antisaint
ten17eighty1
antisaint

I’d disagree.

He didn’t equate Rachel Dolezal to trans people, though. He said flat out that it wasn’t the same thing and that she was full of it. The entirety of his jokes about her were about how not the same they were.

I think it’s akin to the product-placement-laden 80s movie ‘The Wizard’ which had Super Mario 3 (centerpiece of the tournament) and the power glove in it before either one had come out.

See also: Teena Marie. My Facebook timeline when she passed was two worlds divided by color.

Her American accent has always been her weakest in most things that didn't require a specific dialect. She was weirdly convincing the first few episodes, though. Weirdly for her.

To think that one very true comment about mental health in the black community would take away from Chester's death is foolish. The music industry, and in turn, much of the world, is rocked by his death, and especially considering, as the author pointed out, the messages in his music.

Three songs, but several of the classic ones from the film were remade with contemporary voices. She's like the wind was almost a club banger.

I interpreted his disappearance (Norman tells Dylan he stopped going to therapy when she died, so I'm guessing it was around then) to mean that Norman had no recollection of killing him. Which means there could be others he can't remember.

Plus little has been made of the fact that Norman killed his mother. I mean, they both have that in common, not that it would necessarily ease Emma's pain any.

I found myself unexpectedly choked up when Emma was watching her mother's cremation, and it started when I heard "Crimson and Clover." I was then subsequently afraid that she would end up stumbling on Norma's body (and rather relieved that they not only let Emma have her moment in peace, but that she took her mom's

Having binge-watched the previous seasons in order to catch up for the final season, I can say that Dylan had a very good idea that Norman was killing people, as did Romero (the teacher). I don't remember if there was an apron involve but Dylan and Caleb both saw Norman in 'mother' mode and Dylan told Norma about it

Agree! She's Aussie, btw, she and Nicole Kidman were childhood friends. Speaking of Nicole, I take a great delight in picking her American accents apart. She has a lot of tells. ;)

To say nothing of he and Jada's open relationship, which she has spoken publicly about, and the gay/bi rumors that have dogged him for years. He's in no position to deny his son the right to act as he sees fit.

I felt like the dialogue didn't match the scene when Shaolin walked in on Dizzy and Thor. From the dialogue it was pretty clear that Shao was discovering Dizzy was gay, but the scene with the two of them passed out after getting really high and painting shit. Unless I missed something.

I feel like I'm just not watching the same show everyone else is. Toy Box was anachronistic as hell, but I loved the tension build of all the plotlines as the episode went on. Having Misty singing 'backstabbers' was a nice touch, and she was perfectly cast, I would believe 100% that she was a straight-up disco STAR.

Melanie Lynskey (Currently on HBO's Togetherness but also well-known as crazy neighbor Rose on "Two and a Half Men and TON of other things) probably tops my list for this as she's from New Zealand and you would never know it watching her effortlessly do spins on various American and British dialects.

I wasn't expecting they'd find anyone who resembled her (Patty Duke, anyone?) but even looking through Serinda's IMDB photos, the similarities are great. She made me miss Anne all over again.

I liked the subtle hints of Norman cracking under the pressure — he told the new detective he changes the linens every week even if they haven't been used but he never said no one had been there. Even with one or two occasional guests there's still 10-11 other rooms to deal with. That would have been easy to cover or

I think she's gonna get the Lila Loomis line from the film at the end ("But my sister is…")

I think the general change with Marion suggests that at the very least, that plot line will be ported onto another character, but I'd be shocked if it ever comes up again, it's not crucial to anything in this retelling. Marion was a vehicle for Sam's death, and an homage to the movies.