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Mytly
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It's one thing to offer a co-worker a bed to sleep at night. You don't assume that someone you work with is going to decamp with your TV and stereo in the middle of the night. However, there's no need to wave temptation in front of their face by leaving a purse stuffed with cash right in front of them.

Please explain how it was about race. Just asserting it doesn't make it so.

Don doesn't literally want to go back to that farm - it's just the picture of a perfect childhood he has in his head. It's the same in the Carousel speech in 'The Wheel'. The photos Don shows of a perfect family aren't real (in the figurative sense) - they are what he hopes or imagines a life as a loving father and

Betty has never been the grownup at any point in her life. She's so used to everyone bowing to her demands and soothing her tantrums that it never occurs to her that as a mother, she's supposed to be doing that for her kids.

But such a computer wouldn't actually be in the office - no one's going to put a machine that can be heard 5 rooms away in the same place where they receive clients. Presumably, if they had a computer, it would be in some cheap office or warehouse elsewhere.

I really don't see how the scene where Peggy agonized over leaving her purse next to a sleeping Dawn can be construed as 'racism'. Dawn was a virtual stranger to her at that point, and Peggy had a lot of money in that purse (from blackmailing Roger). It's just good sense not to leave your cash-filled purse unattended

It's not his wife's happiness he's trading, it's his own dignity. If SC&P had decided to buy out Don, do you think he'd be on the plane to LA to be with Megan? Or would he be calling every ad agency in NYC, trying to land another creative director job with a competitor to SC&P?

He's literally got your eye … as in, he's playing around with an eyeball. Bad boy, Eddie - you give that eye back to Daddy Ken right now!

Well, rapes are a dime-a-dozen in the series, and the mind control just adds a slight twist.

IMO, odd sexual combination theories are nowhere as bad as cannibalism theories.

"except that Martin does a bunch of stuff to make us think he's not going to go there"
Um, isn't that the opposite of 'predictable'? You can't claim that something would be predictable if only the author had written it in a different way.

Google "Jojen paste theory". It will tell you far more than what you wanted to know about Bran's final chapter, and have you reaching for the brain bleach. *shudder*

It's more like, with Bran and Rickon definitely dead, and the Stark line extinct, they could have a lasting claim on Winterfell.

Tommen likes cats, while Rickon is into dogs (well, wolves), so of course they'll fight to the death.

Osha and Rickon thought "Ah fuck all this 'Winter is Coming' and backstabbing crap", and decided to get a house on a nice tropical island, and spend the rest of their lives sipping pinacoladas by the beach.

A couple of times. Season 2's "Three Sundays" was definitely one. They may have interacted in Season 4's "The Beautiful Girls", but I'm not sure.

Edmure was still his enemy. What was Jaime supposed to say - that he'd tickle all the Tullys till they surrendered? It's still a war, and if making an empty threat to an unborn child means that everyone involved gets to live to fight another day, then so be it. Sure, the Starks wouldn't have considered doing anything

"What makes a king a good king is that he loves his kittens. You can keep your wisdom and strength and all that crap, Grandfather. Just bring me my kitties!"

It was such a pointless scene. Basically, it seemed like the writers just remembered that Gilly had returned with Sam to Castle Black, so they had to show something about her, lest viewers forget she exists.

More likely to be Lysa-LF wedding in that episode, as a parallel to the other sigil-themed wedding episode this season.