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Anion
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The Thaw/White case would be fascinating, wouldn't it? It has all the elements: sex, violence, a supermodel (for the time, certainly), wealth, arrogance…and a red velvet swing. The parallels they could draw to today would be interesting, certainly.

My husband, in his late teens, once had a female friend of his invite him over, and over the course of the couple of hours he spent there she 1) informed him that no one else was home and wouldn't be home for hours; 2) told him how attractive he was; 3) told him how since breaking up with her ex she was ready to start

Yep, he apparently said that one fairly recently, too. Total bullshit, and he's failing to see not only what an ass it makes him look like, but how that theory just highlights again his own incompetence; he claims to have suspected the defense damaged or altered evidence, but didn't say a word during the actual trial?

I remember seeing it as well, and saying to my boyfriend at the time, "Well, there's some reasonable doubt."

Fitting, given the success of both… ;-)

PI-VOT!!

I've always thought Schwimmer is a much better actor than he gets credit for. I remember his role in Apt Pupil; a very small part, but he was excellent in it.

But their affair* had an impact on the case; they were so busy making googly-eyes at each other that they weren't focusing the way they should have.

But does the Hand of the King fit into the glove?

Period sex is basically just like regular sex, only a little wetter. It's a good idea to lay a towel down just in case, but it's usually (surprisingly) cleaner than you'd expect, although you'll want to have some tissues handy for after—my husband is always happy to have the sex but gets a little creeped out by blood

Weevils were what I was thinking, too. I'd be amazed if that pancake mix wasn't infested—but then, I currently live in a place where the little buggers show up with a lot more frequency. (Frex, I bought a 2kg bag of sugar from the grocery store six months or so ago, and when I got it home and opened it to pour it into

Early U2 were pretty amazing, yeah. I was way into them in my early teens, but tend to forget how great songs like "I Will Follow," were. (I'll never forget, though, going on a road trip with my parents and, while my mom stretched out in the backseat, listening to Joshua Tree with my dad; he thought it was awesome,

"Gary Sinise, phoning it in just to get those CBS checks."

Hmm. We're hugely excited for this new season—my husband is taking Friday off work so we can watch all day—but it sounds to me a little like the show has lost or is changing some of the things I especially liked in the first season. I hope that's not the case.

Well, he *could,* he's just probably not going to. :-)

My husband and I generally loved Justified's case-of-the-week episodes, yeah. It's nice to get a break from the main storyline sometimes and expand the actual world of the show in other ways, and in the case of Raylan, it was always nice to see his other duties as a Marshall, or the other Marshalls, or just that he's

SHIELD S2 was quite a bit better than S1, and S3 so far is better again, at least for me & my family. We watched S1 kind of out of a sense of duty, really, but have found ourselves honestly looking forward to the new episodes now. If you're ever bored, S2 is worth a look if only for Kyle McLachlan; the amount of fun

Ooooh…

My problem with the "You were never there for me, old man!" thing is, if Wally cares so little about Joe and Iris and being part of their lives, why did he look them up and show up at their door to begin with? He sought them out, not the other way around, so having him be all "I don't want or need to know you," just

Wait, how is Barry the jerk here? In the previous episode Patty tells him she wants him to commit to her for real, so at the end of the ep he goes to her and starts to tell her he's ready to do so. She cuts him off to say no, she's leaving, she has a chance to go to CSI school. How is that his fault? Why is he