franchise, which in a world where Marvel is going to have an ABC series and several Netflix series all flowing into the Marvel Cinematic Universe seems odd. Why would Warner Bros. license out one of its main characters without getting that synergy in return?

Louis CK and Zach Galifianakis Team Up for an FX Pilot

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Set your dvrs now — Louis CK and Zach Galifianakis are teaming up for an FX pilot. CK, who already has the acclaimed Louie on the network, will co-write the untitled show that will star Galifianakis, according to The Hollywood Reporter. THR says that "details about the subject matter are being kept under wraps."

I think we're on the verge of seeing a shift in basic cable supremacy. AMC dominated the past few years, but with hits like Breaking Bad and Mad Men done or wrapping up, the network has struggled to find replacement shows.

Meanwhile, FX (and FXX) are not only well-stocked with critical darlings like Justified (which still has almost two seasons left), The Americans, Louie and Archer, but the FX networks are eagerly adding new shows. We learned over the summer that Donald Glover was taking his talents to FX, and according to THR, stars like Billy Crystal, Denis Leary and Tracy Morgan are doing the same.

FX Confirms That 'Justified' Will End After Next Season

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Last week, FX President of Original Programming Nick Gad alluded to the possibility that Justified could wrap things up after its next season. On Tuesday, FX Networks CEO John Landgraf made it official: Justified's sixth season will be its last.

According to Entertainment Weekly, Landgraf made it clear that Justified showrunner Graham Yost and star/co-executive producer Timothy Olyphant were on board with the decision, saying, "We talked about it a year ago and they felt that the arc of the show and what they had to say would be served by six seasons instead of seven and I regretfully accepted their decision."

Kudos to FX for listening to the creative talent behind their programming and accepting that sometimes the best stories don't need to go on forever, no matter how well a series is doing in the ratings.

Justified is only two episodes into its fifth season, so there's no need to start getting weepy over the show ending just yet. That said, I hope Justified stars like Olyphant and Walton Goggins will spin the show wrapping into successful careers. Yeah, Olyphant has been around for awhile, but Justified is the biggest thing on his résumé now.

Bruce Springsteen and Jimmy Fallon Parody 'Born to Run' with 'Gov. Christie Traffic Jam'

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Sure, Bruce Springsteen is The Boss when it comes to music, but is there any doubt that Jimmy Fallon is The Boss of late-night TV now? Springsteen was on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon on Tuesday to promote the release of his new album, High Hopes, and paired up with Fallon to sing "Gov. Christie Traffic Jam, a parody of "Born to Run."

Could you ever imagine Jay Leno doing something like this? Never. I can't wait to see what Fallon does when he takes over The Tonight Show in a few weeks.

If you're New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, how do you feel about this song? Springsteen is one of his biggest heroes — is it cool to have one of your heroes sing a song about you even though it's a pretty critical song?

'SNL' PROMOS: Bobby Moynihan and Jay Pharoah Show Drake Where They Lay Down Thumpin' Beats

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Saturday Night Live is back this weekend with Drake pulling double duty as the episode's host and musical guest. NBC released a rather lengthy series of promos for Drake's appearance on Wednesday. SNL went all out for Drake, pairing him with not one but two castmembers.

While part of the promos was about Drake trying to convince Bobby Moynihan that he has acting experience, the bulk of the clips were Moynihan and Jay Pharoah doing their best to impress Drake by telling him the studio is where they laid down their thumpin' beats. Drake wasn't impressed.

'HIMYM' NEWS: 200th Episode to Be Told From The Mother's View; Rachel Bilson, Sarah Chalke and Lucy Hale Coming Back

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When How I Met Your Mother fans learned that Cristin Milioti would be playing The Mother in the show's final season, many of us dreamed of episodes telling the story of how The Mother spent the past few years. How often did she just miss running into Ted? What did her roommate say to her about that guy who loved all her stuff? Did she see Ted get punched out at that St. Patrick's Day party? Was she the one the dating service paired up with Ted but Ted stood up to go help Lily?

Now that we're pretty deep into HIMYM's final season, it's clear we're not getting that dream season. We will get to see those near misses, though. HIMYM's Jan. 27 episode is also the series' 200th episode. We've known for awhile that the episode is called "How Your Mother Met Me," and TV Guide has the scoop on what to expect from the episode.

"This episode is told from the Mother's point of view [instead of Ted's]," executive producer Carter Bays explains. 
For the past eight seasons, the couple has passed within inches of each other and never met, but now viewers will see those close encountered through the Mother's eyes. 
"You're going to learn so much about her and why she and Ted are right for each other," Milioti says. "There are a lot of exciting moments that'll get fans' hearts racing."

Carter Bays also told TV Guide that The Mother "crosses paths with an iconic character from the How I Met Your Mother universe. ... And we bring back other people, too, but you will see different sides of them." And who might some of these other characters be? TVLine reported on Wednesday that Rachel Bilson, Sarah Chalke and Lucy Hale are all coming back. Bilson played Cindy, The Mother's old roommate; Chalke played Stella, Ted's ex-fiance; and Hale played Katie, Robin's sister.

TVLine also reported that HIMYM co-creaters Bays and Craig Thomas have confirmed that we'll learn the names of Ted and The Mother's children in "Unpause," next week's episode.

Melissa McCarthy to Host 'SNL'

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Saturday Night Live has revealed who will host the 13th episode of the show's 39th season.

Melissa McCarthy (Feb. 1 with musical guest Imagine Dragons): This will be McCarthy's third time hosting SNL. She was absolutely brilliant when she hosted in 2011, but was just OK when she returned to the show in 2013. Which version of McCarthy will we get? Hopefully she moves beyond the pratfall-prone comedy rut she's currently stuck in. My Mike and Molly sources* tell me that the show has morphed into a showcase for that version of McCarthy. She can do better.

*AKA my mom.

'How I Met Your Mother''Unpause' Recap: Can Marshall and Lily Be Saved? ALSO: Ted's Kids' Names Revealed

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Wow. How I Met Your Mother has delivered its fair share of emotional gut punches during its run, but besides the death of Marshall’s dad, “Unpause” may have contained one of the series’ most devastating moments. Finally reunited, Marshall and Lily fought over the fact that Marshall had accepted a judgeship without running it by his wife, and after listening to Lily repeatedly refer to moving to Italy as her dream and call him selfish, Marshall went for the jugular.

“You broke up with me and moved to San Francisco,” he said, reminding Lily of the fact that she had once walked away from him. Marshall didn’t stop there — he wanted to know what would’ve happened if Lily had realized her dreams in San Francisco. “Are Marvin and I and any other future children we may have just some consolation prize?”

At this point in my notes, I wrote “WHOA.” I don’t think that “WHOA” even covers the full impact of this exchange, which ended with Lily storming out of the Farhampton Inn and calling someone to pick her up.

How do you come back from a fight like that? How do Marshall and Lily reconcile the fact that not only does Marshall question the foundation of their marriage and family but that he’s been harboring these feelings for seven years? This isn’t something that they can just pretend never happened.

Let me preface what I’m going to say next by noting that I don’t agree with how Marshall went about trying to win this fight. Referring to Lily’s dream of being an art critic in Italy as a hobby and then questioning how much her family means to her wasn’t the way to go. Maybe Marshall felt cornered and that’s all he could swing back with, but — yikes — there’s some serious damage here.

That said, Marshall has a point. I’ve been saying for several seasons now that Lily, as a character, has been walking on thin moral ice. She left Marshall to move to San Francisco, which was her dream. That didn’t work out, so she came back to New York City, settled down, went back to teaching and started a family with Marshall. Yet, in last season’s “Band or DJ?,” there she was on the apartment rooftop crying to Ted about sometimes wishing she could stop being a mother and that she wasn’t happy with her life. She’s only been an art critic for a short time, thanks to the fact that Ted stole Zoey from The Captain and introduced him to Lily. Is that really enough to not only abandon everything for a year to move to Italy but to also jeopardize the future stability that Marshall becoming a judge would give their family?

Unless Future Ted is a super unreliable narrator (and, we do have a reason or two to question his memory recall), we know that Marshall and Lily will find some way to patch things up. We’ve seen them together in the future, whether it was at a reunion or if it was Marshall complaining to Lily about how she didn’t leave him any dirty pictures in her post-death envelope. Like they always have, Marshall and Lily will find a way to overcome this fight, no matter how vicious and mean it was.

HIMYM made the interesting choice of not showing who was driving the car that picked up Lily from the inn. She called someone she knew, and while I think the show was trying to make us think it was Ranjit, the gang’s go-to driver, I have a hunch it was The Mother. Earlier this season, we saw The Mother send Barney on the path that would lead him to marrying Robin — would it really be that absurd to assume The Mother could work her magic on getting Marshall and Lily back together too?



During HIMYM’s ninth season, there have been far too many episodes that could have been great but were watered down with meaningless subplots. “Unpause” wasn’t one of those episodes. In Season 9’s fifteenth episode, the show was running on all cylinders. While Marshall and Lily were torpedoing their marriage, Barney, Robin and Ted were unlocking some of HIMYM’s greatest secrets.

Ignoring Ted’s mother’s advice that nothing good happens after 2 a.m., the trio stayed in the Farhampton Inn’s bar and kept on drinking, fueled by the discovery that if Barney got drunk enough, he could only tell the truth. According to Ted, Barney had four previously known levels of drunkenness: Richard Dawson Drunk, Big Plans With Strangers Drunk, Marcel Marceau Drunk and Jabba the Hutt Drunk. Thinking that Barney was stuck in that final level (which is when Barney gets so drunk he starts talking like Return of the Jedi’s iconic Tatooine crimelord), Ted and Robin were ready to call it a night and send the inebriated Barney to bed. Turns out Barney had another level: Truth Serum Drunk.

Ted and Robin set to work taking full advantage of Barney’s Liar Liar moment, asking him about everything from how much he spends on suits a year (a crapload) to what actually happened between Barney and Ted’s mom (got caught trying to stretch a single into a double) to whether there will be a ring bearer or ring bear at the wedding (his name is Trevor Hudson … and he may actually be a bear).

The biggest revelation from Truth Serum Barney was that during all of his years of responding with “Ha ha, please” when asked what his job at Goliath National Bank was, it turns out Barney was telling the truth. Barney’s job title was PLEASE, an acronym for Provide Legal Exculpation and Sign Everything. Yes, Barney’s job was to blindly sign documents to allow GNB to claim ignorance over the immoral or illegal things they were doing.

While Ted was worried that Barney could get in serious trouble, truthful Barney filled Ted and Robin on the fact that his job at GNB was all part of an even bigger plan. Way back in the Season 1 episode “Game Night,” we saw the story of how how a young and idealistic Barney Stinson had his girlfriend stolen away from him by a cold businessman. That moment spurred Barney to ditch his hippy ways, cut off his ponytail and embrace his suited future. In “Unpause,” Barney explained that Greg, the man who stole his girlfriend, was the one who hired him as PLEASE at GNB and that Barney’s years of working at the company were all to gain his trust and destroy him. Two months after the wedding, Barney would reveal to Greg that he had been working with the feds in order to bring Greg down.

After Robin went to bed, Barney had a nice moment with Ted, telling his friend that while he was nervous about the next day’s wedding, he loved Robin and would do anything to make her happy. “For a long time, deep down, I felt sort of broken, but I don’t feel that way anymore,” Barney told Ted. “Robin — along with the idea that vengeance will soon be mine — has made me 100 percent awesome.” It looks likeHIMYM has finally cleared up any issues Barney possibly had with getting married. Nice to know that The Mother played a role in getting Barney to see that he didn’t have to feel broken all the time.



“Unpause” was bookend by two scenes featuring Ted and The Mother at the Farhampton Inn in 2017. Deciding to take one final trip before a very pregnant The Mother was due, the Mosbys found themselves counting the time between contractions while at the inn. It may have been after 2 a.m., but the Mosby baby wasn’t going to wait until the morning. As Ted ushering his wife and daughter in a car to head to the hospital, HIMYM finally revealed the names of Ted’s long-suffering children: Penny and Luke.

It shouldn’t be a surprise that Ted’s son’s name is Luke. We’ve known for a long time that Ted wanted to name at least one of his kids after Star Wars’ Luke and Leia. The name Penny does appear to have its own HIMYM backstory too. The Season 2 episode “Lucky Penny” was all about a crazy sequence of events that caused Ted to miss a flight to Chicago for an interview at an architecture firm. In the episode, Ted realized that the entire series of events was started by his discovery of a penny from 1939, which Ted thought was worth something. If it wasn’t for that penny and all the trouble it caused the group, Ted would have caught his flight to the job interview and eventually moved to Chicago. Had Ted moved away all those years ago, he would have never met The Mother. Thanks to that lucky penny, Ted was in the right place at the right time. Nice touch, HIMYM.

LAST EPISODE: 'Slapsgiving 3: Slappoinment in Slapmarra'• NEXT EPISODE: 'How Your Mother Met Me'

Notes and quotes 
Ted to The Mother:“I hate to point fingers, but you should never listen to me. You know that.”

Ted mocking the slap mark still on Barney’s face:“Your face looks like a don’t-walk signal.”
Robin joining in:“Your face looks like a photo negative of the Hamburger Helper box.”
Ted:“A palm reader could tell Marshall’s future by studying your face.”
Robin:“The phrase ‘talk to the hand because the face ain't listening’ doesn’t work for you because the hand is on yo face.”

Marshall giving himself a sex pep talk:“Get out there and bang your wife for as long as you possibly can … not a good sign that I’m already out of breath.”

Thanks to Barney’s truthfulness, Ted learned that Robin’s family was actually pretty wealthy. How wealthy? Roughly 6000 craploads. Ted wasn’t too pleased to learn that Robin came from money yet let him pay for almost everything while they dated.

Ted to Robin after realizing Barney was telling the truth about his job: “I guess subtle clues and bar tabs are two things that you don’t pick up.”

Truth Serum Barney telling Ted how he felt about getting married: “Good. I mean, I’m a little nervous but I love Robin more than I ever loved anyone, and iIm going to do everything I can to make her happy. For a long time, deep down, I felt sort of broken, but I don’t feel that way anymore. Robin — along with the idea that vengeance will soon be mine — has made me 100 percent awesome.”

Seth Meyers 'Two Shows Away From Cutting Ties' With 'SNL'

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Back when it first announced that Seth Meyers would become the next host of Late Night, Lorne Michaels teased the possibility that Meyers could stick around Saturday Night Live as a Weekend Update host. I was pretty against this idea, feeling that a move like that would be too much like the guy who graduated still hanging around his old high school.

Thankfully, it sounds like that possibility isn't on the table anymore, as Seth Meyers told TheWrap, "We feel pretty strongly that I'm two shows away from cutting ties. ... I mostly just think its too hard to try to do two of these things at the same time."

Good move, Meyers.

The soon-to-be-former Weekend Update host also told TheWrap to expect Cecily Strong to get a new partner after he leaves SNL, saying, "It's still up in the air, but Cecily comes from that Chicago ensemble world and … she loves playing off of someone, so I wouldn't be surprised too see her with someone else."

Any guesses on who will join Strong at the Weekend Update desk? Bobby Moynihan and Kate McKinnon would be good, but SNL would sacrifice on of its two strongest Update guest castmembers to make that happen.

The first episode of Late Night with Seth Meyers airs on Feb. 24.

Rashida Jones Will Star in Steve Carell's Cop Comedy 'Tribeca'

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Rashida Jones isn't going to be away from sitcoms about fictional governments for long. She's signed on to star in Tribeca, Steve Carell's satirical cop drama for TBS, locking in her post-Parks and Recreation move. TheWrap has the scoop:

The project is described as a satirical look at a police procedural, which revolves around Angie Tribeca, a 10-year veteran of the Los Angeles Police Department’s RHCU (also known as the Really Heinous Crimes Unit). Jones will play Tribeca — described as “a lone wolf, capable, committed, strong and not thrilled when told she has to work with a partner” and a “cut-to-the-chase gal who speaks her mind” and “treads where many fear to venture.”

Jones and Rob Lowe's final Parks and Rec episode airs this Thursday. Lowe also has his post-Parks and Rec plans in place, working on a single-camera sitcom called The Pro for NBC.

Carell will direct Tribeca and produce with his wife Nancy Carell.

'SNL' PROMOS: Jonah Hill Goes for the Hosting Hat Trick

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Jonah Hill hosts Saturday Night Live for his third time this upcoming weekend, and NBC has released a series of promos for the episode. Hill is paired with SNL castmember Taran Killam, who actually wasn't even on the show yet when Hill hosted for his first time in 2008.

Of course, it's a different world for Hill now than it was then. The actor isn't hosting SNL due to movies like Superbad— he's now a two-time Oscar nominee hosting SNL thanks to his role in Martin Scorsese's The Wolf of Wall Street. These promos poke fun at Hill's new caliber of acting, with Killam reminding him that he can't use the f-word while hosting SNL. Hill also forces an autograph on Killam, which Killam asks be made out to Sarah. I hope Killam's wife, How I Met Your Mother's Cobie Smulders, knows about this Sarah ...

Bill Cosby Returning to TV With an NBC Comedy

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There are few living comedy icons bigger than Bill Cosby. If you ever forget that, catch one of his visits with Jimmy Fallon on Late Night (and hopefully soon The Tonight Show) and just watch how much Fallon and The Roots revere Cosby. I'm not sure if we can thank those Late Night appearances, but NBC wants to get back into the Cosby business, with The Hollywood Reporter confirming that Cosby and NBC were working on a new sitcom.

Cosby is teaming with former Cosby Show producer Tom Werner of Carsey Werner for a new family comedy in which he'd star, The Hollywood Reporter has confirmed. 
The comedy will be centered on Cosby, who will play the patriarch of a multigenerational family, like he did on NBC's Cosby Show and CBS' Cosby, and will include his take on marriage and parenting.

NBC has had trouble lately when it comes to bringing back former sitcom stars. The Michael J. Fox Show and Sean Saves the World are watched by probably just Michael J. Fox and Sean Hayes, consistently leaving those shows at the bottom of the ratings. Hopefully this won't be the case with Cosby. I'd hate to see him come back for a mediocre project. Maybe Fallon could give the showrunners of the new Cosby show some pointers.

'SNL' Promotes Head Writer Colin Jost to 'Weekend Update' Co-Anchor

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Saturday Night Live has announced who will join Cecily Strong as co-anchor of Weekend Update, and it's a curveball — the show has promoted head writer Colin Jost to the role.


Many SNL experts (myself included, if I count as an expert) had focused on the current roster of castmembers when trying to figure out who would replace Seth Meyers after Meyers moved over to Late Night. It looks like we all should have been paying attention to the behind-the-scenes talents on SNL.

According to his Wikipedia page, Jost has been writing for SNL since he was 22. According to Deadline, Jost's writing résumé includes "the 'We Did Stop' music video about the government shutdown featuring Miley Cyrus and the 50 Shades Of Grey screen test. He also has written for recurring characters on Weekend Update including Drunk Uncle, The Girl You Wish You Hadn’t Started a Conversation With at a Party (who was played by Strong) and Second-hand news correspondent Anthony Crispino."

'How I Met Your Mother' 200th Episode Gets Special Mother-Centric Opening Credits

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How I Met Your Mother's 200th episode airs this Monday and it's going to be a big one. After teasing us with a few scenes featuring The Mother over this season, HIMYM is ready to go all in and give fans a Mother-centric episode. Entitled "How Your Mother Met Me," the episode will focus on all the times Cristin Milioti's The Mother just missed running into Ted.

Yup, we're finally going to see just how close Ted came to meeting his future wife while he was dating her roommate, Cindy, or while she was in his college class. Will we see the St. Patrick's Day party where Ted got punched for using another guy's tab? Or will HIMYM reveal that The Mother was actually the woman that the dating service had set Ted up with way back in Season 1 only for Ted to bail on the date?

In honor of "How Your Mother Met Me,"HIMYM has created a special opening sequence for the 200th episode. Milioti is joined by Rachel Bilson, who plays Cindy, and a few other friends including Andrew Rannells' Darren (who we met in "Bass Player Wanted") and possibly Lou Ferrigno Jr., who played The Mother's boyfriend (who also punched Ted) in last season's "Time Travelers." (Yes, this means that The Mother dated the Hulk's son before she met Ted.)

'SNL' RECAP: Jonah Hill Brings in Leonardo DiCaprio, Michael Cera and a Few Pornstars

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Welcome to Edition No. 33 of Popculturology's Saturday Night Live recaps. All of your questions about the Jonah Hill-hosted episode will soon be answered.

How'd Jonah Hill do?



Hill's no SNL rookie, having previously hosted the show twice. I've usually included him among the better hosts of the past few seasons, probably because he's a funny guy for a living (unless he's working with Martin Scorsese or Bennett Miller) and he's game for SNL making fun of his "I'm a real actor now" persona.

This weekend's episode stuck to those previous trends, with Hill's monologue tackling the fact that with a second Oscar nomination, Hill's "I'm a real actor now" persona was getting the best of him. In response to the (fake) audience questions about what it was like to work with Leonardo DiCaprio on The Wolf of Wall Street, Hill started taking shots a his costar. That all changed when DiCaprio strolled out on stage, asking, "What the hell are you doing?" Hill's immediate reaction of "Oh god. Oh god, no" at the sight of DiCaprio was priceless.

DiCaprio wasted little time breaking down Hill's big shot persona, reminding Hill that instead of acting like this in public, he should just try to be the best version of himself. To settle Hill down, DiCaprio agreed to recreate an iconic Titanic scene. Good sport, DiCaprio. Why haven't you hosted SNL yet?

What were the best sketches of the night?



The pornstars. You can never go wrong with this sketch. It was reliably raunchy, so — as always — SNL had to save it until the very end of the show. Vanessa Bayer and Cecily Strong kill every time they do this sketch, perfectly nailing the balance between stoned ignorance and obscene one-liners. Is there any other recurring sketch that SNL would dare showcase lines like "You'll feel like you're conductor of running a train on the world" or "With these wheels, you'll feel like you're getting a rim job" with? I don't think so.



SNL and Hill have been bringing back the Adam Grossman/Benihana sketch for so long now, the show had to give poor Adam a new parent in this episode since Bill Hader, who previously portrayed Adam's exasperated father, is no longer on SNL. Bayer filled in for Hader, playing Adam's stepmother, Debbie. Poor Debbie. Even though her stepson is only 6, he never stops making her the butt of his standup humor routine. Does anyone know if "Do you like turtles?" works as a pickup line?



This digital short (yes, I'm going to just call everything a digital short now) should've pleased fans of both Her and Superbad. I'm not sure how much overlap there is between those two fan bases, but I know that I'm right in the middle of that cinematic venn diagram. Spoofing Her, "Me" cast Hill in Joaquin Phoenix's role, but instead of getting an operating system voiced by Scarlet Johansson, the guy in "Me" got one with a voice exactly the same as his own. This arrangement is really good when you want someone to compliment you on your mustache but also super awkward when it comes to ... um ... well, you know.

Hill's Superbad costar Michael Cera showed up to play the surrogate hired by the OS to represent himself in the physical world. If you ever wondered what it would be like if Superbad's Evan and Seth grew mustaches, started wearing high-wasted pants and sleeping with each other, "Me" is the fake movie you've been waiting for.



This sketch was worth it purely because of the random things Hill's character screamed at himself in the bathroom after thinking he had embarrassed himself at his boss' house. "THANK GOD THEY DON'T KNOW YOU HAVE INFANT PENIS SYNDROME? WHAT'S INFANT PENIS SYNDROME YOU ASK? JUST TAKE A LOOK?"

How about any shorts or commercials?



In addition to the "Me" short, SNL also tried to go high-concept with "The Hit," a sketch about three gangsters who become entranced with a snowfall while staking out a hit. Taran Killam and Kenan Thompson's gangsters were scolded by Jay Pharoah's gangster for trying to get out of the car to catch snowflakes on their tongues, but in the end, it was Pharoah's gangster who let the cuteness of a bunny get the best of him.

How was Weekend Update?



While SNL didn't bring back Kate McKinnon's killer Justin Bieber impression this week in honor of the Biebs' arrest, it did have Thompson play the cop who did the arresting. While talking to Strong during Update, Thompson's cop was quite proud of his work and didn't miss his chance to take a few shots at Bieber. "It was like finding a swaggy little leprechaun," Thompson's cop told Strong. Swaggy Little Leprechaun would be a horrible band name.



Had SNL gone with a castmember instead of Colin Jost to replace the departing Seth Meyers on Weekend Update, sketches like this one were exactly why McKinnon wasn't going to be that pick. She's probably the all-around strongest Update guest performer at this point, proving that again this past weekend by playing a Russian woman amazed that anyone would actually want to visit her country for the Sochi Olympics.

Anything else worth mentioning?



First off, Bobby Moynihan is actually pretty good at skating. Not amazing, but better than I would be. I'm glad SNL went with something other than a political sketch or a all-the-news-of-the-week type sketch for the cold open. Those get old quick and SNL hasn't really landed a great political cold open yet this season.



With Hader gone, it seems like SNL has made Thompson the go-to game show host now. I guess that's what he gets for being the longest-tenured SNL castmember after Meyers. The basic idea of this sketch wasn't really all that complex — who clogged the studio toilet? — and it was really only Hill's frantic defense against the charges that he was the one who did the clogging that saved it.



I will trade "Inside SoCal" for "Wake Up, Wakefield" every day of the week. Every. Day. Of the. Week.

What's next?

SNL is back on Feb. 1 with Melissa McCarthy hosting and Imagine Dragons as the musical guest.

Previous editions of Sunday Morning Live

Jan. 18, 2014: Drake
Dec. 15, 2013: John Goodman
Dec. 8, 2013: Paul Rudd
Nov. 24, 2013: Josh Hutcherson
Nov. 17, 2013: Lady Gaga
Nov. 3, 2013: Kerry Washington
Oct. 27, 2013: Edward Norton
Oct. 13, 2013: Bruce Willis
Oct. 6, 2013: Miley Cyrus
Sept. 29, 2013: Tina Fey

Jonathan Banks Joins 'Breaking Bad' Spinoff 'Better Call Saul'

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Mike Ehrmantraut will live again in Better Call Saul. Jonathan Banks will reprise the role in AMC's upcoming Breaking Bad spinoff series, Deadline reported on Monday.

While playing Mike over the course of a few seasons, Banks' character became a fan favorite. We'll now get to see what Mike was like during his time working with Bob Odenkirk's Saul Goodman before Walter White disrupted their lives.

With both Saul and Mike in Better Call Saul, they have to bring back Huell, right? Better Call Saul is set to premiere this fall — hopefully we'll get some clues before then.

'How I Met Your Mother''How Your Mother Met Me' Recap: The Mother Breaks Our Hearts

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An episode of How I Met Your Mother stirring up emotions, whether it’s elation or heartbreak, isn’t something new. Not at all. For over eight years, HIMYM has been delivering episodes of that caliber. Sure, there are low points in the show’s storytelling, but any program that has aired 200 episodes is going to have a few misses.

When it comes to “How Your Mother Met Me,” HIMYM did something amazing. Not only did it create yet another episode that made us feel feelings, but it accomplished that feat with a character who up until this point was more of a concept than an actual person. “How Your Mother Met Me” jumped back in time to 2005 to follow The Mother’s side of the story, showing all the times she almost met Ted.

Ted Mosby’s path to finding his soulmate hasn’t been an easy one. At various times, he thought Robin or Victoria or Zoey was the person he would spend the rest of his life. He actually made it to his wedding with Stella, only to get left at the altar. Five seasons ago, we watched Ted have his heart broken as he sat on that Shelter Island bed reading the note that Stella wrote him. Last season in “Time Travelers,” we saw a very alone Ted imagine going to his future wife’s apartment and tearfully wish that they were together at that very moment. For almost a decade, we’ve had our hearts broken right along with Ted.

In one 22-minute episode, HIMYM made The Mother break our hearts too. We were led to believe that Ted’s love life was tough, with the breakups and the failed engagement. It turns out The Mother’s love life was even tougher.

The love of The Mother’s life died when she was 21.

While Lily and Marshall were celebrating getting engaged and Ted was meeting Robin for the first time back in September 2005, The Mother’s 21st birthday party was interrupted by a phone call telling her that Max, the love of her life, was gone. She returned to the apartment she and Max had shared to find her birthday present waiting for her: A ukulele with a note reading, “So your breakfast doesn’t need to sing a cappella.” Ted may have thought he was alone at times, but The Mother really was.

Losing the person she believed was her one true love at 21 really did a number on The Mother. For almost seven years, she didn’t date anyone. In fact, she didn’t even believe that she deserved to find anyone else. At one point, she told Cindy, her roommate who dated Ted, “I believe that each of us only gets one [true love]. And I got mine already.” The Mother held onto this belief until April 2012, when she finally agreed to date Louis, her boyfriend before Ted. Even then, The Mother was apprehensive about dating.

“It’s like the first lottery ticket I ever bought was — KABOOM — jackpot and I’m pretty sure I’m not going to win again. Not like that anyways,” she told Louis. “So I don’t generally buy lottery tickets anymore.”

That’s heartbreaking.

It’s one thing to have had relationships that ended poorly. You still have faith that things will turn around. You still believe that the universe is going to pull through. You still hope that, like Stella once told Ted, the perfect person for you is trying to get to you as fast as they can. But to have the love of your life ripped away and to lose all hope? That’s crushing.

The Mother’s outlook on love was the opposite of Ted’s. No matter how many times Ted got knocked down, he always came back to the idea that there’s someone out there for him. We’ve seen him take some pretty hard hits over the years, but Ted always believed that his soulmate is out there. I’m guessing that Ted is going to be the one who restores that hope for The Mother.



While in Farhampton to play at Robin and Barney’s wedding reception, The Mother was staying at Louis’ beach house. The night before the wedding, she returned to that beach house to find Louis waiting for her — and ready to propose. “Can you give me a minute?” The Mother asked as Louis was down on one knee.

She had to talk to someone. After years of holding herself back from loving another person, The Mother need to talk with Max about moving on.

“Hi, Max. It’s me,” The Mother, looking to the sky outside Louis’ beach house. “Sorry to interrupt. I know you’re probably up there playing baseball with your dad. Look, I’ve, uh, got a situation here. I think that I have been holding myself back from falling in love again and I think it’s because I can’t let you go. But you’re not here anymore, so I have to ask this — would it be OK if I moved on? I realize that you have no way of answering that, but um …”

The wind picked up here, pushing The Mother back. ”OK, I will take that as a ‘yes.’ In that case, I should get back in there. I guess this is it ... for real this time. Bye, Max.”

Even though she had a sign from Max that it was OK to find someone who loved her, The Mother told Louis that she couldn’t marry him. She collected her belongings, including the yellow umbrella, and left the beach house. Thankfully, the mother of the bride never checked into the Farhampton Inn so there was a room open there for The Mother to stay in. With her conversation with Max and her breakup with Louis still weighing on her, The Mother unpacked the ukulele given to her by the love of her life and went out to the balcony.

As The Mother sat there singing “La Vie en Rose” and strumming along on her ukulele, HIMYM tied the moment into the current state of the gang: a teary eyed Marshall sitting on his bed after his fight with his wife, Lily driving away from the Farhampton Inn, Robin falling asleep before her wedding day and Barney finishing off a bottle of booze.

And then there was Ted.

The Mother room wasn’t just any room at the inn. Just as Ted had always believed and always hoped, the universe had a plan. The Mother’s room was right next to Ted’s. As she quietly played “La Vie en Rose,” Ted was on his own balcony, listening to the woman who would someday become his wife, who he would someday share a home with and who he would someday have two kids with. The right place, at the right time.

This is why I love HIMYM. All of the miscues, all of the storylines that don’t go anywhere, all of the awful road trips with Daphne — none of those things matter after you watch an episode like “How Your Mother Met Me.” Just like how Ted’s faith in the universe is soon going to be rewarded, our faith in this show is rewarded when HIMYM is able to tell a story as perfectly as it did with “How Your Mother Met Me.”

When previously discussing "How Your Mother Met Me,"HIMYM's 200th episode, show co-creator Craig Thomas said, "We want her to win an Emmy for this episode," referring to Cristin Milioti. Thomas wasn't kidding. I've been impressed with Milioti as The Mother since the show's ninth season began, but she absolutely crushed it this episode. I am so glad HIMYM went with her over a big name actress who would've just been stunt casting. The scene with The Mother talking to Max on the beach house porch had all the emotional wallop that we've seen Josh Radnor deliver as Ted over the years.



Beyond this episode’s triumph of fleshing out The Mother so well, “How Your Mother Met Me” was a treasure trove of moments that HIMYM fans had been hoping for for years. We finally got to see all the times The Mother and Ted almost met.

ST. PATRICK’S DAY 2008: Yes, The Mother and her friend, Kelly, were at the St. Patrick’s Day party that Ted and Barney went to in the Season 3 episode “No Tomorrow.” Kelly even bumped into Barney, but wasn’t swayed by his pickup line. At the party, The Mother ran into Mitch, her instructor from orchestra camp. The Mother invited Mitch over to her place to pick up her cello, which Mitch took as an invitation to try out a new move of his: The Naked Man.

Yes, The Mother was friends with the guy who pulled the Naked Man on Robin in the Season 4 episode “The Naked Man.” It turns out that The Mother was actually the third woman Mitch had tried the move on, and while it had worked on the first two women, it didn’t work on The Mother. The Naked Man — it works every two out of three times.

FALL 2009: Realizing that she would have to take some economics classes if she wanted to accomplish her goal of ending poverty, The Mother wound up sitting next to Cindy. The two quickly connected, and Cindy would become The Mother’s roommate. Before that could happen, The Mother and Cindy had to sit through Ted thinking their economics class was his architecture class. During her short time as Ted’s student, The Mother had the chance to laugh at a corny Ted Mosby joke. She was the only one in the class who laughed.

JANUARY 2010: Ted has just ruined his chances with Cindy by gushing about the items in her apartment that belonged to her roommate. As Ted leaves the apartment, that roommate — The Mother — steps into the bathroom. We saw that moment in the Season 5 episode “Girls Versus Suits,” and now we got to see what happened next. Cindy told The Mother that she and Ted had broken up … and told her roommate that it was because Ted was in love with The Mother. Then Cindy kissed The Mother. “I might have some stuff I have to figure out,” Cindy said. Thankfully Cindy figured that stuff out, since it was her and her girlfriend, Casey, who would someday recommend The Mother’s band to Ted for Robin and Barney’s wedding.

There are just eight episodes of HIMYM left. Episodes like “How Your Mother Met Me” make it very difficult to say goodbye to this show.

LAST EPISODE: "Unpause"• NEXT EPISODE: "Sunrise"




Notes and quotes
There are two MacLaren’s Pubs. While Ted, Marshall, Lily, Robin and Barney have been hanging out at the one on the West Side, it turns out that The Mother and her friends frequented the one on the other side of the city.

Ted has previously mentioned The Mother’s painting of robots and habit of making english muffins perform songs during breakfast.

Mitch after pulling the Naked Man on The Mother: “This is my thing.”
The Mother: “That most certainly is your thing. Now please cover your thing up.”

A naked Mitch:“Can I tell you an embarrassing story?”
The Mother:“Is it this one taking place right now?”

Cindy to The Mother after Ted managed to find her stuff in Cindy’s room: “He has a thing for you.”

Hearing The Mother pronounce “renaissance” in the same douchey way that Ted pronounces “encyclopaedia” was a touching moment.

The Mother trying to figure out why someone would name a bar Puzzles:“Why would you call a bar Puzzles? Unless … that’s the puzzle.”

You can purchase Milioti's version of "La Vie en Rose" on iTunes.

'SNL' PROMOS: Melissa McCarthy and Kenan Thompson Imagine Dragons

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Melissa McCarthy will host Saturday Night Live for her third time this weekend, making it the third consecutive season that the Mike and Molly star has graced the SNL stage. When McCarthy first hosted during Season 37, she was one of that season's top hosts. She was original and extremely funny. McCarthy's encore during last season didn't quite live up to her debut. Like most of her movies now, SNL boxed McCarthy in as a someone who should be loudly obnoxious and just fall down a lot, forgetting that she rocketed to fame with a nuanced performance in Bridesmaids.

Hopefully McCarthy finds the magic that made her so successful the first time she hosted when she returns this weekend. NBC released a series of promos for this weekend's episode on Wednesday, pairing McCarthy with Kenan Thompson. Nothing really amazing in these promos — the duo sings a song about imagining dragons (a play on the name of this weekend's musical guest) and McCarthy sucker punches Thompson at one point.

These promos fail to mention that this weekend's episode is Seth Meyers final SNL, which should lead to some pretty key moments beyond whatever McCarthy winds up doing. Will Stefon come back to say goodbye to his "Weekend Update" buddy?

Have Mercy! Jimmy Fallon Gets a Pep Talk From His 'Full House' Dads

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As part of the promotional push for John Stamos, Bob Saget and Dave Couiler's Dannon Super Bowl commercial (yes, there are promotional pushes for commercials now), the three former Full House patriarchs have been showing up all over the place. On Wednesday night, the trio made an appearance during the cold open of Late Night with Jimmy Fallon.

The sketch began with a pajama-clad Jimmy Fallon calling out for his dad, summoning Saget as Danny Tanner. Stamos as Jesse Katsopolis and Couiler as Joey Gladstone quickly followed. "We just heard some sad, yet sappy, heart-warming music," Jesse said.

Together, Fallon's three dads convinced Fallon that he would be great as the host of The Tonight Show. "No one can ever take that away from you," Danny assured him. "Well, maybe Jay Leno," Jesse noted. You're a smart man, Uncle Jesse.

'American Horror Story' Recap: 'The Seven Wonders'

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So Cordelia ...

Hopefully, if you were so inclined, you've seen the episode already. Cordelia (Sarah Paulson), Fiona's (Jessica Lange) only daughter, ended up being the Supreme. She wasn't my top guess, but it also wasn't a very exciting pick either. The Supreme ended up being the old Supreme's daughter. I guess I thought it wasn't going to be so obvious. I can't say I had extremely high expectations for the season finale after this season of hobbled story telling, but knowing that there was an endgame this episode certainly contributed to the higher score.

Popculturology Score: B

The way I see it, American Horror Story's anthology concept behind the series is a difficult thing to master. Each of the three seasons thus far have been drastically different from each other. If the audience doesn't buy in to the theme, you're stuck watching an entire season trying not to compare it to the last two years. The show has built a following over the last two years. It's difficult to do so, but you really have to treat each season independently. It's a very non-traditional way of watching TV — no one really does that. Honestly, the idea of starting over every season is pretty brilliant. If you're good at it, you can keep the show fresh, and it's a clean slate every single year. You not only retain viewers from past seasons, but you have the opportunity to gain new ones from people who decide to finally give the show a chance after hearing how good the show is. Actors don't have to commit their lives to a show for eight or nine years, which is beneficial to the show when trying to attract A-list talent.

Such is the case with another show gaining a lot of attention, HBO's True Detective. Here's another anthology-based series that has two Oscar-nominated actors carrying the show. Most likely, we'll see rotating actors taking the lead roles every season.

With all of that said, American Horror Story continues to be one of the — if not the — most unique shows on television right now. No, this season wasn't my favorite, but I'm satisfied with the fact that come October, we'll see something new again. Here are my overall thoughts on this season of American Horror Story.

The Talent
Again, the fact that the show can start all over every year is a big reason why the quality of the acting is so high. Lange has been nominated for an Oscar six times. She's won two. There's no one else on TV right now that has that kind of résumé. I'm not sure she was planning on sticking around for all three seasons, but she's managed to make herself a series regular for three (and soon to be four) seasons. She appears to be getting nominated for every major television award since she's been on the show — and she really does deserve every nomination she's been getting. This season we saw both Angela Bassett and Kathy Bates join the show. Bringing together these three actresses made the show watchable no matter what was going on with the story.

The Story
Not my favorite. It just seemed to simple to me. This season played more like a comedy, which wasn't why I started watching the show. It was also really hard to follow what was going on most of the time. Each season isn't on very long, as American Horror Story is almost half the length of a normal television series. I'm setting the bar high, but every episode should matter. With so many things happening this season that really didn't seem to matter, the show could have been condensed to about five episodes this year, which probably isn't a strong selling point for the plotline of a show that is already running on an abbreviated schedule. We could have done without the whole "Hank being a witch hunter" thing. Some people seemed to really like it, but Stevie Nicks? Why was she there? I guess I really thought, especially at the end when the Supreme was finally revealed, that there would be some amazing plot twist that we just didn't see coming. Nope. Didn't really happen.

The Characters
Not a lot of complexity here with most of the coven. More importantly, there weren't a lot of characters on the show who I really cared about. How these characters interacted with each other was also confusing most of the time. One minute they're the best of friends, the next they're trying to kill each other.

Characters I Liked
Fiona Goode (Lange)
Misty Day (Lily Rabe)
Cordelia Foxx (Paulson)
Delphine LaLaurie (Bates)
Marie Laveau (Bassett)

Characters I Didn't Like
Pretty much everyone else. Kyle (Evan Peters) was a disaster. Nan (Jamie Brewer) had nothing to do with the central part of the story.

The Technical Stuff
This is another reason why some of the episodes of the season scored higher. Much of the camera work, on the part of a small rotating list of directors, was fantastic. I appreciate shows that can step out of the box in how they frame or storyboard each scene. Something that can be so simple was not a shortcut here for most of the season. Most episodes that I found especially captivating (from the overall direction) was done by Alfonso Gomez-Rejon. I mentioned him in my first post of the show and he continued to raise the bar for the rest of the season.

And so ends this season of American Horror Story. Don't take most of the negative criticism as a signal of dissatisfaction in the show. I think I just really had high hopes from the past two seasons. Even though this one didn't really deliver this time around, I trust that the show will come back better than ever later this year.
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