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Lovely Bones
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I liked the finale. It's funny enough. It's no original Introduction to Finality, but it didn't need to be. Season 5 was a fun victory lap that didn't add *too* much to the show, character/story wise, because they'd pretty much said as much as they could with season 3/had most of whatever else stolen by 4. We didn't

I've heard this argument before and I just don't see it at all. Buffy and Willow enjoyed sex throughout the show without consequences or implications of fucked up-ness, in three through five or six for Willow and four at least for Buffy. What happens with Angel in season 2 is about guys becoming assholes once they get

Where did my response go. . .

SPOILER ALERT FOR FMA:Brotherhood

I mean, yes, but it seems like most people's argument for the season 1 finale we got being when the show should've ended (despite the ups and downs for the series as a whole, I'd take three and four's happy endings, personally) is based on the mistaken assumption that it was supposed to end like that if it was

Oh, Buffy. *Sighs*

Daniel Cerone, who showran season 2 and quit at the end of it, alleged that Showtime forced them to rewrite the finale into that like how they didn't let them kill Dexter at the end.

But the ending of season 1 only happened when they found out it was renewed for season two.

Yes well, some of us hate Varrick intensely, mind you. He's not at all funny. I'd appreciate him if they didn't try to act like he's likable and/or play him for comedy.

It's not so much a reboot as taking advantage of the franchise still being at relatively strong popularity and success to properly adapt the manga, because the original series was its own story once it caught up with the manga.

Awesome. I stopped paying attention to this article ages ago, but I'll go through old ones to check these out. I was looking back on BTAS for a while earlier this year, and intend to do a proper run through it eventually. Right now, I'm introducing Buffy to my roommate. We're mostly finished with season 1.

In what universe is Ben "Michael "Cut off my nipple" Ginsberg" Feldman a budget Ryan Seacrest?

Just skip to the ending of WGY, honestly.

Nah, see, the Matrix thing is because the first episode with the Near-Death Star was written before The Matrix. It was a perfect opportunity for a fun potshot that they missed out on. Rewatching the series from the start, that bit in Near-Death Wish was more of a fun, satisfying callback than anything.

That was before they established policy on it, for the most part, and the only reason season 5 didn't have grades was because Todd couldn't give Long Term Parking an A+.

Not necessarily difficult, but yes, some of the gameplay design is outright pointlessly annoying. That said, it's worth for just how wonderful the writing is, and from my understanding, at least some of it is typical Zelda gameplay that is more enjoyable and easier for someone that's into the rest of the series.

Full run. We finished the Fox run, watched the first two movies and end of Wild Green Yonder, and watched a good chunk of the CC era in October, and now have ten episodes left. I have a revised viewing order of the CC era that only includes what's up to par with the Fox era, cutting out 20 or so episodes, and with a

Story doesn't hold together very well, and I'd say most of the four Fox seasons are more memorable than it. I just finished watching all four seasons again last month, and it comes during a bad lull period for the show, in the middle of season 3 where apparently Time Keeps on Slippin' absorbed all of the writers'

Yeah, I never played OoT before Majora and my friend had to explain all the tie-ins.

Yeah, fair enough. And definitely, the incorporation of then-contemporary but soon to be outdated technology in the Fox era evens things out for the most part. It was weird to realize that in my rewatch.