Very important details about a crime scene being typed quickly into a database.
Very important details about a crime scene being typed quickly into a database.
I'd like to believe I'm Jo, but it's possible I'm Beth. Well, at least, I ain't dying.
I miss her too. She was adorable - like a puppy in a shark tank.
I loved him saying "Why am I being used as an example of what not to do? I'm at Georgetown!"
I really hope Prady wins the SA race - partially because it would mean that Alicia would go back to focusing on Florrick, Agos and Lockhart, but mostly because I adore David Hyde Pierce and hope he stays on on the show. And the only way that's going to happen is if he becomes the new State's Attorney.
At least they remembered that Zach exists. At the beginning of the season, with Zach going off to college, everyone kept talking to Alicia about empty-nest syndrome - basically forgetting that Grace existed and still lived at home. But ever since Alicia wrote Zach out of her life in Oppo Research, he hasn't been…
I know perfectly well what happened - no need for the recap. But I just don't buy that that's how a prickly man like Lord Sinderby would react in that situation. He would become more prickly, because his hypocrisy had been revealed. He would not suddenly morph into a fountain of love and forgiveness.
Just 10 years in-universe time. Totally doable.
Don Draper (well, Dick Whitman, to be precise) is born in 1926, while Downton Abbey is currently in 1924, so it could happen. Don would be a baby, of course.
I was also worried that Robert was going to have a heart attack. Considering how he pooh-poohed the idea to Cora, then immediately went off to have a heart-to-heart chat with Edith, I was sure he'd be collapsing before dinner the next day. Of course, he wasn't likely to die, but it could have been a cliffhanger for…
It's highly unlikely that Sinderby is an earl. Most likely a baron (the lowest rank of the peerage).
Ugh, Lord Sinderby's turnaround was so unrealistic. So in the space of one afternoon, he goes from despising his daughter-in-law and her family to becoming best pals with them? I get that he'd be grateful to Rose for her help, but would that be enough to make him change his opinion of her completely? And why on earth…
Of course she doesn't have to see her stepsons - do you think Merton is incapable of going to see them without her in tow?
Then in season 3, he screamed bloody murder because his wife and daughters were dining in a house which had an ex-prostitute for a cook. 'Super inconsistent' is right.
I don't agree to never criticize it (in fact, Bates and Anna's legal troubles are my ultimate example of how not to write a story for a TV series), but agreed about the rest. Can we just give them both something else to do other than look miserable while the other gets sent to prison?
The stories in this episode weren't all that great (the same could be said about every other DA episode, of course), but the settings were just so gorgeous. Brancaster Castle was amazingly beautiful, both outside and in. Apparently it was the real-life Alnwick Castle, which has appeared in a number of movies and TV…
But she wasn't going to be treated like dirt by Lord Merton - he worshipped her. She didn't need to see her stepsons at all - or maybe on Christmas or some family holiday. But other than that, how would their opinion of her make a difference in her day-to-day life? If Merton's sons had been children, it might make…
The police weren't trying to prove Bates innocent.
Drunk Robert is my favorite Robert!
Oh dear god, I hope Anna and Bates get some positive story next season. But I'm very much afraid the whole Mr. Green saga isn't done yet.