addiebundren--disqus
Addie Bundren
addiebundren--disqus

You ask the right question, but you don't try thinking critically to answer it. THIS show seems to be set in a privileged neighborhood for a pretty obvious reason—to highlight the impact this one traumatic event has had on a community that otherwise has every advantage. Even those who arguably have everything have

I do want a thorough examination of this show's handling of race, but this recap isn't it—you can see that coming through pretty clearly with the "Magical Negro" buzzword tossed out as it is. Whatever's going on with Holy Wayne, as others have pointed out, he's not that. He's not just there to further someone else's

Wow, yes, hate crimes based on religion are so uncommon, right?

Not if the real "signs" were the bank trying to take the church, his sister begging him to stop the newsletter, and the robber trying to taking the money to win back the church. Had he paid attention to THOSE signs, he could have "saved" himself from continuing to hurt people like his sister (cruelly telling her about

I have not watched Lost and would personally appreciate a reviewer who had some insight there.

On the title: Matthew believes he sees help from God in the pigeons and other signs throughout the episode, the way the classic joke/parable presents help to the person about the drown in the flood in the form of two boats and a helicopter. BUT as we can all immediately identify, these "signs" have actually led