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Alan Izar
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En que parte de Mexico tocabas? Todas las orquestas que conozco de por allá eran parte de grupos estudiantiles, excepto por la de Monterrey…

I loved this show so much. And Marco was just the excuse, the show was about the Khan and his Empire. It was as much a court intrigue as it was a war show.

As most people will tell you, I liked it as a movie on its own right. Since I had only read the first four books by the time it came out, I thought it did fine, but apparently I was too blind to the adaptation changes (listening to Handler Snicket's commentary on the DVD was illuminating).

Wow, I didn't know Bellucci was going to be in this.

Out of all places, the only one where I've seen "keeping it secrete to keep them safe" well employed was in Once Upon a Time - Emma's parents kept one secret from her (can't remember which one) because it would make her go guns-a-blazing into an impossible situation and basically get her killed.

Sweeney Todd.

I'm sure McCarthy didn't table read, while Weil did - which is why Paris was back in such a good form compared to Sookie.

McCarthy, to me, seemed to be playing a restrained version of her Ghostbusters character, all the way down to the voice - which is what kept taking me out of the scene. I understand that she didn't have time to prepare - I wouldn't be surprised if they didn't did a table read for the scene and just went straight into

His wife could've been named Samantha

The catalyst should've been Jess telling her to do something. While I didn't like that he specifically said the book, I did like him talking to her. If the conversation had been framed as "you were the editor of the Yale Daily News, you don't think you can make this place work?" and working there and seeing again all

Fall. The episode ASP was itching to write all the way back from the middle of season six, and when all of her inane decisions that happened back in season six suddenly make a lot of sense - which is why a lot of the decisions made here don't.

When they were watching Kirk's film, that's when I knew Rory was not dreaming.

Weirdly enough, that's a Lorelai thing to do.

To me this was the worst of the Revival, but I don't know if it was because of the way it was written - the Girls were at their cruelest - or because of the musical - which, like Lorelai, I wanted to love but couldn't.

I somewhat didn't like that Jess told her to write the book. I agree with you about pointing out that writing a book is best for her, but I would've wanted Rory to be the one to come up with the idea. I said in Winter that Shropshire was Lorelai on steroids, so they could've used that as a way to bring it up - Rory

Yeah. Rory being in denial was, in my opinion, great, because of course she's in denial having been the great kid (as Headmaster Charleston said in Spring) but Lorelai, who basically lived on her own since she was sixteen, not doing more to help (even if she wants to be the cool mom who lets the kid roam free)

Yeah, my therapist usually only does a small head nod when we run into each other at the grocery store and bolts. This was totally unprofessional of her.

That's a shame. The pilot was obnoxious but all the other episodes were pretty great. It also was stepping up to portray the fallout of the revolt. I liked it.

Huh. I remember the Cancel Bear whining about it, but you are right.

I think we would have, but only for a Flash episode - a backwards "Worlds Finest". Definitely not this massive crossover thing.