'As for Laurie, I think it was intentionally left unanswered'
'As for Laurie, I think it was intentionally left unanswered'
This is why the Pros don't buy the stock, they buy 'options' to sell a stock at a certain price by a certain date, then when the stock crashes, the people who bought the stock for real will pay good money for the options. The options themselves are cheap, and the leverage is tremendous.
He was able to dangle a piece of bait in front of Axe that was just too irresistable for him to let go. Chuck knew the possible outcomes could be bad for both himself and his family, but he was willing to sacrifice all these things just to get this guy. He is a man on a mission, determined. Not the sort of enemy…
That's where you make your first mistake. This show doesn't connect dots, It just makes more dots.
Not in the way you think, I think Chuck is using this IPO to see what Axe does. He using his father and laywer as bait. If things go wrong here, it could cost his family dearly.
He is a villain because all that is flowing out of him is based in ego, and not flowing from the Holy Spirit, which he often complains is not speaking to him in the way he expects. Sometimes it's hard to decide if he really believes in anything at all. However, from the events at the end of the episode, he seems…
Yeah, there's a few things we won't argee on. But let me say this.
Allow me to reply, There's a lot here . . .
The QA teams have a false sense of security from years of dealing with hosts that don't shoot back and respond to voice commands. They're having trouble getting out of their loops as well.
Ford is definitely dead. He had finished his life's work, and setting his children loose in the world was his final act. He knew he couldn't go with them where they are going, and his death forces them to go forward without his expertice to depend on; as long as he was alive, they could never be completely free,…
The nudity isn't pointless, you just don't get it.
What a review. I can't get why he's so disappointed in this. I actually thought this was one of the best season finales I've seen in a series in a very long time, and it really tied together all the threads of the show in what I thought was a very satisfying way. For me, it made the wait to get the resolution of…
Unfortunately I've watched every episode in a futile search for some meaning. So far I have been disappointed,
That could be, but I didn't sense any affection between them.
'Delos: They want what Arnold was after. But they want to disguise it as a Wild West theme park.'
I have thus far resisted the temptation to even begin to chew on that nylabone. Unfortunately, I did start watching The Leftovers, which has been a predictably unfulfilling experience filled with great performances.
Or . . .
It seems more likely in this scenario that Logan will be the one to die, leaving William as the inherinting son-in-law who becomes the powerful MiB, who we know just lost his wife by medicinal suicide. She would have been Logan's sister, if we are to believe William is the MiB.
Perhaps as a flashback???? Who knows?
That was a flashback to the attempted recovery of Maeve after her child was killed by MiB. They were going to erase her memory of the event and she killed herself rather than lose the memory.