Aceeași.
Aceeași.
Only mildly fun fact: my boyfriend closely resembles Nick Offerman, and also hates Indiana.
I don't know about that, but Alabama's agricultural sector certainly suffered due to lack of labor.
I'm a real secret agent and I won't hear any differently, DAMMIT.
Well, I'm boycotting the novel Indiana by George Sand. No royalties for you, you pseudonymous bastard(ess)!
Salut! Ce faci?
Man, that movie is… something. (I love how he's suddenly able to psychoanalyze and cure her because he, you know, read one book about it).
Exception: Michael Kupperman. 100% gold.
If you want to get legalistic, coercion and duress can indeed negate consent to sex.
I think so, at least I've seen her in the promotional photos.
Ah, okay. I just remember her family saying, "Don't you want to say good night to him?" when she's over visiting, and her being very hesitant/ disinterested.
She was definitely jealous of the niece. Though I don't think it was just because she knew his "secret identity", but more because she and Don were so comfortable with each other and she knew a side of him that Megan didn't. (The "real" him, which he didn't really share that much with his wife, even though she…
I love that scene where she's trying to explain what it does so, so much.
I'm still confused about what actually happened to the baby— I thought that her sister was raising him. (Or was at least taking care of him in the earlier seasons).
I doubt this particular aspect of human nature has really changed in the last few thousand years…
Exactly.
Yeah, it was a combination of both— she was found unfit by the state, but she also had no interest and wanted nothing to do with him.
I think it was kind of a "hail Mary" to save their marriage— she knew about his past extramarital proclivities, and it was a way to bring that into their marriage in a way where she felt like she was somewhat in control. (Even if she, and ultimately the other two participants, didn't particularly enjoy it that much).
"Hell, her Jaguar sex romp was no big deal when you think of her life as a whole."
I don't think the divorce was *that* unrealistic for the times, especially with one spouse deployed overseas for so long. Plenty of couples did get divorced back then in similar circumstances.