avclub-0da7b2945e9148fed0a61ba72bfb017e--disqus
vanzettis sacco puppet
avclub-0da7b2945e9148fed0a61ba72bfb017e--disqus

@avclub-913d3a7404f98f0ee3766e12e78506fe:disqus Part of Skyler's arc was that she duplicated the process that dragged Walt into the muck. Walt got into the meth business ostensibly to spare his family an uncertain and probably poverty-ridden future; Skyler starts to think that she can make some good out of evil, and

Agree 100%.

Voyager wins this one, hands down. Rick is cracking like the egg I dropped this morning; Janeway was nearly always a steely-eyed badass. Even when she made moral compromises she never seemed too put out about it. Shane or Chakotay? Chakotay was kind of a mushy character, but he had magical Indian powers, so he beats

That line was flat out hilarious, but also struck me as a thought someone who did believe in such things might express in the midst of a zombocalypse. You'd definitely bend over backwards to reconcile your faith with the horrible things happening to try and drag something out of your situation.

Remember when AMC followed up Mad Men with Breaking Bad and it seemed like they were shitting gold? 'Twas a hopeful time…

I'm pretty excited about season 3, too - the finale was pretty good, all around, despite flaws you mentioned.

re: Glen, that felt like decent characterization, we know he's good in a pinch (or at least he was in Atlanta). With Maggie, wtf happened to that badass chick who rode in on a horse and clocked the shit out of a zombie? That happened, right?

I think the reviewer's comment meant essentially: "Rick had every good reason to shoot Shane. The man has been undermining him and threatening him for a good season now. And then he fabricated a little death trap to get Rick alone and then kill him. But still, the way Rick told the story and his subsequent

I was hoping Lennie James would fill that role. I'm still holding out hope he'll end up back in the show.

Zombies can't swim so they're only coming at you from one side?

@avclub-ef062084a1c4a3584af1d4f8e514ea50:disqus - Catching up on the show, browsing the comments, caught these and had to respond. "The worst a person wondering about this would be doing is underestimating the number of female Indian physicians back then" - yes, exactly. The assumption that she has to be a time

They've done a great job of keeping her exactly the same - ruthlessly selfish, with that same dead expression on her face at all times - while still occasionally giving us moments to sympathize with her.

On that note I'd like to see more interaction between Regina and Bay. It fits with Regina's character as drawn thus far that she's drawn a separation between them - she hasn't allowed Bay to jump into her family with both feet like Daphne has with the Kennishes. Still, like you say, I'd like to see them start bridging

"CENTRAL VALLEY, CALIFORNIA.
A teenage boy was found dead by blunt force trauma this morning. Investigators quickly determined the boy was mortally injured by a nearby cow.

The exploitation is the worst part. Why isn't BBH paying them an actual wage when they are essentially working for BBH?

Yeah, I felt the same about the "but I know *you*" bit. It was a nice touch without being too heavy handed.

Yep, that's classic zombie/survival genre stuff. Except this show has fucked up that simple formula by sapping all the tension with interminable, useless conversations.

That is exactly what popped into my head when watching the episode, and I cracked up.

Hopefully they're smart and shift the threat to external forces, like Randall's group.

Ugh, gun realism is the least of this show's problems. At least no-one cobbled together a silencer out of a coke can and then shot it to make a little tiny "pew" noise.