Baka, Bile and Baseball Bats · Santa Clarita Diet · TV Review Santa Clarita Diet goes out with a stellar season finale · TV Club · The A.V. Club
Dr. Wolf being a cold, no-nonsense scientist was fine; De Rossi's delivery was quite funny at times. Not exactly the answer Joel was looking for from Dr. Wolf. Basically, Dr. Wolf (Portia de Rossi) comes to the Hammonds' house to make a cure for Sheila, though it's a bit more complicated than that. It's not a surprise that Santa Clarita Diet ended Season 1 on a cliffhanger—that's what shows do. That felt like a cheap way to have everyone in greater peril than if Dr. Wolf was there with the teens trying to figure out what to do and the show didn't need to do that.
Drew Barrymore Timothy Olyphant Santa Clarita Diet Interview
I don't want to watch dark sh*t, I don't want to be in dark sh*t, and I don't want to put dark sh*t out there. If you've already binged your way through Santa Clarita Diet, the idea of a sexy zombie shouldn't sound too insane. Everything That Goes Down on Santa Clarita Diet Season 1 Related:"I don't want to watch dark sh*t, I don't want to be in dark sh*t, and I don't want to put dark sh*t out there." "Because again, she's not the [traditional] type of zombie," Barrymore says, sticking her arms straight out and groaning in a parody of Hollywood's usual brain-hungry monsters. A similar thing can be said about her new Netflix show, Santa Clarita Diet, which somehow transforms a seemingly ridiculous story about a woman who turns into a zombie (of sorts) into a delightful, incredibly disgusting, and feminist half-hour of television.collected by :Lucy William



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