Absolutely agree, even minus the leotard. Hair-back and straight is a fantastic look for her.
I would have loved to see her minus the leotard.
I think this show is getting real good from a writing/editing standpoint, but I also think I still tune in mostly for the babes. Is this so wrong?
Rent Choke.
What was it that Troy said to Brita? Something like, “Girls are supposed to dance. That’s why God gave them parts that jiggle.”
Damn I love this show.
The brunette teacher is seriously doable. If I had to choose between her and Brita, I’d choose to be between her and Brita.
Which leaves Annie free to “hang out” with me…
(but you are right about Professor Slater—She is a stunner)
Head’s up! Alison Brie (Annie) is going to be on Attack of the Show on G4 in about 1.5 minutes.
Abed’s dance at at the end was pretty impressive.
Favorite Piercism:
Jeff: [My girlfriend’s] last name Beeswax, first name ‘None-a-your’.
Pierce: Really? My third wife was biracial too.
For those not familiar, the Greendale Community College website (maintained by the show but separate from the show site) is great, especially the faculty and student profiles. Also pins down the location as Greendale, Colorado. The Admissions Page is pretty good too:
Greendale Community College:
You’re Already Accepted!
Brita, Slater than Annie. Although Slater has the advantage of being easy.
I loved the nod from Pierce to all his old SNL cast mates when he said he was used to being told “drop dead” to his face.
Didn’t catch that, but it would work.
Just wanted to reiterate for the benefit of all the new posters to the thread that Annie is also in Mad Men, although in a very different sort of role as Trudy. I think she’s an amazing actress, because it took me a handful of Community episodes to realize they were the same person.
And she candance the Charleston.
OMFG, this is the first television episode I’ve ever watched THREE times in a row.
Tea for TWO? But there’s FIVE! Wouldn’t the tea kill the flowers?
The Jack Black episode dripped with it, but that meta-tone has been emerging as a consistent theme since the start of the series. It’s most obvious in the character of Abed–whose interprets events completely in terms of pop-culture–but all of them have moments here and there when they seem to be aware of their sitcom existence.
Right now, all of NBC’s Thursday comedies get a good portion of their laughs by having characters comment on the show itself. But “Community” is somewhat unusual because it doesn’t rely on familiar tropes to do this. “P&R” and “The Office” lean on the documentary conceit to introduce meta-humor, and characters in the wonderfully screwball “30 Rock” will overtly address the viewer. Each of these techniques clearly separates the character as part of the story from the character as an actor in the story. But in “Community”, the meta-humor is discussed by and integrated with characters inside the (sitcom) plot, rather than having those characters “step out” of the action to get the meta-point across. So far it’s worked, and if the writers are smart they’ll develop this idea further.
Abed is just another Chicago Polack?
Er, makes a lot of 21st century sense. I drive through hoods that flaunt tempting cuisine except I recall too hell what a person well south of the Tropic
Abed is just another Chicago Polack?
Er, makes a lot of 21st century sense. I drive through hoods that flaunt tempting cuisine except I recall too hell what a person well south of the Tropic of Cancer is likely to love.
Blasphemy! Especially when Zoe and Emily appeared as cousins.
I agree. Although she looked amazing in her Wonder Woman costume on that Halloween episode.
No, Annie! Not Vaughn! Don’t become a hippy chick!