Glee is the kind of show that will give a major character's father cancer, then never mention it again until revealing that he's cured, with both instances serving largely as an excuse to prop up said major character's ex-boyfriend.
Glee is the kind of show that will give a major character's father cancer, then never mention it again until revealing that he's cured, with both instances serving largely as an excuse to prop up said major character's ex-boyfriend.
Glee's depiction of college admissions has always had virtually everything happen in the last month before graduation (remember last year, when Kurt, Rachel and Finn only learned about whether they'd gotten into their schools of choice on, like, the day of graduation?).
I always thought that Tom Amandes, who played Dr. Abbott on Everwood, was the ideal guy to player Rogers if they ever did something about him.
I've been hoping to see a new film version of this for a bit, though it's too bad Branagh never got to this one.
My favourite part of that sequence is how MacDuff sticks his sword right into Macbeth, then slowly draws it back out, then decapitates him with it.
The showrunners said that they prefer to focus on interactions between the principal characters (i.e., having Sansa talk with Littlefinger directly), but that we will see Dontos again. I assume because they need somebody to row the boat and be the inspiration for Brienne's wild goose chase.
In all seriousness, I think Warbucks should be a bit older than Foxx.
Ginsberg: "I mean, you're a sexy girl, and you smell great!"
No, they're the actual Ladies. They run the houses. If they weren't, their adult children would be in charge, not them. Look at, for instance, Lady Waynwood's entry in the indexes; she is the Lady of Ironoaks, with her eldest son Ser Morton Waynwood listed as her heir.
They're not inherently matrilineal, but when a woman becomes the Lady of a noble house, the children take her name, to preserve it (which has also happened at various points in our world; like the children of Maria Theresa of Austria still going by Hapsburg).
They messed up booking the actor's return for season 2, and he had other commitments; hence, we haven't seen him again.
I wanted to yell at the screen when she talked about feeling terrible for anything happening to him.
A remarried Cersei could in fact pass the name along. It's been shown numerous times in the books that when a woman assumes the Ladyship of a noble house, the kids take the mother's name (the Martells, the Mormonts, the Oakhearts, the Flints of Widow's Watch, the Waynwoods, apparently the Starks at some point in the…
I though the trial was very well done.
(who after all, did tell Cersei all about Ned's plans)
I was unsure about that as well. It's possible they wanted to avoid making Brienne's nudity erotic, since it's supposed to be a very serious moment (and Brienne is at least notionally supposed to be unattractive).
@avclub-e57dbebc740250d2c4a370cf6ccb35f0:disqus , he was actually trying to screw Aerys, since Pycelle is a Lannister stooge. From what he said in the books, he was actually hoping that Tywin would take the throne himself, though that didn't work out.
I was imagining a PSA-heavy episode of Game of Thrones, where we learn that reading is cool, alongside many other important messages ("And remember, kids, don't trust the creepy guy who talks often about his crush on your mom…").
Lord Harrion Karstark was a POW at that point, I believe (and remains so, as of book 5).
The implication is that Tywin is dead set against ever remarrying.