1. Raylan and Winona take out their Detroit mafia captors.
1. Raylan and Winona take out their Detroit mafia captors.
Episode barely rates a B, which is disappointing and, worse, continues a trend of backsliding with no sign of getting the show back on track — ameliorated only slightly by having Donna appear in the first three minutes.
Yeah, remember when we were young and thought we'd amount to sumthin'?
It was the first known injury to a drone pilot.
"I'd tell you to go to hell, but I never want to see you again."
Just for laughs — actually no, i just really need a life — I looked it up and Megan Draper "is 26 at the time of her marriage to Don, who turns 40 seven months after the wedding." Her birth is listed as 1940/41, which is impossible, but then, so is the whole show. And Ms. Pare is 32.
Yeah, I felt the same thing, especially since the merger was his move, too. He's been far more integral to the company's current prosperity than anybody in the room, so I do believe the man merited more of a dialogue and due process, instead of a rather cold meeting, fait accompli, but perhaps that's just the…
I didn't read the review all that closely, and only half of the postings below, but did anybody else notice that when Stan leaves Peggy in Don's old office, Peggy takes Don's chair and spins her back to the camera to the precise pose (same angle) of the Don drawing that is the closing shot of the opening credits —…
Of all the unbelievable things about this show, the fact that the whole thing is taking place in a high school is tops, especially since the principal four actors are between 23-27 years old, as are several of the satellite liars. They are awfully big girls, especially when you compare them to the real high schoolers…
All I could think of when Frank spoke was Jesse Ventura. And I missed the credits and IMBD is hopeless, only lists three voice artists.
and so on (apparently).
I promise never to eat Smarties cereal. Not when I have my Reese's Pieces.
Yeah, what a turn for Frances Barber, U.K. stage icon, to be on the IT Crowd being incredibly hammy. A bit like Nureyev or Bernadette Peters on the Muppet Show. Dig it.
Or how about Aaron Douglas as the dufus lower prison guard that Seward conned into the phone call. Very underused character so far. I have a feeling he's going to prove more consequential down the line, otherwise it's a long way down from "the chief" in BSG.
I realize sarcasm and satire don't easily come off in print — something bloggers are very slow to come to — but I thought I could get away with this one. I was not even remotely serious, just overcaffeinated.
I don't think the drawing was "never investigated." It was just too generic in its early repetitions. The point Linden made was that, when the kid (Adrian?) started drawing again, it was the same drawing, but with the addition of the abandoned building, which gave Linden something to go on in another search. She was…
F#@! the primadonnas. Use Aasif Mandvi.
Yes, I liked the first few "Jon Stewart is away doing xxxxxx …" Going to be hard to keep it funny, though.
Not possible for these guys. First, they worked their asses off to get this job of bleating their opinions day and night. And second, they have a word count.
I liked the little exchange between them at the beginning of this episode.