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BelieveInMeWhoBelievesInYou
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IRENE ADLER IS THE MOLE

What overall rating?  If you're using Metacritic for TV shows, don't.  In fact, don't use it all.

I thought it was pretty clear that the nakedness wasn't really supposed to titillate Sherlock into confusion; rather there was just a lack of information that Sherlock was unprepared for, having spent his training assuming people wear clothes most of the time.

Mycroft will be Sherlock's transgendered lesbian father.

I still prefer the BBC version, but they're so different that it really comes down to your preferences.

You should watch the last episode.  I don't know if it's enough to make up for the Hounds of Baskerville for you (which was my least favorite, but didn't provoke nearly the same reaction in me), but it's worth watching.

@facebook-572633200:disqus To be fair, this version of Irene is also Moriarty so it's not really a direct comparison. 

Person of Interest is also really good CBS show.  I never would've thought it a year ago, but despite all the really dull procedurals flooding the network, it's got a few really worthwhile dramas in the mix.

It doesn't, but it's part of the show's charm.

*Elementary spoilers*

You get me

Eh?  Chipotle is definitely one of the healthier fast food spots, if you do it right.  Cut out the flour tortilla (300 calories, 670 mg sodium) and get a burrito bowl, and don't get sour cream.  Then you just have vegetables, meat, and rice, and if that is "disturbingly unhealthy" then we're pretty much just screwed

F- for not concluding the Scranton Strangler saga

Never heard of that book.

S4 AD

I doubt they assumed it was permanent.  Boy are they in for a surprise…

This has happened like once ever in the history of TV (Cougar Town to TBS).  Why did we assume it woud be a sure thing?

I hypothesize that a good amount of it is also some form of network "loyalty".  People who have been watching CBS's "reliable" programming for a good part of the last decade probably have little incentive to check out other networks.  I'm wondering if NBC's new "family-oriented" shows wouldn't have been hits on CBS,

It was clearly an alligator.

Personally for me, I really can't stand the audience laughter/applause/hooting, which interrupts the immersion and flow of the show, and the set-up seems pretty restrictive (fixed camera angles and settings).