avclub-4e2b695e165365b19acbc179eb3c05a9--disqus
samurai99
avclub-4e2b695e165365b19acbc179eb3c05a9--disqus

Danny Trejo is a funny way to spell Jason Momoa.

I actually think this novel will work better as a tv show, since it would allow them to focus more on Wednesday and less on Shadow taking long walks down back country roads.

P&R probably goes before community.

Now they're planning an it ironside style remake.

I hate myself for liking this.

Part of me wants nbc's other comedies to fail bad enough that community would get renewed for a seventh season. Just to see how the internet would react.

Now that I think about it, why was he torturing her in the first place? Why not just go to the groups giant plane and wait for them?

Going off the curve set by the last bunch of episodes, I could see this being a B+, but I still thought it was pretty dumb. How did Skye even track the bad guys without a car? How did nobody hear when she shot that guy? And does this show really expect me to care about Skye getting shot? I could go on, but I'd be here

For all I know Mary assassinated JFK. I don't care about her, and the show didn't give me a good reason why Sherlock on John should care. Lying about something like that and then being instantly forgiven is the writers proving once again they don't care about consequences.

Which would be a much better excuse if the plot didn't rely on CAM turning into an idiot at the last minute and giving away the game.

…And then he was bailed out, because God forbid the british government deal with Moriarty on their own.

The clear cut answer is 'announce he has no proof of anything and bury him under an avalanche of libel suits.'

"and he was overconfident, believing that the "heroes" would never attack him."

Which is what is called 'terrible writing'. I will not buy that these two people could screw up so monumentally and still take this show seriously.

Sure he did. He's alive, CAM isn't. CAM would have won if he wasn't such an idiot that revealed he didn't have any real evidence.

So Magnussen fails to search Sherlock and Jon for weapons like he did earlier, reveals that he has no dead-mans-switch for no reason, and Sherlock to shoot him with people around rather than coming up with a murder plan he could actually get away with, and then all consequences from that murder are ignored because

OK, maybe Mary Sue is the wrong word. What's the tvtrope for a character who is shown to be flawless, or have their flaws completely ignored for no logical reason?

By that logic, this episode didn't understand the original story either.

I don't like her because she's a complete Mary Sue. Any issue with her being an assassin is completely ignored, and the idea that she wasn't actually trying to kill Sherlock is ridiculous.

So SHIELD academy doesn't teach their biology majors any practical surgery?