avclub-826aad531083df9d0c5dbf488a9973c9--disqus
Musashi Myamoto
avclub-826aad531083df9d0c5dbf488a9973c9--disqus

I think to be more accurate, she takes revenge without remorse.

He's probably on a stipend, and they give him a small apartment as part of accepting him as an initiate.

There's no way for Balish to know. Ned's wife didn't even know; if Ned was so careful to not even tell his wife, and let her deal with the pain of a non-existant affair for many years, I think he's pretty sure there was no one left alive who knew besides himself.

The only one he'd take a spanking from is Sansa.

The new Grand Meister has probably had time to get his little birds out to lots of places in the Seven Kingdoms by now. He would certainly have someone with the Boltons, and at the Pyke. Winterfell seems to have reached the point in organiztion where anyone who is anyone would know of the change in control of the

If I remember correctly, Dragonstone is just a sort of huge rock in the ocean, with no native food or other resources anyone could live on besides fishing. If you don't have the resources to have stuff shipped in, I guess there's no good reason to be there. But I also found that curious. Maybe nobody realizes it's

Cercei will be really confused when Arya walks in looking like Jamie.

Sansa knows LittleFinger was involved, but not all the players, I think.

I thought of LittleFinger this morning, My bad.

You know how this show is; what we are eventually going to find out is that Balish truely loves Sansa and that love has changed his life. He'll die tragically trying to save her from something,

I thought he was probably talking about Dannerys, because he thinks he can defeat anyone on the ocean, I'm sure he knows where Danni is as easy as it is to read a map. He may actually have enough sense to know that he can't win that fight right now, so in that case I got nothing.

There's probably only 2 people left alive who know the truth. Oleana and Varus aren't going to tell her. Doesn't matter, she would still blame Tyrion, who for some ancient reason she wants to blame for every tragedy in her life.

It makes sense he would be there. If anyone knows of a cure, they would be the ones,

Agreed. The foundational premise of the series is to create an inexplicable but shockingly consequential event and watch how people run around trying to make sense of it. WE all know, from the explanations the writers have given us, that there really is no answer to the questions the characters are asking, but in

I'm not a member of the grammer police, so I let that go. No problem.

They have gone pretty much out of their way to emphisize the fact that the departure was completely random. Nora was an investigator of the Departures and she has said that repeatedly.

I'm not really on board; I'm watching the boat meander about seemingly pointlessly from my balcony on the Game of Thrones cruise ship.

I never watched 'Lost', but from what I heard, it was a lot like this, so I'm glad I don't have to find out. I'm just not enjoying the 'never get to the end of any plotline because life is like that' crap. Yeah, I know once Game of Thrones is over, the character's lives won't end there, and there will be more plots

I have known rare genetic freaks that look like this all the time. But not likely.

'He doesn't Laurie did what she did last week.'