The people at Jest Comedy bring us this supercut of the best of those very special episodes, from peer pressure to deadbeat dads. Enjoy reliving some of the more awkward and painful moments in comedy.
Culture Buzz Gene Shalit, former film critic of The Today Show, is a respected expert in the field of wordplay. Also, he somehow gets paid to say stuff about movies.
Well TV shows and Back To The Future II. Obviously. (via tumblr.thedailywh.at)
Movie Buzz “Big Trouble in Little China” is an awesome film. Despite the fact that the lead actor seems to have no idea what's going on.
He gets killed almost as often as Sean Bean. (via nerdist.com)
Check out Rick Perry vomit his favorite political cliche all over the place. (via msnbc.msn.com)
What do you get if you edit 50's and 60's coffee commercials, leaving just the parts were the guys are jerks? Fifty three seconds of hilarity, that's what! With a healthy dose of sexism, of course. (via reddit.com)
Is there any trope from movies you can't make a super-cut of? I'm sure there is, but so long as those future hypothetical cuts are as engaging as this one I'll keep watching. (via thedailywh.at)
What's the take away here? Romantic comedies need more explosions! This year's summer blockbusters are ready to party in this excellent supercut.
This is one sexy supercut. Asking the question we've all wondered, Deandagati spliced together every use of the word “sex” in a single episode of Secret Life. What do you think the total was?
A supercut of your favorite swan blubbering. It's not the pretty kind of crying either.
Hey hermano! Here's almost every instance of Buster Bluth's “hey brother” catchphrase being uttered on Arrested Development.
The editor behind the 100 Cheesiest Movie Quotes is back with another extensive collection of quotes from classic films. I'm going to have to remember some of these to scream at people on the subway later.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/23/the-comprehensiv...
After watching this comprehensive compilation, you, too, will be an expert on collateralized debt obligations and whatnot. Precision, clarity, eloquence: These are the cornerstones of all cable news programming.
Hey guys! Can you make it all the way through this video? It features a selection of YouTube's self-help beauty gurus just, you know, introducing themselves and stuff.