Oh, is this going to be the Teen Wolf sort-of bottle episode of the season where they're trapped in basically one location by a sinister force? I thought that was the motel one but I'm excited for another one. I liked Night School and Fury a lot.
Oh, is this going to be the Teen Wolf sort-of bottle episode of the season where they're trapped in basically one location by a sinister force? I thought that was the motel one but I'm excited for another one. I liked Night School and Fury a lot.
I'd be really annoyed if the show backed out on making him his aunt's killer. I'd be okay with it being presented as something he honestly felt he had to do to "protect" his family or friends or whatever.
I think I'm coming around on the love triangle too, mostly because I buy each character in it. It makes sense to me that Jo, who flocked back to Danny immediately, would develop a big crush on him, and that Lacey would be more hesitant but still drawn in. And even that Danny wouldn't see (or would pointedly ignore)…
Why Lydia couldn't "know too much" and ALSO be a philosopher is a mystery to me, but whatever Jennifer.
Alright. That's what I thought but someone I was watching with was sure it wasn't a sacrifice because of the asphyxiation thing I mentioned above and that made me question my understanding. Glad you guys are backing me up.
That's what I thought too, but she wasn't asphyxiated like the rest, right? Her throat was slit. I imagine that still counts but I'm not sure.
Son nervously fritters around the room trying to tell his dad something while pretty girl sits quietly on boy's bed.
I'd be alright with sad Stiles as long as it's followed up by immensely relieved and closer than ever with his dad Stiles.
Okay, what's the verdict on Piano Lady's death? Philosopher sacrifice? Weird creepy music accident? Lydia accidentally deflecting her death elsewhere?
I can get the lost tension thing, but to me it just makes no logical sense not to tell him. And while this show isn't exactly where I go for logical decision making, they'd dragged his ignorance out long enough.
I won't lie, the first time I heard the name Robin Thicke I honestly thought there was some Robin Sparkles / Alan Thicke song I'd missed.
I won't lie, I'll be pretty upset if anything permanent or irreversible happens to Sheriff Stilinski. And so help me if they finally (FINALLY) brought him in the loop only to kill him off I'm going to be outright pissed.
Teen Wolf, brought to you by (sexy) Ice Breakers!
I'm pretty sure that makes him and Kirk Cameron like, tv step brothers or something.
My favorite response to this song (which I actually really like) was from a DJ, immediately after playing the song. "…I really hope you're right, dude."
I've heard both mentioned as good shows but I don't know enough about either of them to know what I'm missing.
Man I've never before been disappointed I don't have Sundance, but here we are.
Poor gullible Mike. Taking Briggs's story without even a grain of salt (and it may well prove to be true but would you believe it?) is one thing. Believing his handler is going to be good and noble with that news is another one altogether. I don't trust that guy at all.
I read Red Dragon this year just because of the show. One of my favorite descriptions of Will came early on, when Jack Crawford noted he'd seen Will pick up the speech patterns and mannerisms of the people he talked to and how Will didn't seem to have any control over this action. Beautiful.
The play Hettienne Park and Jerry O'Connell were in was Seminar. The cast rounded out with Hamish Linklater, Lily Rabe, and Alan Rickman.