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alfla
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Thoroughly enjoyed her rant tonight, the actress towed a nice line between comedic exasperation and genuine emotion.

I got that too! The way she looked at Cozette at one point, for sure. I was thinking they were going to reveal down the line that her and Cozette have actually been hooking up since day one - which would be a nice flip on the "angsty closet" storyline.

At least Cary was running this case, and Kalinda fighting for a promotion. Seems they're trying to get them back in more.

Have we seen the opposing lawyers in this case before? They didn't have much room for individuality but I really enjoyed the main female opponent.

I enjoyed Diane getting up in her face - it's been a bit too pally in the L/G offices recently. Plus her reasoning was fair: stop acting like a child who got the toy they wanted but is pissed that other kids got it too.

I said this in a comment on an episode last season, but The Good Wife has set up a situation where, from the outside in, Alicia could be considered a fairly loathsome character. Promotions based on who she's slept with, a generally cold demeanour, the way she breezes in and out of Peter's life and campaign with not

Only after the episode ended did I appreciate the genius move of the way this "pyramid scheme" plays out in a wider context. As a TV show, we expect our main character to progress year to year in her career - but the law doesn't move that swiftly, and making Alicia a partner so early is ridiculous. That the show

Between this and "Marthas and Caitlins" it seems Alicia is just breezing her way up the career ladder on blind luck.

I didn't say it in that post but thought it as I typed it — the Glee cast are all great singers, just they're edited on top of that.

Also, all the actresses had strong dance backgrounds before joining the show, and it comes across that way. I love how good they all are, not having to use body doubles or slick editing - which would be the equivalent of Glee's endless auto-tune.

On your first point, I thought it skirted the line of out of character, yes — however, earlier in their little conversation he said something that made it sound like he had dropped out. I can't remember exactly what, but it was a little conversational tic, maybe "I hear that" or something along those lines.

I believe that Modern Family regularly dips into the stereotype well — look at how Jay talks about gay people for on and off the entire show. It may be part of his character, but it's still far harsher than this joke. Still, as a gay person I don't find it offensive.

"I Shat A Shit" perhaps.

"I Shat A Shit" perhaps.

American Horror Story: Tokyo Drift.

"What was that?"

I'm off to caramelize the color off this meter stick before Labor Day.

TOTES ADORBZ LIKE.

I really liked Maddie's teacher. Something about her reactions to Kate's insanity and also the innocuous-on-paper lasagne line was great.

Ugh. Just looked her up. WHY MUST EVERYONE BE RELATED TO FAMOUS PEOPLE?