SURPRISE! NBC has added a last-minute comedy series to its fall lineup! Think Fast follows a Chicago slacker (John Mulaney) who, after losing his license and his job after a DUI, is forced to move in with and work for his stepbrother (Rob Riggle), the head coach for the Chicago Bulls.

SURPRISE! NBC has added a last-minute comedy series to its fall lineup! Think Fast follows a Chicago slacker (John Mulaney) who, after losing his license and his job after a DUI, is forced to move in with and work for his stepbrother (Rob Riggle), the head coach for the Chicago Bulls.


Goofus and Gallant (2013) » starring Will Arnett, Jason Bateman, Julie Bowen, Nick Offerman, Melissa McCarthy, Tim Meadows, Ari Graynor, and Justin Timberlake

Goofus and Gallant (2013) » starring Will Arnett, Jason Bateman, Julie Bowen, Nick Offerman, Melissa McCarthy, Tim Meadows, Ari Graynor, and Justin Timberlake

Oh and here’s one that got rejected from the compilation set on account of having a terribly executed design concept (I got about halfway through it and then was like “oh whatever” and never posted it): Beelzebub, in which Aubrey Plaza plays a student at a Christian college who discovers that she is not only adopted, but also the antichrist. Dave Foley and Catherine O’Hara are her adoptive parents; Jason Sudeikis is a charismatic Joel Osteen-y televangelist who has her on his show and makes it his “mission” to save her.

Oh and here’s one that got rejected from the compilation set on account of having a terribly executed design concept (I got about halfway through it and then was like “oh whatever” and never posted it): Beelzebub, in which Aubrey Plaza plays a student at a Christian college who discovers that she is not only adopted, but also the antichrist. Dave Foley and Catherine O’Hara are her adoptive parents; Jason Sudeikis is a charismatic Joel Osteen-y televangelist who has her on his show and makes it his “mission” to save her.

Hi, my name is Liz and this is a compilation of some of my favorite silly fake film/TV posters. That I make. For funsies. Just puttin’ it out there. Because I’m bored. That’s all.

Broads Abroad (2012)

starring Elizabeth Olsen, Lizzy Caplan, Mindy Kaling, Leighton Meester, James McAvoy, Tom Sturridge, Mélanie Laurent

Spurred by unemployment, friends Kate, Joanna, and Megan (Elizabeth Olsen, Lizzy Caplan, Mindy Kaling) enroll in grad school in Amsterdam and move into an artists’ squat with citizen journalist Paul (James McAvoy), neo-hippie stoner Halcyon (Leighton Meester), and bohemian artist Jules (Mélanie Laurent). High times and crazy European adventures ensue.

Broads Abroad (2012)

starring Elizabeth Olsen, Lizzy Caplan, Mindy Kaling, Leighton Meester, James McAvoy, Tom Sturridge, Mélanie Laurent

Spurred by unemployment, friends Kate, Joanna, and Megan (Elizabeth Olsen, Lizzy Caplan, Mindy Kaling) enroll in grad school in Amsterdam and move into an artists’ squat with citizen journalist Paul (James McAvoy), neo-hippie stoner Halcyon (Leighton Meester), and bohemian artist Jules (Mélanie Laurent). High times and crazy European adventures ensue.

Nothing But Treble (2012)

amypop asked — Rashida Jones, Maya Rudolph, Jeremy Renner

Sad sack Kim (Rashida Jones), a failed singer-songwriter, is forced by unemployment to take the job of director for Nothing But Treble, a college women’s acapella group that has always been considered a joke in comparison to Ace of Bass, the school’s hotshot men’s supergroup, led by four different directors (Jeremy Renner, Jimmy Fallon, Taran Killam, and A.D. Miles). However, though the NBT girls are hardly Glee material, Kim senses they have star potential, and must join forces and reconnect with her smug and superior sister, pop diva-turned-Pop Factor judge Charlyne (Maya Rudolph) in order to lead the group to collegiate acapella glory. Also starring Anna Kendrick, Emma Stone, Gabourey Sidibe, Naya Rivera, Abby Elliott, Brie Larson, Alia Shawkat, Hunter Parrish, Dave Franco, Armie Hammer, Scott Porter, Jonathan Groff, Donald Glover, DC Pierson, Dominick Dierkes, Amy Poehler, and Rachel Dratch.

Nothing But Treble (2012)

amypop asked — Rashida Jones, Maya Rudolph, Jeremy Renner

Sad sack Kim (Rashida Jones), a failed singer-songwriter, is forced by unemployment to take the job of director for Nothing But Treble, a college women’s acapella group that has always been considered a joke in comparison to Ace of Bass, the school’s hotshot men’s supergroup, led by four different directors (Jeremy Renner, Jimmy Fallon, Taran Killam, and A.D. Miles). However, though the NBT girls are hardly Glee material, Kim senses they have star potential, and must join forces and reconnect with her smug and superior sister, pop diva-turned-Pop Factor judge Charlyne (Maya Rudolph) in order to lead the group to collegiate acapella glory. Also starring Anna Kendrick, Emma Stone, Gabourey Sidibe, Naya Rivera, Abby Elliott, Brie Larson, Alia Shawkat, Hunter Parrish, Dave Franco, Armie Hammer, Scott Porter, Jonathan Groff, Donald Glover, DC Pierson, Dominick Dierkes, Amy Poehler, and Rachel Dratch.

No Kids Allowed (2012)

anonymous asked — Ellie Kemper, Zooey Deschanel, Charlie Day, Isla Fisher

Kevin Moylan (Charlie Day) and Laurie Stewart-Moylan (Ellie Kemper) are the perfect couple. He’s a writer; she’s a greeting card designer. They share a gorgeous apartment in the West Village, travel the world, sleep late, and buy whatever they want while still living comfortably within their means. Their French bulldogs, Sullivan and Miss Piggy, are their most beloved companions. And by no means do they want children.
This, of course, hardly sits well with their families. After all, Kevin’s younger sister Gabby (Zooey Deschanel) is an earthy Park Slope supermom, living in happily-married vegan, unvaccinated paradise with husband Jensen (Jake Gyllenhaal) and their twins, while Laurie’s eldest sister Lila (Isla Fisher), a seemingly ageless Upper East Side mom-of-three, sings the praises of parenthood while a cavalry of nannies and au pairs keep her kids from realizing Mommy and dad Bradford (John Slattery) are on the verge of a nasty divorce.
After three years of marriage and seven years of cohabitation, the question their relatives have been asking all along — “So, when are you two having kids?” — has hit a deafening fever pitch. But in a world full of baby showers, celebrity bump watches, and obnoxious family members, how long can a couple really postpone the inevitable?
(Spoiler alert: Laurie has a pregnancy scare against all odds. They attempt to deal with it. They’re rightly terrified. Shit goes down. Turns out she never was pregnant and it was a super convincing false positive. This is actually a movie in which having a baby isn’t presented as a magical cure-all for relationships, and childfree people aren’t represented as immature or awful people, which was my main problem with Friends With Kids, as well as with Hollywood in general. And that’s that!)

No Kids Allowed (2012)

anonymous asked — Ellie Kemper, Zooey Deschanel, Charlie Day, Isla Fisher

Kevin Moylan (Charlie Day) and Laurie Stewart-Moylan (Ellie Kemper) are the perfect couple. He’s a writer; she’s a greeting card designer. They share a gorgeous apartment in the West Village, travel the world, sleep late, and buy whatever they want while still living comfortably within their means. Their French bulldogs, Sullivan and Miss Piggy, are their most beloved companions. And by no means do they want children.

This, of course, hardly sits well with their families. After all, Kevin’s younger sister Gabby (Zooey Deschanel) is an earthy Park Slope supermom, living in happily-married vegan, unvaccinated paradise with husband Jensen (Jake Gyllenhaal) and their twins, while Laurie’s eldest sister Lila (Isla Fisher), a seemingly ageless Upper East Side mom-of-three, sings the praises of parenthood while a cavalry of nannies and au pairs keep her kids from realizing Mommy and dad Bradford (John Slattery) are on the verge of a nasty divorce.

After three years of marriage and seven years of cohabitation, the question their relatives have been asking all along — “So, when are you two having kids?” — has hit a deafening fever pitch. But in a world full of baby showers, celebrity bump watches, and obnoxious family members, how long can a couple really postpone the inevitable?

(Spoiler alert: Laurie has a pregnancy scare against all odds. They attempt to deal with it. They’re rightly terrified. Shit goes down. Turns out she never was pregnant and it was a super convincing false positive. This is actually a movie in which having a baby isn’t presented as a magical cure-all for relationships, and childfree people aren’t represented as immature or awful people, which was my main problem with Friends With Kids, as well as with Hollywood in general. And that’s that!)

Is it a bad thing that I think a Sherlock Holmes adaption set in a high school and with the main characters gender-flipped would actually be the greatest and campiest thing to ever exist? No? Awesome, then.
In either case, I really want Scandalous to be a real thing.

Is it a bad thing that I think a Sherlock Holmes adaption set in a high school and with the main characters gender-flipped would actually be the greatest and campiest thing to ever exist? No? Awesome, then.

In either case, I really want Scandalous to be a real thing.

Dangerous Game (2012)

After their yacht is blown off-course during a sailing vacation, wealthy English couple Graham and Gillian Bennett (Liam Neeson and Tilda Swinton), their pampered son Noel (Benedict Cumberbatch), and his sharp American girlfriend Bridget (Jennifer Lawrence) land on a deserted island, where they are greeted, fed, and offered hospitality by an eccentric retired war hero and game hunting enthusiast, General Artur Zelinski (Christoph Waltz). It’s not until they’re deep in the jungle, running for their lives, that the foursome realizes it’s a trap — and they’ve been brought to the island to provide deadly entertainment for the general. Together, they must kill or inevitably be killed. Based on Richard Connell’s short story “The Most Dangerous Game.” In theaters this December.

Dangerous Game (2012)

After their yacht is blown off-course during a sailing vacation, wealthy English couple Graham and Gillian Bennett (Liam Neeson and Tilda Swinton), their pampered son Noel (Benedict Cumberbatch), and his sharp American girlfriend Bridget (Jennifer Lawrence) land on a deserted island, where they are greeted, fed, and offered hospitality by an eccentric retired war hero and game hunting enthusiast, General Artur Zelinski (Christoph Waltz). It’s not until they’re deep in the jungle, running for their lives, that the foursome realizes it’s a trap — and they’ve been brought to the island to provide deadly entertainment for the general. Together, they must kill or inevitably be killed. Based on Richard Connell’s short story “The Most Dangerous Game.” In theaters this December.

Movie pre-cast: Bridesmaids. This was tough — I knew right off the bat that I wanted to cast Judy Holliday as Annie (her performance in It Should Happen To You is proof that women can totally play human disasters and actually have it be funny), but the other bridesmaids were a nightmare! I eventually went with Betty Grable as Lillian, Jane Russell as Helen, Lana Turner as Rita, Betty White as Becca, and Vivian Vance as Megan, but really, there were so many ballsy and underratedly-funny women working during that time period that this is totally open for reinterpretation. Threw in some Donald O’Connor as Rhodes because honestly, that guy could have played Batman and been the right choice.

Movie pre-cast: Bridesmaids. This was tough — I knew right off the bat that I wanted to cast Judy Holliday as Annie (her performance in It Should Happen To You is proof that women can totally play human disasters and actually have it be funny), but the other bridesmaids were a nightmare! I eventually went with Betty Grable as Lillian, Jane Russell as Helen, Lana Turner as Rita, Betty White as Becca, and Vivian Vance as Megan, but really, there were so many ballsy and underratedly-funny women working during that time period that this is totally open for reinterpretation. Threw in some Donald O’Connor as Rhodes because honestly, that guy could have played Batman and been the right choice.