I started singing that in my head to the Pokemon theme song, and it took me far too long to realize it didn't even remotely scan.
I started singing that in my head to the Pokemon theme song, and it took me far too long to realize it didn't even remotely scan.
I more or less agree with you, though I do confess to missing "wherever whores go."
I doubt that a person who is "triggered" by someone even speaking that word would actually be able to handle watching this show.
Nick shows up under Cece's window reading from his blue-painted zombie novel. How romantic!
Did you just call Winston Bishop "unlikeable," you utter monster?
So in this analogy, Jess is unceremoniously killed off in the last five minutes of the finale?
Right. My point was that there *is* an episode airing this month - in two weeks - named after the Dornish words, so a Sand Snakes marquee seems pretty likely.
I hate that I've seen enough TV to both understand this and have understood it all intuitively while watching the damn scene.
I don't see a problem here. Stannis is the best military commander in Westeros, but that doesn't mean he gets the finer points of correlation and causation.
"Well, I guess we can safely say Arya is killing Meryn Trant instead of Dareon"
"Dorne makes its long-awaited arrival to the opening credit sequence, although notably it is the first of such appearances to denote a Kingdom in its entirety, versus a specific city or landmark."
"If the Sand Snakes have their own marquee moment on the way, it won’t be any of the episodes HBO has scheduled through the end of May."
"Then again,Game Of Thrones takes place in a world of dragons, giants, and undead monsters, so what’s so unbelievable about Stannis fathering a smoke monster with a red priestess and then sending said smoke monster to kill his brother? "
Okay, but what about the devastating lack of Babou? Was THAT a scheduling issue?
And this is why I decided to go to Cambridge.
*Clone Krieger's reason
I love serialized TV, and bar none, my favorite serialized storyline of the last couple of years is the slow, tragic fall from grace of "phrasing" and Archer's quixotic quest to at least have a serious talk about getting it back into the mix.
In the Vatican.
Her character had two whole dimensions?
So…. it's a TV version of Invisible Cities?