Tyrion's arc in the series is degradation. He is supposed to be on the opposite trajectory to Jamie. He needs to kill Shae, who clearly do not deserve to die (regardless of what she did), for his arc in Dance of Dragons to be possible.
Tyrion's arc in the series is degradation. He is supposed to be on the opposite trajectory to Jamie. He needs to kill Shae, who clearly do not deserve to die (regardless of what she did), for his arc in Dance of Dragons to be possible.
He is the (by Westerosi standards) deformed, scarred,
Ned Stark, the man who dooms the kingdom to civil war TWICE because he is so damned inflexible (and has a huge blindspot where Robert The Douche is concerned), would totally condemn Jamie for killing Aerys. Even if he found out the truth.
Good boots are hard to find…*shiver*.
@avclub-fec1b8d3fbc08f27a84e5a334d45bb5a:disqus SouthofHeaven Arya? The better person?
SPOILERS; ovb.
Too this critisism I would say that I would LOVE a story about Faramir and Denethor and Gonrodrian inner politics. That is, in a way, what ASOIAF is. If it had been another LoTR, I would never have read it.
Ahh, Ghost!
Takes me back. I devoured Norse mythology as a child, and my mom used to read it to me at bedtime too.
Jerk-AssHomer Oh, come on. They needed to get impregnated somehow, there was like…miles to the nearest city. What, they are going to pass up some quality sperm just because the guy is their dad….
So, Scott Tobias, you are basically okay with the Jude Law character abusing his position and being a horrible human being, while the movie portray him as some kind of heroic individual and his actions as something a decent person would do?
Sploosh! Totally sploosh!
Underwood is, though. Normal Whips might not be famous, but Underwood is a power in the majority party in Congress, has a lot of influence on the Hill and has the ear of the President.
Underwood is a very important person in the Dem.party, a mover and shaker, as you see in the show. He has likely had personal threats made against him before, and has a buffed security detail for that reason.
"Men" (with which I mean boys) think they would enjoy it, but like most things boys think they would enjoy, they are likely mistaken.
I doubt they have a word for it, seeing as in general everything just get worse for the elves as time goes on. That is basicly the plot of the Silmarillion right there: The elves had it good, then effed it up (again and again and again….). Also, Feanor is a douche and the Valar are remarkably petty and arrogant for…
It is! It totally is.
Dyson is a fae, while Lauren is a human. I think that is the difference. Bo is pretty much all Kenzi has in the world (even though she is technically Bo's property:) ), and Kenzi fears that she will lose Bo once Lauren and her becomes serious. She is not that threatened by Dyson, maybe because Kenzi does not seem the…
Well, at least she has agency. Seeing as she is a Succubus, she is also very aggressive in her sexuality, which is rare in female heroines. And she is bi, which is also rare in heroines. In fact,Bo embodies a lot of classic femme fatale/female villain tropes, down to her all black, boobaliscious outfits.
As a science major, I tend to veer towards actual evidence. Such as the definition of coercion and rape quoted above, and what we actually see happen in the show:
- Damon and Caroline sleep together.
- Caroline is clearly terrified and revolted by what Damon is, is afraid for her life and screams No, no, no, no after…
As a science major, I tend to veer towards actual evidence. Such as the definition of coercion and rape quoted above, and what we actually see happen in the show:
- Damon and Caroline sleep together.
- Caroline is clearly terrified and revolted by what Damon is, is afraid for her life and screams No, no, no, no after…