avclub-1413d4a67c83fe9bf359ef8a9002e95b--disqus
ajde
avclub-1413d4a67c83fe9bf359ef8a9002e95b--disqus

I really miss the old Mallory, Cheryl/Carol, Pam office subplots. This new setup has kind of isolated Carol from the group and they don't seem as interested in the dangerous mission/office work contrast anymore.

They had just better go all the way with it. Stiles doesn't have to get a boyfriend and can end up with a girl, but they had better make something of the continual hints and have him come out as bi or something. few things on tv make me rage more than empty queer-baiting to get gay guys and girls to watch your show.

I really loved this episode. I'm just hoping they expand garnet's character soon and also I'm hoping they explain the premise a bit. It doesn't have to become a sprawling mythology like AT, but I'd like to have some sort of idea of what this all is. What's a Crystal gem, who was Steven's mother, etc.

I stopped at about the same point. It's very good and I see why people could like it, but just found it suffocating. Every episode seemed to be screaming at me that this is a serious show about serious people seriously doing serious things.

1. Orange is the New Black
2. Bob's Burgers
3. Hannibal
4. Game of Thrones
5. Adventure Time/Gravity Falls/Rupaul's/korra

Misty day just won't let the dead stay dead, will she.

The show has been so great with emotional arcs and letting the characters develop as people so I hope they follow through with Valerie. jenna was cruel, but it's not like she was terribly wrong either. Valerie is inappropriate more often than not so I hope she grows from her (over-due imo) punishment while still

how was it supposed to be funny or in any way suggesting trans people are mentally ill? The episode can never get too dark and has to inject some humor of course, but it goes a long way in pointing out society is at fault (PB too) and Cookie only got this way because of how he was treated. As an lgbtq person myself I

Really? I love what Princess Cookie suggests. It's the only children's show I know of that has touched that kind of issue. The episode never judges Princess Cookie, and at the end neither do finn and jake; both they and the episode come to the conclusion that Cookie is the victim of an intolerant society and problems

The episode felt off to me as well in a way an AT episode hasn't in a long time. It obviously looked like the beginning of a larger storyline though and I'm excited for that.

didn't she though? she apologized to the twins and said it was too late to save him. But in general she doesn't seem as hung up on never under any circumstances taking lives as Aang was (which is why I'm in the minority of liking her more than I did Aang

Can someone explain the Bolin/Eska parts to me? As far as I can tell after the initial lust-at-first-sight on Bolin's part, and after finding out Eska was a complete psycho who is abusive, Bolin has spent most of the season terrified of her. I was like Mako and thought he was playing her to get free, but no, he

Transphobic seems an awfully harsh accusation when it's functioning as an off-handed, one-line criticism. If you're gonna make a criticism like that you've really got to back it up with more; you can't just leave it there.

That's not how I understood it. I thought the weird turtle shelled thing was the source of them turning to sand with the light coming from its head, and the dead guy just had some sort of reflector on his head that broadened the light coming from it.