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Anion
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Okay, working from memory here so I may have a detail or two wrong, but I believe I'm correct overall:

"As you know, Bob, grayscale is a disease that turns your skin all scaly and stone-like, and you can catch it if an infected person touches you."

I was watching the guards holding him by the wrists at the end of this episode (as he spoke to Dany) and trying to figure out if they were holding his gauntlets or his skin. Because if one of them touched the skin of his wrist…

He goes nowhere without his precious Cones of Dunshire.

TriUMphant Napoleon!

Yep. We went to look for a season 2 preview and found the same thing. So irritating; "leeches" is right. God, nobody cares about your comments or thoughts, go away!

*sorry, I decided my comment was dumb, ignore this*

I would have personally loved to have explained that to my children. "Mommy, why did Eddie shoot himself there? Why did it make Wells disintegrate? Do men pee out storks?"

The same way astronauts do. IMO, anyway.

He's altogether spooky, though.

He wasn't a true dragon.

I completely understand why Danaerys is so upset with him—he's ultimately responsible for the deaths of her beloved husband and their baby—but I do wish she would let him explain that it was that moment when he realized how wrong he'd been and devoted himself to her, and that by doing so he gave up everything he

Wellll… I agree about the Sparrows, but greyscale has been mentioned quite a few times over the years.

Ned Stark had essentially no loyal men behind him when Cersei went after him; maybe a handful were present in King's Landing. And again, Loras is a *knight,* one who has a reputation for being very skilled; what kind of knight requires a guard? (Not to mention that he was surrounded by other knights when the arrest

Exactly. Art is absolutely open to interpretation, and creators are not infallible…but it is also possible for an interpretation to be (while being "correct" to the person doing the interpreting) absolutely wrong.

Well, we do know that if anyone could help her get over the trauma of Ramsey's attentions, it would be Podrick…

I could see that. He wouldn't do it out of kindness or feelings, but because it's not good for the Watch. And then he'd yell and sneer at Sam how it was all his fault and generally be a raging dickhead about it.

I don't know if it's so much that people assume he's important for those reasons as it is that we really like(d) him for those reasons, and hope to see him again. Not saying you're wrong, just offering a thought.

OT, but another great commentary track is Kurt Russel & John Carpenter on Big Trouble in Little China. They actually forget to discuss the movie for long stretches of time, and the lighting of cigarettes and opening of beer cans is audible. It's lots of fun.

I think it depends on the person with whom you're having the sex, though. *Some* of us might be into that.