It’s illegal for you to ask me that. Final Suggestion: Watch it twice. The first time is for shock. The second time is to realize that every background extra is trying not to laugh.
I Think You Should Leave Season 1 is a perfect 75-minute loop of anxiety, rage, and profound stupidity. It is not for everyone, but for the people it is for, it is religion. Tim Robinson has created a universe where the only sin is admitting you were wrong, and the only virtue is committing to the bit until you crash through a table. I.Think.You.Should.Leave.With.Tim.Robinson.S01....
Platform: Netflix | Created by: Tim Robinson & Zach Kanin | Episodes: 6 (15-18 minutes each) The Elevator Pitch Imagine a comedy sketch show designed by someone who finds conventional punchlines physically repulsive. I Think You Should Leave is not about jokes. It is about behavior . Specifically, it’s about watching a middle-aged man in an ill-fitting suit dig a social hole so deep, so compulsively, that he ends up screaming about a "bonies" or a "motorized skeleton" just to avoid admitting he farted. It’s illegal for you to ask me that
Absolute Linux will continue development under eXybit Technologies, built with the same approach and
structure we've used to develop RefreshOS. We're not here to reinvent what made Absolute great, we're here
to carry it forward.
Since 2007, Absolute has stood for being simple, pre-configured, and lightweight. Slackware made easy.
That core philosophy isn't changing. Absolute will always be free, open-source, built for ease of use,
and based on the Slackware foundation.
As of now, there is no set release date for the first eXybit-developed stable version of Absolute Linux. We're bringing Absolute into modern computing while keeping it minimal. The first step is to preserve what already exists, rebuild the underlying infrastructure, and create a canary version of the next major stable release.
You can still download the original versions of Absolute Linux by Paul Sherman on SourceForge.