I have a theory about them, but it's based on the previews from Wolf Watch so PROBABLY NOT SPOILERS BUT JUST IN CASE.
I have a theory about them, but it's based on the previews from Wolf Watch so PROBABLY NOT SPOILERS BUT JUST IN CASE.
I actually felt the same way when the episode started. I'd assumed Barrow wrote the numbers on the board for himself (for some reason), so I was surprised when everybody immediately knew it was a message left for him by someone else.
Mostly his obsession with Scott.
You seem fun.
I heard Rent in bits and pieces for years from friends who loved it more than I ever would. When I finally saw it (and yes, I saw the movie version, not on stage), I found most of the characters terrible. Just because you're "artists" doesn't mean you shouldn't have to pay your fucking bills.
I agree he should've gotten there faster, but I also think that's one of the cases where the answer is easier for the audience because of our narrative presumptions. Why give all this backstory about a character if he's not going to be important later? Sherlock doesn't get that perspective; unlike us, he knows a lot…
When we say 'EGOT' out loud, do we just say each letter individually, or do we try to make it into a word? I honestly don't know.
For your being bad at analogies?
I was sure somebody's explanation for Bainbridge's stabbing was going to be that he was stabbed with an icicle (that thus melted away in the hot shower). When nobody suggested it, I was worried it was going to be the real answer. So even if the belt thing was kind of silly, I didn't mind it.
The problem with a confrontational attitude to Sherlock is that Sherlock (and especially this show's Sherlock) is never wrong, so anybody disagreeing with him would always wind up looking like an idiot. And Lestrade is better than that. They do need to find a place for him besides Sherlock fan / some level of…
The middle name thing was weird, but I can excuse it with drunkenness. I'd just assumed they must have mentioned the stag party at one point during their 'investigation' of her case and she knew about the wedding that way.
The actors in The World's End even went through drunk training to get each 'stage' exactly right.
This song may be far from perfect, but it does a lot more good than harm.
After this song won some MTV video award, my pastor emailed the performance to me, excited about it and determined to find a way to use it (positively) in her sermon sometime in the upcoming weeks. She encouraged our congregation to seek out the video and appreciate the good message it sends.
You know what makes me happy about all of this? There is plenty of debate on this page and lots of different opinions. About the quality of the song, about whether Macklemore is the right messenger for the topic at hand. About whether the song (or the article) have racial undertones and how those should be…
She may not be benefiting as much as Macklemore and Ryan Lewis, but she's definitely benefiting.
Yeah, I think if this song impacts one group the most it's going to be kids under the age of 16 or so. Same as most other pop music.
Voices like Mary Lambert's?
It is amazing to me how often he's been the wrong point of a love triangle.
I thought of the movie but still couldn't think of his name.