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Definitely agree that the show tightened up just about everything in this season. It’s the kind of improvement many shows make in their third/fourth seasons, I find. The cast and writers are firing on all cylinders and understand what kind of show they’re making and trust each other. Really, the only thing missing

As a Midwesterner (the reigning champion of Poorly-Defined American Regions) I am compelled to ask — why does Idaho get to be in Pacific Northwest when ZERO percent of it touches the Pacific? That’s just madness.

Washington.  Oregon.  The part of California north of the pointy bit of Nevada.  That’s your Pacific

Usually a spouse or romantic interest fills that role in the comics. That might be a good business opportunity, in fact — a network of contractors who show up to cook, do some light first aid, ask open-ended questions to prompt exposition dumps, and make excuses/cover for various unattached heroes in need. :)

The second-person narrative in the early going was hard for me to get a handle on at first, too, but a) there is a reason for it and b) that reason is pretty satisfying if you stick with it long enough for it to be revealed. (It didn’t hurt that I knew going in that all three books of the trilogy won the Hugo, an

I’ve been mulling over a particular question Nate asked (“Why would anybody wish to be a sidekick?”) and I think I’ve got an answer.

Gary is desperate to be included, but he’s also got low self-esteem and a streak of, if not cowardice, then certainly risk aversion at his core. When you think about it, “sidekick” is the

Plus, it’s literally the only thing they know about him besides his name, because this audition was dropped in their lap by a distracted but powerful executive. Which makes me wonder how much time Hollywood casting teams have to devote to indulging the whims of suits with more money than sense, who want to seem like

Let me just state right up front that I HATE Oasis and I LOATHEWonderwall”, and the kind of schmaltzy vocal-led pop/soul that many contemporary shows feature in their designated Act IV Emotional Moments often nauseates me. But Maze’s version was really, really good. It made me think there’s a point to that song

Just waiting for a biologist to yell THAT IS NOT HOW PHOTOSYNTHESIS WORKS GOOD DAY so I don’t have to. By the time the sunlight gets into the plants it’s sugar or whatever the plant equivalent is, right? And we already saw Alex charging her up with sun lamps to help her get over the Kryptonite poisoning back at the

Am I a bad person for thinking cold, emotionless Brainiac-5 is about 500% more interesting than the ersatz Spock we’ve been getting from Jesse Rath so far? I haven’t quite been able to put my finger on what has bothered me so much about his performance, but having him finally drop the vocal equivalent of having one

Another theme that Veep has pushed (and achieved a brilliant, subtle resolution here) is that for all their chest-pounding about the press being the guardians of freedom and the keepers of the public interest, political journalism as practiced at the highest levels is ultimately just a species of celebrity-watching,

It’s kind of amazing how he keeps topping his previous instances of going over the top as Uncle Jeff.  By the end he’s making his role as X the Executioner on Harvey Birdman look centered and restrained.

The other big plot head-fake in this episode: I was pretty certain that Remiel was going to either defeat Amenadiel in their fight or distract him long enough to resume the hunt for angel-baby — then run smack-dab into Maze, who would get to demonstrate her value as slightly-to-moderately psychotic protector to the

See, but that’s how they getcha! I was dead certain that the little girl in Game of Thrones (not Lady Mormont, the wildling girl who wanted to fight the wights but was persuaded to go to the crypt to “protect everyone”) was going to die when closed captioning informed me that her name was Teela, even though it wasn’t

I think one of the strongest things about this season of Lucifer overall is that, aside from a couple of the murderers-of-the-week, nobody is really a mustache-twirling villain. Almost everybody has a valid point of view (or at least a valid complaint) and the carnage that they cause is largely a result of

Re-opening the ring box after Linda closed it was just... <chef kiss>

That’s my cue to remind everyone of a little film called Game of Death!

My head-canon for why Cecile didn’t figure out that Joe was hanging by a thread until he told her is that he was in a building full of a bunch of other people hanging by a thread, so he probably melted into the mental background noise.

Ooeuf, that was a rough one.

It sort of depends on where you focus your attention; to me, Priest is a heavy metal band that also wrote some “crossover” hard rock songs early in their career — in fact, their original drummer quit over the decision to move away from the more esoteric material on their first couple releases. Also, Rob Halford is