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ly_yng
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Maybe he's British?

Is it inconsistent? Sure. Is it something a real person might do? Absolutely.

Is it inconsistent? Sure. Is it something a real person might do? Absolutely.

As I recall, Tarrlok was going to let the whole thing go. But then Korra said that he was just like Amon. And then Tarrlok freaked the fuck out.

Now'n'days, everyone knows ever detail of a politicians life. But we're talking about the turn of the century here. New York was more or less run by straight up criminals. As late as the 1940s, most of the country didn't realize that FDR couldn't walk. So, you know, seems plausible to me.

Let's say hypothetically that Mako treats her wrong, and she gets all angsty (perhaps rightly).

Let's say hypothetically that Mako treats her wrong, and she gets all angsty (perhaps rightly).

That re-rejection plot would be really, really great. It seems appropriate that Korra's "fuck waiting, just do it" attitude would be a huge asset half the time, and a huge liability the other half.

That re-rejection plot would be really, really great. It seems appropriate that Korra's "fuck waiting, just do it" attitude would be a huge asset half the time, and a huge liability the other half.

So, this episode was pretty darn clear about drawing parallels between Aang and Amon. We already knew that both of them could take bending away, but we saw both of them do it this episodes - that seems significant.

So, this episode was pretty darn clear about drawing parallels between Aang and Amon. We already knew that both of them could take bending away, but we saw both of them do it this episodes - that seems significant.

Other than the flashbacks, my "holy crap!" moment of the episode was when Lin metal-bent the track and flew the cart through the ceiling to escape. That seriously ruled.

Other than the flashbacks, my "holy crap!" moment of the episode was when Lin metal-bent the track and flew the cart through the ceiling to escape. That seriously ruled.

In this episode, she mentions that she's been working on her sandbending, and creates a model version of an earth kingdom town out of sand.

How amazing is the fact that when totally off-the-rails Azula hallucinates a vision of her mother, the vision isn't vindictive or cruel. All she says is "No, I love you." And it just kills Azula. It takes a seriously messed up childhood to punish yourself with the concept of unconditional love.

Yeah, it was frustrating that he didn't subtly imply them over the course of two months. Next time, Adams….

Yeah, it was frustrating that he didn't subtly imply them over the course of two months. Next time, Adams….

SPOILERY (does anyone even care anymore?)