avclub-52e423907968ddd10bbd2ec76092a7fc--disqus
Peameal Bacon
avclub-52e423907968ddd10bbd2ec76092a7fc--disqus

I am not a lawyer nor a psychiatrist, but I think that @avclub-13d7df3c17502af69aafccc758195f96:disqus  is right.  To be considered not guilty by reason of insanity, the relevant question isn't if the person is really fricking crazy; it's if the person was mentally incapable of knowing what they were doing (e.g. they

Laguerta is actually Chicky Hines.

@avclub-757b1bb98b616f4f8d0cb350f4714988:disqus , Dexter is still dumping them in the ocean.  But at the end of season 2 or in season 3, Dexter said that he is now dumping them in the Gulf Stream (or some other current) and not in his old spot, so that the bodies will be carried hundreds of miles out into the deeper

Yes.  Especially, since they really had to stretch out the DDK story and add in a lot of filler in order to push back the "reveal" that Gellar wasn't real to late in the season.

This.  My wife and I remarked favourably about the fact that it was missing.

However, the social/strategy* game is about more than just getting people to like you, it is also about getting to the final so the jury's good opinion of you can pay off.

I may have found Cochran annoying on different seasons on Survivor, but on this season I found him to be a welcome breath of fresh air - when everyone else was just following along with their preset alliances to the bitter end, he made a big move to shake things up.

Ah, I think Jeff just called it a "relationship" and he seemed to be presenting it as a nice story of finding love on Survivor.  So I assumed it was a boyfriend.

My observations from the Reunion show, recorded as a watched it:

This episode being delayed by over half an hour because of football just strengthens the biggest reason that I hate gridiron football: When I was a teenager and wanted to watch new episodes of Star Trek: TNG at 7pm, it would often be delayed by a football game that had about, say, 2 minutes left on the clock, but it

I didn't mean to suggest that Carmela knows about that particular crime, just that the interesting dramatic situation where she needs to make an ethical choice is something that she already has done and continued to make.

That's funny.  But unless there were separate tribes and explicitly labelled as Christians and atheists, it wouldn't work.

I understand that you're not holding what Albert did to Brandon against him, but what is this thing that Albert did to Brandon that some people are referring to that was so bad?  Was it not giving the necklace back?  Because WTF?  Why should he?  He had made no deal with Brandon about it.  He didn't trick Brandon into

Has it ever happened before?  I thought it happened, but, then again, if this was a first then I would have thought that Jeff would have commented on that.

It’s what Coach said to Brandon as he was leaving, though, that really rubbed me the wrong way: “It’s God’s will. Go win Redemption.”

In one of the camera confessional moments, Coach conflated the questions of "right and wrong" and "deserved to be here" with "someone I can trust" and "which alliance I should stick with to win."

Too much God talk and basically-forced public prayer on this season.  I'm not saying they shouldn't be able to honestly express their views, including about religion.  And there isn't really any single act of prayer or talk about God that I thought was inappropriate.  It is just the cumulative weight of it all…

"Wilful ignorance" is the phrase that comes to mind.  If Carmela was an innocent who was completely duped into thinking that her husband was good, honest, and didn't cause anyone harm, then I would agree that, dramatically, it would be necessary for Carmela to be confronted by the truth so she would have to make a

Hold on, hold on, this is your fantasy film idea, you can have anyone you want in it and you choose a bloke that doesn't exist and a woman who hasn't been in a film or on TV for 10 years!

Yes.  When Andy fired Darren I thought it was one of the few smart decisions Andy made.  However, I love the character of Darren and I was actually disappointed as a viewer when Andy fired him, because I assumed that would mean less screentime for Stephen Merchant and less interaction between him and Ricky Gervais.