I can't be the only one who flashed back to a middle school Wil Wheaton crush with that leech in the…ahem…area, was I?
I can't be the only one who flashed back to a middle school Wil Wheaton crush with that leech in the…ahem…area, was I?
She's got pretty sharp knees too.
Robert only wanted to have sex with Cersei when he was drunk enough to be able to pretend that she was Lyanna (Ned's sister).
There's a couple of reason why Cersei had the bastards killed:
The director's cut of Alien 3 was pretty decent and helped the plot actually make sense.
The Iron Bank of Braavos.
So here's a theory, not directly related to this week's episode, but might come to light next week when i'm sure Tyrion will be back.
I also though that it was a good way to show the passage of time. When Sam met her, she was (I think) just newly pregnant. She's given birth now, so it's got to be like 7 months that they were stuck out in the far north.
To be fair, I don't think this episode does pass the Bechdel test.
@TheTuckPendletonMachine:disqus : if anything, the fact that they are written in advance shows a level of devotion to these reviews that I, for one, appreciate in a poet hustler.
@TheTuckPendletonMachine:disqus : if anything, the fact that they are written in advance shows a level of devotion to these reviews that I, for one, appreciate in a poet hustler.
I think it was a good thing. You have to have some reason why the Jem'hadar remain subservient to the Founders. Either they really aren't that bad-ass (so that the Founders and Vorta can keep them under control physically), which lowers their perceived threat level, or you have something like this.
I think it was a good thing. You have to have some reason why the Jem'hadar remain subservient to the Founders. Either they really aren't that bad-ass (so that the Founders and Vorta can keep them under control physically), which lowers their perceived threat level, or you have something like this.
Don't kick the baby! KICK THE BABY!
Don't kick the baby! KICK THE BABY!
But they did have that episode with the Clone Miles, that I still think was ambiguous (did they save the real Miles or the clone? Were they _all_ clones?
But they did have that episode with the Clone Miles, that I still think was ambiguous (did they save the real Miles or the clone? Were they _all_ clones?
Later episode? Wasn't that one of the major conclusions from Equilibrium?
Later episode? Wasn't that one of the major conclusions from Equilibrium?
But it's a Bajoran station. And god knows civil rights are probably not really high up on Bajor's list of priorities.