SouthernN'Proud
Southern Discomfort
I ain't makin' this up
I reckon it would be. Now if only they stopped acting like terrorists and jihadists in everyday life...but we won't worry about real life, this is TV!
Then maybe quit blowing shit up every time the wind changes direction. Maybe quit hijacking planes and flying them into buildings. Or, emulate Seinfeld and become pop culture and brainwash the typical viewer into believing your rhetoric that way. Either one. Can't worry with it now, Idol's on donchaknow.
Must see TV by any definition, wouldn't you say?
Gawd I'm glad I am a music fan.
"A lighthearted comedy that portrays the Muslim community in a manner that is evenhanded is definitely a welcome change from hearing about Muslims as terrorists, as jihadists," Elsayed says.
I reckon it would be. Now if only they stopped acting like terrorists and jihadists in everyday life...but we won't worry about real life, this is TV!
"We need something to show that Muslims are human," says Kamal Nawash, founder of the Free Muslims Coalition, an anti-extremist group based in Washington, D.C.
Then maybe quit blowing shit up every time the wind changes direction. Maybe quit hijacking planes and flying them into buildings. Or, emulate Seinfeld and become pop culture and brainwash the typical viewer into believing your rhetoric that way. Either one. Can't worry with it now, Idol's on donchaknow.
The first episode introduced viewers to the close-knit Muslim community, in the fictional small town of Mercy, and to the local non-Muslims who regard their neighbors with a mixture of trepidation and tolerance. In the second episode, the new imam, a handsome young man newly arrived from Toronto, sparks a battle of the sexes when he decides to erect a barrier between men and women in the mosque.
Must see TV by any definition, wouldn't you say?
Gawd I'm glad I am a music fan.