ahughwilliams
Baltimoron
ahughwilliams

Ji-Ah killed nearly 100 men in the space of a few years. All of them disappeared without a trace.

Ji-Ah’s mother gave birth out of wedlock and was shunned by her community. Desperate to be accepted once again, she fell for the first man to treat her kindly. Unfortunately, he was a pedophile who raped Ji-Ah when she was still just a child. Soon-Hee (Cindy Chang) summoned the kumiho at a high cost. The demon

Atticus was definitely a Private. I specifically chuckled at his low rank, but it also makes sense for the volunteer.

Revenge rape can never be anything but disgusting, no matter who the target. I wouldn’t want to see that happen to Weinstein or Cosby even though they are far more monstrous than that store manager.

Korean War is still going on - no peace treaty was ever signed and a state of emergency still officially exists.

This is an odd show. It started with several characters I loved almost immediately, but whom I like less and less as people with each passing episode.

I noticed that after the first two (which told one story), they’re giving each episode to a different regular. Ep. 3 was Leti, Ep. 4 Montrose, Ep. 5 Ruby, this one was Ji-ah’s turn, and the next will be Hippolyta’s.

But their lives were useless. When the soldier’s gun jams, he calls for a lieutenant. Tic appears out of nowhere to point his gun Ji-Ah, prepared to end her life, but Young-Ja bravely places herself between her friend and the gun.

Yes, this was a love story while Tic and Leti seem more like friends with benefits. Tic was planning to leave without saying goodbye after their first time. He only stayed to protect her from Christina. She longs for the friend from childhood but doesn’t understand the man he became at war and he still haven’t told

The reviews of the episodes on here are absolutely baffling. This episode is the only one to not receive an A, yet it was probably the best of the bunch save maybe the premiere.

Was that first victim also Hiro’s best friend in the show Heroes? He looked familiar so I expected him to stick around a little bit longer.

This was no bottle episode. Quite the opposite, in fact.

“Baffling” only describes this episode if it doesn’t fit into the show you thought you were watching, as opposed to the show that its creators have actually been making.

Ji-Ah certainly is a fox.

Honestly thought this was one of the strongest episodes. It works as both part of the show and as its own standalone being.

Ji-Ah killed 99 men but Tic ain’t one...

The book was a series of loosely connected vignettes that reinterpreted multiple genres of science fiction and horror through the lens of racist violence America. It’s great to see how this show has picked that up and run with it. I know for some that’s resulted in an inconsistent tone for a few people, but it’s

Joelle and I really aren’t on the same page with this series... this episode was the best of the season for me, and yet it’s the only one so far to get less than an A grade. Opinions sure are weird, huh?

That was some freaky tentacle sex.

A great thing about this show is every week I have a previously unknown monster/folklore to look up on Wikipedia and terrify myself with.