avclub-6eff75e7ea1e4eaecc24df1ca043de61--disqus
poot
avclub-6eff75e7ea1e4eaecc24df1ca043de61--disqus

What I wouldn't give for every woman with crazy eyes, crazy little teeth, and crazy hair to do the kind of honest advertising that's on display here.

Nope. It's sound, but muddy. I think at a certain point mud becomes unavoidable, however.

Not horrible, but they still need to Captain Christopher Pike that main dude.

I give this comment a C for not having been posted several days ago, when it really could've re-stirred the shit-pot.

He called for the removal of all goblins from WoW, and not just the NPCs.

I was a bit pissed at the roof scene too, but my rage was somewhat mollified by the realization that Peter Bishop would've been the team member most likely to suss something like that out in the field. I decided to interpret the scene as showing us just how badly they need him.

This of course begs the question of how the machine works in Amber, since Peter was never there to activate it. I wonder if the machine preserves some of the new paradox, or if it was resolved along with everything else.

Yeah, but Walter seemed pretty apprehensive about the whole thing when it was actually about to happen. I got the sense that Bell was %100 committed to it, even though Walter may have been having… (wait for it…) second thoughts.

It was a cliffhanger.

The whole Red/Blue thing was, indeed, kind of a misdirect. If the two universes had always been linked somehow - perhaps even before Walter blew a wormhole through both of them - then the distinction was always more one of heads and tails on the same coin. It's just that the characters didn't realize it.

That's what happens to kids who fail at giving their grandfathers control of the doomsday machine.

Makes sense; that is how you get pregnant, after all.

If there's anything these guys have proven, it's that hard work and dedication can make you better at almost anything, including being disturbingly random and weird.

I'd almost forgotten how much I'd enjoyed Jackson's work in this series. He really is a pleasure to watch, and I think that Torv and Noble's material has suffered from his absence, even though they've been doing an awesome job of subtly hinting at all of the differences between Blue and Amber - through their acting,

People who read are statistically more likely to be able to use their imaginations, which, in turn…

I don't have much faith left in the show, but I do hope that Dean is just feeding Sam another line of bull when he says that his (increase in) self-destructive behaviors stemmed from lying to Sam. And I think the message from Ellen is a good hint that maybe somebody on staff wants to push in that direction a bit;

An imminent threat to one's own survival sort of sounds like moral high ground to me.

Peter put forward a theory tonight that the Red/Blue universe is just fucked forever, because he survived when he should have died. He seemed genuinely concerned about the future of Reddish/Amber now that he's "back," because his death 25 years ago was what "fixed things," at least to the point where there's some

Bell was kind of an inconsistent dick. He did remove pieces of Walter's brain to prevent anyone else from figuring out how to access the Red Universe, after all.

Hey, this is why the show takes such pains to show us that Peter Bishop is highly adaptable. Also, he has extremely deft hands.