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War Bastard
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I thought they were setting things up so that Eugene was going to pull an Oskar Schindler and purposely make munitions that ultimately didn't work, but his helpful suggestion of pouring molten metal on the fence walkers' heads to make them tougher to kill either means he's going all-in on the Stone Cold Negan act, or

When they had an "Undercover Boss" of Hooters, I got the distinct impression that the co-founder/CEO was really more conservative than he let on— the company just seemed to have this vibe of, maybe not religiosity (far be it), but conservatism nonetheless.

No…it's way, WAY worse. It's the Megabus of the Skies, with a slightly better safety record but worse amenities. At least Megabus sort of sticks to a schedule, too.

"Eh, it's slave labor- you get what you pay for"

Co-signed. And I'd have to agree with Katie- the wings are actually better at Hooters than at "B-Dubs"- everything tasted like it came out of the microwave about 25 minutes ago, and the only thing that helped was the myriad sauces that covered everything up.

She didn't have time to bake any cookies.

WRT Rosita, not two months ago (or, about 2 hours in the show's timeline), she and Sasha had a total Eskimo Sisters moment at the Hilltop, only for Rosita undergo a personality about-face (maybe all the contributing writers got fired from last season. And they took all their character notes with them. And last

I felt bad for Emily having to sit next to Kasuji, esp. since last week Jim helpfully pointed to the seat on the other side of him so that he acted as a barrier between the two blood enemies. I think even Jim had enough of his shit and decided to hang with Poochie. Emily had that pashmina/cape/serape practically

Aw, I kinda liked "Revolt" (it works on so many levels you guys).

Law & Order had a special kind of Third Way creepiness to it- it would go on and on about civil rights, and usually the white corporate guy (WCG) was the villain, but there was a disconcerting "Trust the Police IMPLICITLY" to it, which makes it especially cringeworthy. The number of times the cops say "We could get a

That, plus the opening sequence felt like Gatiss was plagiarizing from himself- it was straight out of Crooked House.

Pffft, you never wear a band's t-shirt to their documentary, man. What a bunch of n00bs.

Great acting all-around. Considering that the two were a couple in real life and were together for years, only to very suddenly break up, makes it all the more disconcerting.

Hey, gender is a fluid construct, man.

I was lukewarm on the second season of Bloodline because the writers took everyone in season 1 and made them uniformly awful in season 2; it didn't help that it meandered after last year's murder so that everyone talked in circles (and John Leguizamo was added to douchebag it up). Season 1 was magnificent, which is

Remember when Sherlock was friends with Alfredo? That was cool.

Well, there's a ton of Canadian-Bahamian hair metal frontmen out there, so maybe Bach's story isn't entirely necessary.

The best tangentially-related story about Bach comes from when MTV's Cribs was touring Adrian Young's house; when they they got to the rec room, the camera focused on a vintage KISS Gottlieb pinball machine (and immediately flashed back to Bach's episode, where it showed all the KISS Army stuff except that). Young's

The 'sup, bro nod that Daryl gave was more than enough, but the manbrace was for all the slash fiction writers on 4chan.

Rosita is practically a black widow, since every guy who hooks up with her dies a horrible death.