When a group of arrogant students commandeer the foosball table at school, Jeff (Joel McHale) and Shirley (Yvette Nicole Brown) unite to defeat them. Meanwhile, Annie (Alison Brie) accidentally breaks Abed’s (Danny Pudi) new limited edition “Dark Knight” DVD and claims that someone broke into the apartment and stole it. Things snowball out of control when Abed thinks he knows who took the DVD and sets about getting it back.
Immaculata University senior guardRob Siter became the second Mighty Mac men’s basketball player to eclipse the 1,000-point mark with a game-high 23 points in Immaculata’s 88-71 win against CSAC foe Philadelphia Biblical University on Monday night.
Immaculata improves to 2-3 overall and 1-1 in the CSAC. Philadelphia Biblical falls to 2-3, 0-1 in the league.
Siter scored his final layup of the night with 2:23 to play in the contest and surpassed the 1,000-point mark with 1,001 career points. Siter also finished with a team-leading eight rebounds and five steals.
It was a back-and-forth game during the first eight minutes that ended with a 15-all tie at the 12:08 mark. The Mighty Macs scored 11 straight points to open up an 11-point advantage (26-15) with 9:34 to play in the first half, and never gave that lead away.
Immaculata led 44-36 at halftime.
The Crimson Eagles trailed by nine, 48-39, 1:28 into the second half, but that would be the last time Philadelphia Biblical chipped Immaculata’s lead to single digits. A 9-0 run during a span of 3:48 gave the Mighty Macs their largest lead of the night, 79-58, with 5:15 left in the contest.
Philadelphia Biblical had four scorers in double figures, led by 19 points from Jeff Bishop. Charles Kennedy had 11 points and a team-leading eight rebounds.
Immaculata travels to Rosemont on Wednesday night for an 8 p.m. tip with the Ravens.
The study group pitches in to help when Annie (Alison Brie) decides to move in with Troy (Donald Glover) and Abed (Danny Pudi), but the plan breaks down when she becomes frustrated by their fun-loving lifestyle. Elsewhere, Dean Pelton (Jim Rash) discovers Jeff (Joel McHale) at the mall and blackmails him into spending a lovely afternoon together.
Episode Synopsis: When Britta (Gillian Jacobs) runs anonymous personality tests on everyone for a psychology class, one of the test results seems to indicate that someone in the group is deeply disturbed. At the group’s Halloween pre-party, she enlists Jeff (Joel McHale) to help draw out the potential sociopath and the two of them lure everyone into telling their favorite horror stories. The results are…spookey. Chevy Chase, Yvette Nicole Brown, Alison Brie, Danny Pudi, Donald Glover and Jim Rash also star.
Coming off a great performance on the BET Hip-Hop Awards Cypher, Skillz releases a new video for “Celebrate Life“, which is the latest visual off of his “The World Needs More Skillz” album. DJ Jazzy Jeff makes an appearance in the music video as Skillz chronicles Las Vegas as the perfect place to celebrate the highs that come in life. The video is directed by Cristopher Schafer.
Greendale’s favorite diverse study group is back as Communityreturns for its third season of meticulously sharp writing and inspired story ideas. Unlike most comedies out there, and especially on NBC, this is one that genuinely has fun with its source material focused around the concept of college life. The premiere reminds viewers how things have changed since the series debut yet the character’s conflicting personalities still remain as strong as ever.
After last season’s terrific two-part Western/Star Wars spoof finale, Pierce humbly left the group after a year of lies, pills and jealousy that made him somewhat of an evil villain bent on destroying any happiness usually revolving around Jeff, and ultimately the group itself. The show’s writers have realized Pierce went off the deep end last season and want to bring his character back to being the narcissistic rude old man he originally was in the beginning. That’s what this episode was trying to reinforce, if you were excluded from the study group, how crazy would it make you become? Jeff learns this the hard way.
As usual, Community always has clever opening scenes before the credits and in the premiere, issues focused on the show’s cult following were addressed. During a dream sequence in song form, Jeff, Britta and Abed insist that things this year will finally be ordinary (boring) and therefore make them more appealing to society (viewers) compared to previous attempts. Once the three awake, you appreciate how Community enjoys being a constant inside joke among its loyal fans and is content with sacrificing widespread approval for originality. It’s a brilliant touch that fits in with the series’ attitude of sarcastic undertones.
The episode then gets us reacquainted with the study group after the summer break. Not much serious drama to unpack here but it appears that Troy and Abed are living together, which will most likely play a part throughout the season. The main plot device revolved around Jeff getting kicked out of Biology class, by Greendale’s first teacher who actually appears to know what he’s doing, and Pierce replacing his position. Annie also has a good bit where she hits Jeff with a dose of his own medicine, implying that they are still friends outside the study table.
As usual, Winger brushes this aside due to his over-sized level of arrogance and does his popular “I don’t need them” routine that Joel McHale continually nails. His antics trying to get back into the class and chasing Chang through the school’s air vents shows the desperate lengths someone will go to get back to normality.
Once Jeff goes off the hinges, his inner psyche is unveiled. The sequence in his mind is truly hilarious and unsettling at the same time (Jeff eating his phone). His attack on the table is a little unnecessary but it proves Jeff’s point that a piece of furniture can destroy the definition of friendship.
Things resolve themselves with Pierce acting as a scapegoat to get Jeff back into the group. Problems aren’t all fixed, but by the last shot in the episode it seems that things are back to normal for now.
The sub-plots this episode are interesting but don’t do much to evolve situations. Abed’s yearning for a new show to replace Cougar Town as his favorite pastime goes nowhere quick. While it’s initially funny, especially Abed’s creature-like squeal for comfort when he’s distressed (only Troy can calm him down), after a while, it grows old. Meanwhile Dean Pelton has his own continuing storyline too, as he gets in over his head when he takes on Greendale’s Vice Dean, played by the great John Goodman.
It’s fun to see the two square off, only for Dean Pelton to get whipped into submission once Goodman shows his true power of dominance. Having an actor of Goodman’s caliber added to the cast is a marvelous addition since he is someone who’s willing to be funny and extreme at any given time. The fact that Greendale has no money this season opens up a whole slew of doors for Community to enter with new ideas brewing on the horizon.
Chang, for example, appears to be the school’s security guard this semester, which will obviously lead to hilarity and countless moments of enforced chaos. Jeff’s remark after seeing him in full uniform pretty much sums it up, “this is the year we all die.”
Overall, it was a relatively somber episode that had more ups then downs. It was a gentle reintroduction for the study group while adding new elements that will grow over the course of time. Additions like Goodman and Michael K. Williams from HBO’s The Wire, as a former inmate turned science teacher, make the proceedings even more of a fresh viewing experience.
Community’s new season is off and running, so it’s just a matter of time before wittier movie parodies and more innovative filming techniques (remember the claymation episode from the last holiday special?) start popping up week after week. Fans of well-written and superbly performed comedy television can rejoice, Community has returned.
On the last night of the fiscal quarter, Dennis, Shenanigan’s manager, will be promoted to district manager if they have a $9000 day. To motivate the crew, he tells them the restaurant will close if they don’t meet this goal. His competition is next door: Ta-Ta’s, a bar with scantily clad waitresses, managed by the newly self-confident Calvin. At Ta-Ta’s, it’s Allison’s first day; she’s nervous. At Shenanigan’s, Mason, a cook, is trying his best to be cool, without success. As the shift wears on, each employee faces his worst fears, and Dennis tries to learn how to attract women. Next door, Calvin and Allison make self discoveries. It all ends at the post-shift party
Legendary comic Carlin comes back to the Beacon theater to angrily rant about airportsecurity, germs, cigars, angels, children and parents, men, names, religion, god, advertising, Bill Jeff and minorities. This is George Carlin’s 1999HBO Special (from The Beacon Theater New York). It is George Carlin’s 11th HBOComedy Special.
George Carlin shows his comedy has changed in the years since he started 43 years ago with this special. Here, anger fuels his comedy more than ever before, and it helps alot. Here, he attacks Children and parents, cigars, angels, theme restaurants, advertising (ironically), religion, god, airportsecurity and germs. With this, he brings a whole new type of stylish comedy that makes Richard Pryor look like Carrot Top. At 61, George comes back with his best, and wins. Best comedy special of the year. A++
EPISODE 48: One of the true forces behind popularizing West Coast rap – really – David Faustino joins Eric, Jeff and Jensen to talk Married With Children + Lou Adler + the Sunset Strip + The Roxy + The Whisky + Will 1x + Xzibit + N.W.A. + Fairfax + Scott Caan and Alchemist + his once and again rap career + more
EPISODE 47: Streetwear giants Bobby Hundreds and Ben Hundreds join Eric, Jeff and Jensen to discuss what’s in the Fairfax water + who the next brand to blow up will be + not apologizing for the Complex streetwear list + growing up with Stussy and Fresh Jive + who really shops at the LA Hundreds store + the coolest Nasstory during his beef with Jay-Z + DIYWest Coast music + being friends with Game + the Kreayshawn situation + Caushun the gay rapper + much more!
Decades before Jay-Z, Nicki Minaj, Eminem or Lil Wayne made names for themselves in mainstream hip-hop, Afrika Bambaataa, Grandmaster Flash and Kool Herc introduced the movement to the first adopters, who spread the genre to the masses via not only music, but dancing, art and DJing.
That rich history of hip-hop culture, dating back to the days of b-boys and b-girls breaking on streets, DJs scratching turntables, MCs battling each other on corners and graffiti writers tagging wherever and whenever, is explored in a new coffee-table book and accompanying Grammy Museum exhibit, which opens Tuesday.
“Hip-Hop: A Cultural Odyssey” is a massive, sprawling 420 page opus that includes exclusive photos and interviews with the pioneers, trendsetters and icons of the genre and provides an exhaustive account on the birth, evolution and global ripple effect hip-hop has had over the last four decades.“There was a realization that there was a huge void in the market for a book like this,” said Jordan Sommers, editor of the book and president of ARIA Multimedia Entertainment, the book’s publisher. “Coffee table books are usually associated with iconic subjects, culturally (more…)