"Cloon" — it's "You're not that kind of cloon." If we never see Penelope again, I will forever remain grateful that we got her saying "cloon" on last time. It was her last word, wasn't it?
"Cloon" — it's "You're not that kind of cloon." If we never see Penelope again, I will forever remain grateful that we got her saying "cloon" on last time. It was her last word, wasn't it?
They keep cancelling all of my favorite sad-marrieds shows (Married -duh, Satisfaction, this one). Apparently you have to be sad and single to be interesting (You're the Worst, Love, Girls, others?) — but not gay (Looking — also one of my favorites).
Yes. I've enjoyed both seasons, but I really look forward to watching this season. Last season, I was just watching because it was there.
Exactly! "Extreme niceness" is an excellent description of her. Like when she offered to quit rather than the boss having to fire her. Those were the parts of this show that were so incredibly difficult to watch, but so vitally important for building characterization to get to such an amazing place by the end of…
They have the same hair … and eyes ….. and buttocks.
"Can we just get this over with so I can get on with my life?"
That might have been my favorite line of the whole episode. That or maybe, "Can you put those idiots down?"
Come to think of it, despite everything Chip went through, Dale really came into his own and stole the show for me this week. Along with remembering…
It really made me hungry for a Beef 'n Cheddar.
Martha seems to say yes to anything anyone suggests to her; even goes out of her way to accommodate a coyote into her home. She is a fantastic character. Extreme (and strange, of course — otherwise she wouldn't have been sitting out there at the campfire with Eddie and Chip, now would she?) but emotionally…
I've been on Leonard's side re: Trudy the entire time, but when I saw that she'd killed that bird — no sympathy left for her. She is just plain awful.
Yes it does! I think what's great about it is that it flows along being effortlessly and consistently entertaining with both the mission and the characters' relationships, and then every so often it blindsides you with either a relatively short (Sadie's surgery) or almost episode-long (the early one where Jake kills…
I'm not at all surprised by Bill abandoning Jake's mission and taking up his own. You put a young guy who couldn't save his sister from an abusive husband ALONE ALL THE TIME right below a beautiful damsel-in-distress with an abusive husband and why would you even expect him not to fall for her and get involved? I am…
I'd love to hear people's ideas on this as well. Not being a Marnie-hater, I'm also sometimes curious at the deep-seated ire she evokes.
They could kill her on How to Get Away with Murder. They're going to need some new people to kill next season.
I'm glad it's not just me. Her hair was gorgeous this episode.
Too bad the rest of everything else sucked so badly.
Whoever said that it's a little soon to say that Tina has finally found something she's good at — for not bringing a diaper AND then driving the baby home without a car seat — all of that is still resonating with me. (I may be combining posts but the concept is all the same.)
I think she had several points: (1) to show us and all of the other characters that Alex had gotten successful in every way, (2) to keep Alex busy and occupied and unable to hook right up with Tina, (3) to further drive it home that Tina has reached rock-bottom emotionally and achievement-wise (which, let's be…
I don't know. It took me 8 episodes, but I just somehow realized that he is JUST SITTING THERE. EVERY SINGLE EPISODE. It is awesome.
Sam at the end was such an awful, emotionally abusive and manipulative person, and the flashback Sam seems like a much kinder, more loving husband. I have always thought that he, as her therapist, which is already immoral and unprofessional, manipulated Annalise into the relationship and marriage. Played on her…
The "all the good parts go to women" joke may not have worked (I don't think it did, either), but having Jason Alexander throw the glasses past an extended photo wall of all women, women you can assume are the network's stars and have "all the good parts" was a fantastic inside-the-joke touch.
I thought I'd hit "play" on the wrong show!