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skittledog
avclub-84f9e7d729107289d35152b4262e2b53--disqus

I don't remember any ideas other than the FBI thing for season 4. I do remember thinking that I couldn't trust Rob Thomas anyway, as he was interviewed somewhere about the finale and said that originally the final scene with Logan and Veronica would have been Veronica telling him he's out of her life forever, earlier

No, "Run" was the big one. I was still at university when that was (re-)released, and it was EVERYWHERE.

I may also have chuckled at the caption. Heh.

So much agreement with everything here.

Great choice of screenshot to head the review with: Kristen Bell nails that look of heartbroken shock every time she is called on to do it. Just looking at her makes my heart hurt a little.

Ah, I've always wondered what the hell she was going on about there. Thanks for confirming it is in fact nonsense and I don't have to worry about it…

Yup, isn't he in Logan's flashback to making out with Veronica in the car? Or at least mentioned there…

What I've always failed to understand is why her acting ability should be proportionate to the length of her hair. But I swear that it is.

I wish I hadn't known that before watching, because it kind of spoiled the performance for me.

It's really weird on a rewatch to watch Dick's character evolve. He starts off in the second episode as a dumb goon whose only line is "Logan?" and somewhere, over the course of three seasons - and probably mostly during season 2 - turned into one of my favourite little bits of the show. He's just such a big dumb

Hah. I would like to state that the only way I got a few of my male work colleagues to try BSG was by stressing the 'lots of explosions and robots in short dresses' angle. (But at least none of them loved Black Market, eesh.)

When I visited my friend in France she made me watch dubbed Angel for exactly this reason. It was hysterical.

Oh I agree, they definitely were an attempt at a bribe at the start (though I think Neal knew it was a doomed attempt, given how easily he shrugs off 'he's Peter, he can't be bought' to Moz), but that's what I liked: they didn't pop up again until they couldn't be anything other than a gift.

The boys at my school were considerably less giggly, statistics or no. But, perhaps.

Definitely a fun caper. Villain over the top, Moz a touch over the top too, but some acceptable acting and writing for the kids, a gorgeous location and most of all, the return of Neal-Peter banter. Plus, of course, Neal-Peter respect: I loved Neal's grin watching Peter get the blue off his hands, and Peter's

Seconding the fist pump. I think that might be the first time a tv show has ever made me do that. Eliiiiiiijah!

I also like that they don't actually have all that much to do. They're just there, a vague menace and a dead-end for Veronica or Keith whenever they find out that something leads back to them, because they're entrenched and have some power. They're a bit of an anti-Jake-Kane in terms of Neptune's class structure, but

CONTINUING VAGUE SPOILERS

That would be AMAZING. (Though for some reason the rugby-playing best friend has morphed into George from Blackadder in my head. Alas, poor Wallace.)

I enjoyed this episode. I seem to be in the minority for not having enjoyed last week's episode much at all - maybe I was just in a bad mood when I watched it, or maybe it's that I've always been uncomfortable with too much embarrassment/injury humour, which it really used a lot - but this week was a nice return to