avclub-57ea21d48dc6a2e17d2f472597762c3c--disqus
bumblbee
avclub-57ea21d48dc6a2e17d2f472597762c3c--disqus

Dooley's last line made me really uncomfortable. I might be reading too much into it, I haven't decided, but it felt like he was saying, "It's fine to treat her like an equal now that we can beat the crap out of her."

Funny thing that I'm not sure was intentional, but I hope it was: Dottie attacking a dentist with a drill, then immediately cut to the sound of a jackhammer as Peggy and Jarvis go hunting scorned women.

Are you going to be an old white person when you're explaining that?

Hahaha, thank you. SJ really doesn't have the proportions of a normal woman in that picture at all.

I associate that move so much with BW, I was really surprised it wasn't her when she looked up.

Does anybody think this about the A-Team?

I'm interested in Elizabeth's relationship with her mother. The flashback scene we saw was an example of Elizabeth's own indoctrination- her mother wouldn't go to her husband's funeral because he was a traitor. Elizabeth didn't want to disappoint her mother. Later, we see Elizabeth disappointed in herself for not

Oh I thought that was his new dad on the answering machine.

I don't know, I was with Phil and Andy until the neck-tickling. For some reason, that made me super uncomfortable.

Yuengling is exactly what it's supposed to be: cheap, drinkable, pretty damn good, every day beer.

I really want to feel for Sandra, but she's the one character on this show who hasn't been emotionally developed, outside of her relationship to Stan. I read her emotions in that scene, but I didn't empathize with them.

Paige was giving off a very mini-Elizabeth vibe in that scene, with her v-neck sweater, hair over one shoulder, slightly defensive "I read the newspaper."

"Channing Tatum… looks like the human incarnation of a fist bump."

I think they work a lot during the day (and are always going to "conventions," that was mentioned before) and do their spy stuff mainly at night. Which begs the different question, when do they sleep?

There might be some sad things about Martha's life, but she was doing ok on the sex front even before she picked up the Kama Sutra.

I think we've been doing that on here for a while, actually.

I think Mad Men carries the same emotional density, it just moves slower. You don't get violent fights conveying plot, you get Don Draper staring out a window for five minutes.

The preview, I think, got one thing wrong- Elizabeth and Gaad might have met before, at the same party where Phil and Amador met.

I kind of want to see what happened right after Elizabeth threw her daughter into the pool. I'm guessing it involved a lifeguard.

In 15 years, he goes to work for Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce.