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80sRobot
80srobot--disqus

I could see the finale ending in a flash-forward to our present where each is involved in an emerging technology now: self-driving cars, for example. I wish I were joking.

"Attractive Teenagers Standing On the Side of the Road Mutually Experiencing Existential Ennui"

Seriously, this series managed to survive so long due to the talents of its main cast. And I say this as a high compliment to them and the series overall, and a reason why I tell people this is worth watching. The tech history is wonky and wrong in many ways, though I still like its first season. It has the strongest

You know, now is the time for a 90's era set teen drama — reviving the spirit of My So-Called Life as a nostalgia series (which was contemporary when it first aired in 1994). So I wonder if this Netflix series will evoke that classic cult series' vibe.

Perhaps Beetle-BOB jumps from the girl to another host.

When Mulholland Drive was originally a pilot for a series for ABC, Lynch considered that it would be set in the Twin Peaks universe. The parallels in the movie version still suggest that it occupies the same world. The Cowboy appears to be a denizen of the Black Lodge, and The Ranch could be another gateway into it.

Ok, just my theories:

I found this to be a cute, lighthearted, pleasant diversion of a series — a nice palate cleanser to the heavy dramas I typically like to watch. The series doesn't look expensive to produce, and it feels more like the kind of show that's exclusive to a streaming service, like Amazon or Hulu. Perhaps Hulu could continue

I figured that an electronic device had been stuck on his car to disable it.

And she dies because she betrayed the second chance.

I agree actually and like this interpretation. But there's ambiguity regarding how he was presented (which was the point). If there's a Season 4, will he return?

So if there's a 4th season (in the year 2019?), then I'm assuming Ray Wise's mysterious character will be a major factor. In a realistic sense, he must be a mob boss who's very well-connected. It appears he helped Nikki and Wrench in order to get back at VM. (And he followed Gloria to LA. Perhaps then he had no idea

I wonder if most of the original actors from the series just were not available to work the schedule that they did when they were younger. Maybe most of them simply don't act professionally anymore, and hold other jobs. This could explain why most of them have appeared in just single scenes or cameos.

The fact that the assassin is a little person is probably no coincidence — this should trigger Cooper to remember things, like the Black Lodge and the Little Dancing Man.

I seem to recall fellow TP fans online fan-casting Dern as Diane several years before this continuation was announced. The fans are either on the same wavelength as Lynch or he heard of this fan idea and himself agreed OF COURSE.

"The extent to which people treat Dougie as if he is not behaving severely brain damaged is borderline infuriating"

I predict (hope?) that the little-person assassin follows Cooper to Twin Peak (after he finally wakes up — which better be soon).

Thank the owls for Naomi Watts, both her character and performance, for livening things up in this dragging episode!

Or… maybe Yuri is dead, too. Along with Nikki and Wrench. They all died that night.

The thing about Varga is that he tells stories. And they're BS. This series, since Season 1, has had many scenes where a character tells a story in order to make a point to someone. Come to think of it, that's the whole theme/"gimmick" of Fargo — that this is a "true story" being told.