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gforguava
avclub-0ff5eb1c3084a8704d83866c53448eef--disqus

Bunheads!

I thought this was alright. Like the review said the finale itself was basically Defiance in a nutshell.

Yeah, not even remotely accurate.

All in all I though this was easily the best episode yet. DJ Alak Tarr got to DJ for a second(and looked pleased as punch while doing it), got a smooch from his hot mom, and was used as a tool in political shenanigans. Good week for him, except for the whole ass-kicking and then getting called a peckerhead by Graham

Quick question time: When DJ Alak Tarr was getting his friend to help they kept saying they were "…scary bad mother ——" in Castithan, was the word for 'scary' Irathi? 'Cause that is a pretty neat detail if it was.

First Nolan supporters descend from the shadows and now we are besmirching the name of DJ Alak Tarr? The guy stood up to his gangster father while wearing a diaper. He can call himself whatever he damn well pleases.

While I agree that a lawman is beneficial(if not necessary) I don't think that alone makes Nolan worthwhile, or rather that because he fits the frontier town style of Defiance he can get away with being bland.

Good for them and I mean that with zero snark.

DJ Alak Tarr standing up to pops, how far you have come my friend.

I thought this episode was about on par with the previous two and I think this review is stretching some with the ladies vs. gents bit.

The problem with all of the Superman films is that they take out all the gee whiz!-ery.

The problem is they are focusing on the wrong 'talent'. Who cares if person A is a better singer than person B when the winner, regardless of who it is, will put out dreadfully mediocre music?

I don't now why people have a hard time understanding why someone who isn't a "young adult" would read YA fiction, the answer is astoundingly obvious: They are the pulp stories of today and I sure as heck can't pick up a non-YA book that has hoverboards in it.

It is no different than superhero comics or genre cinema

That snippet from the review confused me a bit, not that the show isn't way more sanitized than the reality would actually be, but that the 'not sleeping with the mark' was specifically addressed within the episode.

She had to get out soon or she would be compromised and everything wouldn't be fine. That's why the

"…stitching a skin suit out of my dead corpse after you stab me and steal my organs?!"

I'm really liking this show, better than most summer fare I've come across in a long time(but not better than Bunheads, of course). The cast is good and they work well as a group, the interconnectedness of what is going on helps things feel more substantial than on your typical USA show(and procedurals in general),

Killing Sukar seems like one of those things that doesn't seem so bad from the production side of things. This was probably written and maybe even filmed before the show started airing so they had no input into how this would play out with the audience. 
I mean seven episodes in and they kill a minor character, that

I was actually really liking the episode, I thought it was one of the better ones thus far, until the end with the nanites. It basically undid everything in the A plot that came before.

The best muse has to be the air freshener(forget what animal it is) which Jaye throws out of the taxi in one episode("But I didn't even say anythinggggg!")

I do think Leitso is the weakest link but it's mostly because he gets caught up in the main dramatic storyline with Dhavernas and he just can't compete with her.