PennyArcadia
IPennedArcadia
PennyArcadia

Okay, I'm going to say it: I don't feel this season at all. I mean, it's good. I see it's good. It's terrific, if not subtle, and stuff happens and the characters go places.

I'm not sure it's financial security she craved - the 50 grand would've got her much of that. No, instead she got real, honest to god power over these guys. Which is much, much better. (and then there's the cv polish. If the company goes down, she's been a partner. That's something!)

She won't be. But she may just have the deciding vote!

Awesome catch!

Agreed. Worst angle ever.

But you never got to see those women from their own perspective, it was always mostly Don's. The writers are handling that completly differently with Megan, who they are obviously trying to build as protagonist they want us to care about beyond her being Don's wife. Don's mistresses had personalities, but they were

I think she's going to leave him for her own social circle, and not some other guy. Which will set Don into a tailspin.

Muchly. Don on the defensive -> never a pretty sight.

Though the show's been awfully on the nose sometimes this season, almost veering into the literal.

Her assertion that Ginsberg's Judaism doesn't make him qualified to cover the account — saying, "I'm sick of people thinking that way" — is a bit ironic, considering that she got her break at Sterling Cooper being assigned female products because she's a woman.

NOT MY VINYL

Last week, the commenters accused me of interviewed myself on the premise that 'nice guys' like the ones I previously interviewed (when they weren't being awful by other accounts) don't exist, or are anomalies.

Needs more salad.

I was dumbstruck to find that my worst bully in middle school, who terrified me so much I didn't want to leave home, seemed to have forgotten all about it when I met him again in high school. He was nicer than nice, all smiles and 'how are you's, and acted completely oblivious.

What struck me most about this story is that Romney was the leader. Not a bystander, not a helper, but the leader. Who got so excited about someone behaving out of the ordinary that he took it upon himself to punish him.

I've noticed that in discussions, rape is so often defined 'prosecutable rape' or rape that has a clear guilty party by legal - and provable - definitions. It tends to cloud everything. I mean, rape is this whole broad scale of incidents and it's not just rape if there is sufficient proof to convince a jury. It's

YES

RPattz has been dissing Twilight since day one.

Women are portrayed in comics the way men have demonstrated that they want them to look. Men are portrayed in comics the way men think women want them to look, despite women consistently demonstrating that it isn't the case.

CREEPY/AWKWARD.