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3 "Chuck Versus the Break-Up" June 23, 2009: 180 8 106 7 4 "Chuck Versus the Cougars" June 30, 2009 — — 141 3 5 "Chuck Versus Tom Sawyer" July 7, 2009: 172 5 163 2 6 "Chuck Versus the Ex" July 14, 2009: 201 7 169 2 7 "Chuck Versus the Fat Lady" July 21, 2009: 194 2 157 1 8 "Chuck Versus the Gravitron" July 28, 2009: 174 5 150 1 9 "Chuck ...
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"Chuck Versus the Pink Slip" May 31, 2010: 281 1 102 1 2 "Chuck Versus the Three Words" June 7, 2010: 312 1 44 9 3 "Chuck Versus the Angel de la Muerte" June 14, 2010: 272 2 — — 4 "Chuck Versus Operation Awesome" June 21, 2010: 263 4 49 5 5 "Chuck Versus First Class" June 28, 2010: 315 1 74 1 6 "Chuck Versus the Nacho Sampler" July 5, 2010: ...
[1] [2] Chuck centers on Chuck Bartowski (played by Zachary Levi), an "average computer-whiz-next-door", who receives an encoded e-mail from an old college friend now working in the CIA; the message embeds the only remaining copy of the world's greatest spy secrets into Chuck's brain. [3]
"Chuck Versus Tom Sawyer" received positive reviews from critics. Eric Goldman of IGN gave this episode a score of 9.3 out of 10, writing, "This was perhaps the geekiest episode of Chuck yet – and certainly the one that anyone who grew up in the 80s will most appreciate. It was one of those installments that worked to bring Chuck's spy life ...
"Chuck Versus the Three Words" is the second episode of the third season of the American action comedy TV series Chuck. It was aired January 10, 2010, on NBC . In the episode, Carina returns with a new mission for Team Bartowski – steal back a stolen weapon from her "fiancé", an arms dealer named Karl Stromberg.
"Chuck Versus Santa Claus" was one of many episodes to be directed by producer Robert Duncan McNeill, [4] [5] and was written by producer Scott Rosenbaum. [5] It originally aired in the United States on December 15, 2008, on NBC as the eleventh episode of Chuck's second season and the 24th episode overall.
Although he did enjoy Morgan's handling of the spy plot and Chuck's secret, and noted it was a revelation that was long overdue, he felt the tone of the episode was off with "wackiness in excess." Like Sepinwall, he criticized the similarity of the endings of both "Chuck Versus the Fake Name" and "Chuck Versus the Beard". [8]