avclub-8408fd166a93e6f48d095709f5abef9b--disqus
sidgirl
avclub-8408fd166a93e6f48d095709f5abef9b--disqus

He'll have time to paint more murinals that way.

My husband and I met him. He was AWESOME. Hilarious and kind and engaging, and he seemed to genuinely enjoy meeting and talking to us.

@Roswulf:disqus Ha, yeah, no one is less interesting than Riley. My grandmother was more interesting than Riley.

Wasn't it "kind of tired of packin' and unpackin'?"

I love Leslie! Her montage of excuses to the park ranger for why "she" shot Ron? Lit-rally hilarious.

Not I, says Mr. Grant.

It did indeed, as it is my birthday. :-)

I was in 7th grade Photography when the Challenger explosion was announced. It was my mom's birthday, too.

I have to add: the scene where he gets the news about Arlo, and his whole demeanor changes as he speaks to Raylan…just a great moment.

No, Wynn Duffy is AWESOME. I love him.

She slides her hair behind her ears almost as often as she blindly believes anything anybody tells her and then goes off on a rant about it, even though there's no proof or reason to trust the person she's listening to.

Absolutely. I've always thought so.

Yeah, I love the idea that he can't possibly be attractive to women because he's not twenty. Capaldi is VERY attractive. And many of us like men our age or older.

For me it's in large part because all of his stories are the same, and so many of them end with the kind of "Wish it better!" nonsense your third-grade teacher would have dinged you for.

Anybody's got to be better.

I can see that. But I also think maybe he couldn't fully admit to himself or Ted what was behind his speech.

Thanks! & yeah, having just watched the finale I still think that was at least part of it.

I know! The first thing I thought was, "Man, Pete really ought to stay off mass transit."

I was two days shy of my first birthday when Nixon resigned. Guess how old that means I'll be in a month and a half?

Yeah, I had that thought, too. Specifically that when I was a kid, where I grew up, we referred to ringing someone's doorbell and running away as "n-word-knocking." I clearly remember saying it, and I also clearly remember being shocked when I finally realized that it wasn't all one word but referred to black people