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avclub-5ff056fb661e3f6375bdf155111cb391--disqus

I was intrigued with Audrey Pauley, the idea of the doll hospital and Audrey's mission, even though the plotlines did not resolve/hang together well, particularly the motives of Dr. Death.

They tried very hard in this ep to make us care about Mike—making him vulnerable and lovable, at least in Jessica's eyes. I felt nothing. Maybe I'm tired of manipulative scenes that lack any depth or authenticity. Suits is masterful at setting these scenes up. Watching them is like eating sugar—takes more energy than

I know, right? Except the Bravermans or their friends. Every time Hank barges in on Sarah, I talk to the TV.

I am more worried about the fact that Julia and Ed lied to a classroom of kids about the vegetable garden. And lied again when one of the kids questioned them. The Sustainability Project was a bust. Julia and Ed should've owned up to it. Sound familiar?

For me, this show is about the women now. Harvey and Mike just make noises. I kind of miss the centrality of their skewed buddy story, but I'd rather watch Donna do her voodoo.

"They'd rather use Louis as the punching bag."

Mike gets an A+ in Ethics—that's funny!

…and they are deaf ears, which makes them even sadder and creepier. Or are they…?

Right, the ears did not match the ears in her photo. That bugged me, too.

After those very phony phone accents, I was willing to believe LeStrade's version. But I agree that the version Sherlock admits to Joan is much more elegant.

Loved the shot of her "ear farm" before amputations. Almost as good as an underdeveloped Siamese twin growing out of one's neck. But I found the perfect and hapless little ear clones to be entirely implausible, no matter the "scientific" explanation.

Why, Julia, why? Ed should just be out of the show now. Ugh.

Fun, not-hot Amber rescues little brother from the doldrums.

Hank: You let men rule your life.
Sarah: You're so right. Call before you come by next time.

Sydney, go to your room. The one at your dad's house.

Waiting for cancer test results really sucks. And it rings true that the threat-release pattern can infect cancer survivors—and sometimes their mates—with a crazy drive to accomplish something with their time on this earth.

Favorite moments at frat party: 1) Amber's reaction to being kissed by roommate; 2): Drew swatting roommate away to talk to Natalie.

Actually, this episode pointed up similarities between Zeek and Crosby like no other, vis-a-vis a point of view limited to ME and MY SPACE.

Women who have sacrificed their (other) dreams for family are awkward in their first expressions of independence, which may come in their 50's. They may sound angry, or at least entitled. Once people around them get the message that there's a new order, the woman wears her independence with more grace—she learns that

Agreed. It's not bad, it's just not creative enough, not cutting edge enough. I hope they get a second season, though, because I am right there every week, waiting for Dorian to do his thing.