avclub-32867cd0cb93cddabbb4a8e781a04523--disqus
drdang
avclub-32867cd0cb93cddabbb4a8e781a04523--disqus

Am I crazy or where there two totally random TMNT references?

I like that Mike isn't hesitant about hanging around the household anymore. He really got in Brody's face this episode.

Was I the only who thought that in the last scene Carrie was clearly flirting with Brody (as opposed to striking a friendship)? And Brody was responding similarly? Boy I didn't think the show would go *there* this soon.

"He's at the carousel. It's were all the ex-jockeys end up."

And what do you mean by orthodox fashion?

Oh absolutely, I take both instances as a result of his scarred state. I just thought that maybe the show was trying to nudge us in the direction that he didn't want to touch his wife (which wouldn't make sense in the light of the pilot).

I liked that the moral of this story was "sometimes it *is* the black man".

I thought that's where the show was going too, except for the fact that he totally did have sex with her in the pilot (albeit again, in a disturbing fashion)

"Gus is gone." Do the writers of Fringe know something about the Breaking Bad finale?

Think of it in the context of them having reconciled in the beginning of this season. I mean, all of that being in the past, it was Ellen who asked Patty's help this time, and Patty agreed because she wanted to make up for all the things she did. When Patty talks about fashioning Ellen as her successor, I felt she was

Am I the only one who *completely* sided with Patty in the last conversation? I totally agreed with her about Ellen being a child, and success, failure and loneliness. I'm not excusing her from filing the second case, but it seemed to me like handing over the case to Ellen was a sort of an apology. Yes it was