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Doc Brown
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Taylor Kitsch…pure eye candy. I remember him on FNL. Tim Riggins was a fun character, I remember feeling like I wanted to hang out with him.

That is precious, isn't it? I was born in the late 80s and yet I don't pretend to be an "80s kid." Fuckin kids!

Why do you think he's so short?

Your comment was far more succinct though.

The Robert's Rebellion thing makes a lot of sense-I've heard HBO is very interested in GoT spinoffs either way. It ending after seven seasons might make HBO more willing to go to that and the Dunk & Egg crap to fully milk the ASOIAF universe.

"And it’s nothing they can do in the show"

Yeah, this. The phrase to Google is "FeastDance." It's still not *great*, but it's less of a slog.

He's 3 for 5 as far as I'm concerned. Last two sucked. Even if you read them FeastDance style.

Nobody likes the feeling of being tied down to a huge project. I find that side projects, you know, engaging my mind in something else, often help me focus better and even work faster once I go back to the old project.

My god I have the weirdest boner right now. This is like that time I found my dad's tranny mags.

OK, that second comment of mine was gratuitously dickish.

You gotta be sure you're right if you presume to correct someone, is all.

What on earth are you talking about? He lives in Westchester, and he worked for John Lindsay and Nelson Rockefeller. He ran for New York State Senator. You call that the Connecticut political community?

"Bacon, eggs over easy, toast, black coffee."

How in God's holy name could they possibly stretch this out over 5 seasons? I can see another season that is set up quite nicely in the finale, but they seemed to run out of creative juice towards the end this season. Why does every show have to be stretched out? It was great for what it was, and it can maybe be great

Agreed. I've said before, I really wish they hadn't gone full retard with Danny. Because the show was a lot better when you could sympathize more or less evenly with both sides (I was probably 55 Danny, 45 the rest of the family).

That's pretty much the natural progression for the story. It's a hell of a lot more interesting than Danny's son (which I almost rolled my eyes at).

That really resonated for me. When you were raised by parents with hair trigger tempers, for the rest of your life you are *always* bracing/flinching when something goes south, even though you learned years ago that your parents weren't normal.

I love all the callbacks to the Carousel pitch in "In Care Of." That parallelism is perfect. Great episodes to watch back to back, even if out of order.

He gets run out of the Keys and starts a new life as a high school football coach in Texas.