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astrid1021
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@tzero….i completely understand what you are saying

about the debbie thing, i was a lot like debbie when I was little…sensitive, anxious, motherly, inquisitive, obedient, responsible (ok, you get it)….and the first boy I had a FULL ON DIE HARD crush on when I was little, around 12 years old, was a boy that looked and acted and completely was just like this little Hank

i am glad too, bc I do like Steve and Fiona together, for some reason which I can't articulate, but I wish they would have done a little more with his grand return. I am not saying his icy civility wasn't realistic, but there are other ways it could have gone….and what is with him having a girlfriend and bringing her

i went to an ivy league school, i kept yelling to fiona "noooo, they don't let you live off campus freshman year" but to no avail:(   i agree with this review, there was something refreshingly centered and nostalgiac about this episode in a way it hasn't heretofore been this season, i liked it:)

I met Channing Tatum once, he is seriously one of the nicest guys I have ever met in general (celebrity status aside)…..and we didn't have like a five minute hi/bye conversation, it was a long conversation, and then a couple more over the course of a week. He is just a nice, unpretentious, down to earth guy, so

you are right, it's not normal behavior for a ten year old, you get one or two in a say a class of fourth graders who is maybe a little too interested in girls (which in itself suspect), but being ready to act on the impulses is a bit extreme and definitely concerning

maybe she's trashy (seh embodies a lower socioeconomic housewife stereotype) but not skanky, come on - there really is nothing to support that yet…she is acting irrationally by not blaming her husband (although fiona did  know craig was married so she is partly guilty) but it is typical for women to be angry,

i respectfully disagree, i love debbie but more than that, i love watching how such a sensitive, pensive girl emerges from this type of dysfunction—— i know that she is a little like fiona, but she is more emotional and perceptive in a sense, like a fiona plus….it is interesting to watch
in contrast to her is carl, i

i agree!! i thought that the reviewer was going to bring up the same point when he talked about Frank having to pay the consequences for what he did which turned out to be surface, flimsy, and incredibly short-lived ——- which disregards the whole "he can't succeed at his goal"…and "the success being mitigated by some

i agree, the hypersexualized portrayal of minors througout the show is DIS-turbing…it comes off as a bit farcical, a bit cartoonish and extreme but I venture to guess that the reality is somewhere in between, which too is disturbing
but i hope for the sake of the show they are not trying to normalize any of this and

@phodreaw    of course what I am saying might offend that segment of the medical profession to whom it is referring (and yes, their kin), though that is not my intention, but that doesn't make it any less true…it may be a tough pill to swallow so please drink some water with it
just want people to KNOW who's examining

oh yes, of course, our doctors SHOULD be LESS educated!!! are you kidding? doctors deal with people's lives. The eight years of education and the rigorous standards are what make US doctors the best in the world. I won't go to the doctors who weren't educated in this country bc to me that means they weren't smart

yeah but uh something tells me frank wasn't thinking of saving someone else…he really could have cared less, he wasn't at all concerned about someone living, he was only concerned with Dottie dying….i thought he was a sociopath but psychopath does sound more like it

no matter what Lip and Karen's relationship, I think the point is that Karen is not thinking about it or regarding it in any significant way which contrasts Lip's intensifying feelings as he deals with possibly having to lose or share her…..watching how Lip manages and reacts to this, that is, his first love, is one

you are spot on with what you said about The Wheel - i remember watching that episode already loving the epsiodes I had seen - but something about that particular episode made everything click and come together, just like Don makes the whole ad campaign come together with the monologue he delivers at the end to the

I  completely understand. My mom thought the same thing and was bent against it in principle before ever seeing an episode, but once she started watching she couldn't stop, it's her absolute favorite show. It's not about 50s era repression, it's about people, change, families, history  (personal and global)- all

i am surprised noone in the article mentioned Mad Men's "The Suitcase" and I even loved the pilot "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes" — two of my favorite episodes of television EVER

i LOVE community, but I kinda gotta agree

and you are right about the bad dye job….i read an interview in which Jane Levy, who is a natural blond, said that couldn't get the dark color out of her hair and back to blond which is why she dyed it red for suburgatory….that would make me pretty upset!

actually i liked Jane Levy a lot, i thought she was a beautiful and talented actress on this show, just as she is on suburgatoy, who brought a good amount to a small role - and i was hoping she'd do both, though suburgatory is a lead role for her so it makes sense she wouldn't be back….and like Ian, she appears a lot