I'd love for Tyson to throw Rachel under the bus and claim Aras as his new "loved one."
I'd love for Tyson to throw Rachel under the bus and claim Aras as his new "loved one."
Well, from a guy who's relatively comfortable in his heterosexuality, Colton is a pretty damn handsome guy. Not hot or anything, but aesthetically pleasing in the face. I imagine a person could find plenty to like about the guy if one could just mute him or drown him out.
Russell strikes me as the kind of guy who could find insult in a sunrise.
They're great, but he's no Eliza Orlins.
I figured he was speaking from experience, but I still found it hilarious, because the editing made it seem like it was a moment of nonexistent self-awareness.
Gervase is kind of like Rupert and Russell Hantz, in that his ego will never allow him to win Survivor in a million years.
Tyson's quote on Colton possibly "overthinking himself out of the game."
It's not that he's uninteresting, it's that he's less interesting than the people surrounding him (to me, at least). I find guys like Morehouse, McGuire, Donovan, Freeman, even Eva to be more interesting than him. Although he's admittedly a far sight better than Elizabeth, Annie, or his partner with the shrill wife.
I think networks in general don't really think things all the way through when they greenlight obvious one-season, high-concept premises.
Sookie Stackhouse (Man ALIVE, this woman. How True Blood sustained so many seasons with a lead whose only quality was keeping the "lead character" ball away from Bill Compton is beyond me)
Looked about ready to deliver a wicked "KHAAAAAAAN" before the video cut off.
In the first episode they mention he was strangled, and that he also suffered bruising to his spine, implying that whoever strangled him likely slammed him down or against something at some point, unless he was beaten beforehand (which they didn't state — and one would imagine they'd have said as much if he had been).
"Battle Of The Year is destined to please. Josh Holloway stars as … an alcoholic … from … Planet … Xperia. Crammed with … opening-credits … and … dialogue … the movie stops just short of … masterpiece. Battle of the Year … works much better in 2-D than in 3-D … jerks. Lee’s editing and choice of angles … focus on ……
I really like that explanation.
Vanuatu, in my opinion, is one of the most underrated seasons in the history of the show. It's far from perfect, but it tells a remarkable story with Chris Daugherty, and it gave us some pretty solid characters like Scout, Twila, and Eliza Orlins (who I wish they'd fly in for every tribal council just for reactions).
Fuuuuuck me, this episode.
I'm glad they revealed it, but I thought the only real misstep of the episode was the Sanbrooke stuff. Maybe I missed a bit of dialogue about the daughter looking up to her mother and seeing her as a saint, but why is it any better for Hardy's daughter to see her father dragged through the mud than her mother?…
The character work and the acting on this show is uniformly stellar, which is a rarity on TV these days. I never would have pegged Susan Wright's character to end up being a heartbreaker, but dammit, Pauline Quirke broke my heart.
It seems all too easy for Nigel to actually be the killer, but then maybe that’s the point — that the man who seems guilty actually is, and everyone has ignored it all this time.