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

I thought it was pretty clear during the torture/interrogation scene that the businessman was intentionally lying and taking the blame himself precisely to up his odds of not being killed either by the Triad or by the guy who was currently torturing him. He started off trying to get the vigilante to just go after the

Too much voiceover from Tessa. Otherwise, an awesome episode. I wonder if it's intentional that I'm finding virtually every other character more interesting and engaging than Tessa right now. I don't remember that being quite as true last season; it seems like she had more to do (and less to say… in voiceover.)

Too much voiceover from Tessa. Otherwise, an awesome episode. I wonder if it's intentional that I'm finding virtually every other character more interesting and engaging than Tessa right now. I don't remember that being quite as true last season; it seems like she had more to do (and less to say… in voiceover.)

I knew she had talent when she was on Weeds, but it's great to see that these writers are taking her strengths and building upon them with more screentime and more chances for her to be unapologetically bizarre.

I knew she had talent when she was on Weeds, but it's great to see that these writers are taking her strengths and building upon them with more screentime and more chances for her to be unapologetically bizarre.

Change isn't necessarily bad. Amnesia about one's own life without any explanation is bad.

Change isn't necessarily bad. Amnesia about one's own life without any explanation is bad.

As the reviewer adroitly notes, the soap opera elements of Supernatural are done even more lazily than they are on actual soap operas. This Sam and Dean are no other seasons' Sam and Dean, except when they are, but only a little, and only when the writers feel like it. But stay invested in the characters. Because, uh…

As the reviewer adroitly notes, the soap opera elements of Supernatural are done even more lazily than they are on actual soap operas. This Sam and Dean are no other seasons' Sam and Dean, except when they are, but only a little, and only when the writers feel like it. But stay invested in the characters. Because, uh…

Ah, Creed and Staind: just one 'e' away from cred and literacy, respectively.

Ah, Creed and Staind: just one 'e' away from cred and literacy, respectively.

I was wondering why it wasn't called The Aliens Who Built America Using Freemasons and The Illuminati as Proxies.

I was wondering why it wasn't called The Aliens Who Built America Using Freemasons and The Illuminati as Proxies.

"And then the CW learned that competing with online porn sites was not the best idea they've ever had."

"And then the CW learned that competing with online porn sites was not the best idea they've ever had."

And then a renegade white shark will use a public refutation of Objectivist philosophy to organize all the not-so-great white sharks into a mob. He'll take over the shark-enclave, effectively enslave all the greater-white-sharks, and reap all the benefits from their labor.

And then a renegade white shark will use a public refutation of Objectivist philosophy to organize all the not-so-great white sharks into a mob. He'll take over the shark-enclave, effectively enslave all the greater-white-sharks, and reap all the benefits from their labor.

Maybe he has "merely" above-average Strength but superhuman Dexterity, with a feat selection geared towards improving his critical range and multipliers?

Maybe he has "merely" above-average Strength but superhuman Dexterity, with a feat selection geared towards improving his critical range and multipliers?

Okay everyone, new plan: we post "edited" versions of the publicly available court documents for all of these lawsuits.