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illogicaljoker
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I think it's perfectly fine for him to audition here — larger audience, different opportunities. If he's legally allowed to (remember, permits have been a problem in the past), then he should be able to dance on this show, assuming he even cracks the top ten. Besides, they're letting professionals—people who have been

Nice. I didn't even think about that.

Nothing….
…about all the comic scenes with Jesse trying to entertain himself in the lab? I'll admit that this wasn't one of the better episodes, but that's at least worth recapping.

@South, sure, but he could have used the submarine for that, too.

MAKES NO SENSE AT ALL
I don't get it. If Locke-ness wanted to get them all together and kill them, why the hell didn't he just leave the C4 on the plane? They weren't suspecting it, and they'd all have been dead. And Smokey wouldn't have been hurt at all. Hell, for that matter—if the monster can't leave without

Uh, No….
B? This was one of the best episodes of Chuck in quite some time—snappy, sexy, and hilarious. The fight choreography wasn't a bunch of snap-cuts (recently, it's been like watching Nolan's extreme close-ups of Batman), and the show found a way to justify bringing Morgan into the fold. Even Beckman had some fun

Wrap up the story like Firefly? Whaa? First off, Firefly *had* a story, and it needed to be wrapped up, considering it got canceled after half a day. But 24 has gone on and on, usually without much care for plot. For them to "wrap" up everything at this point, they'd need Oliver Stone to write and direct (create a big

Plot Question
No, it's pretty clear that if Sarah was killing Shaw's wife, either she was a mole, or Sarah's handler was—and the latter makes no sense. ("Let's have her kill an innocent person so that one day, say about three seasons later, we can have the innocent person's husband kill her and then himself—two birds

The descriptions of the paradigms clearly state that in a multiple-COM set-up, they will each attack *different* enemies. If you're only fighting one guy, though, Tri-Disaster (or Smart Bomb, if you've got Fang)/Cerebus works *really* nicely, especially if you're shifting between them for the free gauge refills.

The Cork
So, uh, in reference to The Man in Black smashing the bottle, I guess blowing up the island wasn't such a good idea, was it?

Schiels, this simply isn't true. Final Fantasy VI gave the player tons of freedom. Hidden dungeons, hidden characters, hidden side-plots, hidden storylines, hell, the whole second half of the game was optional, if you were tough enough to go straight to the final dungeon with four or five characters. Inevitably, as in

Jacob is pro-Life?
The Jack/Richard scene brought Michael back to mind. Though Michael tried to kill himself, he couldn't. But he could be killed by someone else. Or, more specifically, blown up whilst on a ship.

Scratch that. As the bonus feature on a DVD, I'd like to see that dude's job interview for CTU.

Or maybe he'll just die. Seriously, where do these people come from?

Right. Rossum didn't invent the tech; Topher did. Rossum may have hired him, but there are plenty of other Bennett-level geniuses out there, and if Rossum can identify individuals by their medical genetics, so can other companies—more importantly, other countries. Perhaps "bio-weapon" is a better analogy than "nuclear

Boyd's Logic
Whether he's wiped or not, Boyd isn't a hardened bad guy. Even from a corporate standpoint, here's his clincher: "The technology exists." In other words, someone will eventually build it. In his mind, it's better that he gets to it first so that he can build a vaccine, rather than to be vulnerable to some