I don't know where you got a raiding, but I'm pretty sure that was the young prostitute that survived the Oxy-Clinic shooting begging Ava for help.
I don't know where you got a raiding, but I'm pretty sure that was the young prostitute that survived the Oxy-Clinic shooting begging Ava for help.
My curiousity has gotten the better of me. I've never seen Suburgatory, but several comments have referred to it as creepy. What's going on over there?
I remember thinking about Game of Thrones when one of the antagonists in Boardwalk Empire who owned a butcher shop was doing the same thing. And then thinking back to both of them during the last scene tonight.
So I suppose next season on Breaking Bad we'll see the villain gutting a deer or something.
I've never seen an episode of Buffy or Angel, or even read any of the reviews. But I've spent so much time on the AV Club that I'm familiar with the characters and plot developments from mentions in other reviews.
The two shows are cited in pretty much every entry on TV Tropes as well.
I think that Danni and J.D. were only together as an actual couple for about three epsiodes and then they were together for a few more when JD got back together with her because Elliot got back together with Sean. After that Danni popped in a few more times because she was Jordan's sister.
I'm sad that I know…
The last review for Boss had the word quotidian it too. Do all the reviewers share a word of the day calender or something? I've noticed that rarely used words or phrases seem to pop up simultaneously across multiple write ups sometimes, like "characters acting with agency".
At least brio never caught on.
The thing that I was thinking was unless that accident had just happened there would already be cops at the scene.
I don't really understand all the rage this so show is generating because it is clearly a family show. No one really swears, the romances are chaste and the weapons are all (since the pilot) non-lethal. And can't you can't really have byzantine plotting or even overly complex characters when part of the demographic…
Just one more please, will someone explain to me how that article led to this thread?
That Maya the Bee theme is going to be in my head all day now.
I got to thinking about what the most batshit crazy twists could be and the worst two were:
With the classic, slow moving zombies the idea that they would overwhelm the Earth has never made any sense. Which is I why, I think at least, zombie movies usually elide over how things got so out of hand and just stick us in the thick of it. It's like how at the end of Night of the Living Dead you get the sense…
I don't know if anyone else would have seen it, but there was a late 90s movie titled "Sweethearts" with Janeane Garofalo. I think the reason that the ending has stuck with me as long as it has is because I knew nothing about the premise when I started watching it and had thought that is was going to be a standard…
James Cameron, the guy behind "Terminator","Avatar" etc…
I watched it at home with a group of friends. After it was over I turned it off and there was a full minute of silence while everyone just kind of stared at the blank screen. Eventually I said: "So does anyone else want to jump off a bridge now?" Everyone muttered their agreement.
I noticed that too, I thought that they probably could have just cut to the graphic of the die flying through the holes in the wheel everytime the timeline switched. Maybe it was so anyone just tuning in would be able to figure out what was going on.
Does anyone know how old the kids are supposed to be? I was just how wondering how old they were when Brody actually left, he must have been deployed for a while before he was captured.
When Sarah was giving Amber the "You and your brother will always come first" speech I half expected her to follow it up with: "By the way, have you seen him lately?".
I didn't realize until this episode that Cyr is actually closer in age to Amber (nine year difference) than Sarah (twelve year difference). Not that it's really important, it just occured to me when Sarah was fretting to her mom
On an unrelated note, for some reason I thought it was "Haddie" not…
He was the steady, level headed Braverman in the first season. But as the show progresses he seems to be becoming more and more like Krause's wildly emotional character from Six Feet Under. Think about how many times he ended up shouting last season, or when he punched the guy in the grocery store. That's some…