Even for Sansa, this was a FML episode.
Even for Sansa, this was a FML episode.
"Sister. Or mother!" *wink* *chuckle*.
If you like dragons, treachery, sex, and violence, you'll love the next Game of Thrones, which is entirely about the sovereign debt crisis reaching a head in Westeros.
Oh, dang.
Definitely an Other. They just kill people to make wights, and they wouldn't want a baby for that.
They don't fire him for coming clean about his past. They knew about his past. "Dick Whitman" has been outed since season one. They fire him for ruining a client meeting.
I mean, it's fine for Betty to chastise him or criticize him. She's his mom, it's her job to tell him when he's being inconsiderate. But she can't resent him, especially for the rest of the day.
"Are we negroes?"
"Peaches give me a rash!"
"I'm Bobby Five!"
I can't get past the fact that Aaron Echolls is now an even-tempered, honest, and decent old man in 1969 instead of being Aaron Echolls.
He can just retire to a career of guest appearances on sitcoms and SNL.
HIS NAME IS REAGAN RONALD BUT HE GOES BY RAY RON WHY ISN'T ANYONE TALKING ABOUT THIS
Depends if you're Ned. Ned was a believer in custom and traditional law, which everyone accepted as real even if they didn't observe it - which is why he wouldn't back Renly.
For me, it's neither. It's that the exchange comes off as charming banter.
Niles/Daphne is also influence by the fact that it was a steady-state sitcom for the first 6 or 7 years. There was a light sense of continuity, but for the most part, Niles creepiness wasn't really cumulative. It was the same joke in multiple episodes without a real sequence. Tension resolve, episode ends,…
Oh, Paradox. You make games that appeal to every over-complicated urge in my soul and then never explain it well enough to stop me from just muddling through.
Also, if you were already compelled to hoard items "in case you might need them later," adding a need to hoard spells, not only for their use but for everything else, meant that I played that entire game without using any magic if I could possibly avoid it.
By far the worst episode of the season, and managed to remind me of everything that's wrong with SNL. The Sound of Music parody was promising until the abysmal return of baby hands. I hate that sketch so much. I hated it the first time, I hated when they brought it back every two weeks, and I hated it again now. …
Stanley!
Harry Potter and Luna Lovegood.
It was worth it for "Hey, Nick I've been meaning to talk to you about end tables. What kind of wood…JESS I FAILED!"