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While there was manipulation in that line as well, Cary was completely right that Will would not see Alicia as the type of equal he saw Diane as. As much as I've always loved Will & Alicia together, the power imbalance is evident.

Peter is going to have an ethics violation with that goat, mark my words…

The most brutal thing about Will and Diane's break up is that I think I've always known Will could be this cold, easily cutting ties left and right because business or his own integrity or whatever else comes first. I love him as a character but there's always been this side to him. I'm not just worried about how he's

I feel you on that, actually. I probably should've said "British shows are usually good" because I have seen a fair amount of crap, or just the types of shows I don't enjoy from those isles. Britain produces just as much crap reality as the US does (comparatively) and despite the shorter seasons, I've seen so many

You seem weirdly defensive. I was talking original programming strictly, not what they import to the UK - I wasn't saying "bin this channel right now". Admittedly what I've seen out of Sky's original productions hasn't been much, but most of what I've seen hasn't made it into my "must see" category. YMMV.

I grew up on British comedies and 1-hour detective shows. I know full well British TV ranges in quality from sublime greatness (like Life on Mars) to lazy trash (like whatever that angel show the guys who wrote LoM later came up with was).

The Good Wife has become almost too intense a watch, which is really weird because while it's always been good, it's never been a particularly nail-biting weekly watch, even when you like the characters and are worried about them at times. Keep it together, Sims, we're with you.

I still have to finish the DK/SE version, which is amazing. I'm a bit worried I won't be able to watch the remakes because they're modeling the characters too closely after the original.

Um.. The clue is in the title.

Sadly I agree with you here.

You might ask for further clarification on that. If you're just very knowledged and have a tendency to point out when others are wrong, fine, but considering what an asshole Sheldon can be to his friends, you might want to look into your behaviour..

It appeals to some nerds who thinks it represents them and don't think about it too hard, and because there's the occasional joke that caters to them ("you have to know Star Trek to get this joke, hahaha, I love this show!").

I remember reading the reason he gave the show to NBC was because NBC promised a full first season. So it's going to get 20-22 eps no matter what.

It's on Hulu! REJOICE. I need my 80's simmering sexual tension tonight.

I really need to just buy Remington Steele on DVD and burn through it. I did that with Moonlighting (except I stopped at S4 and pretended the show ended in S3 because that was really the last good season) and it was one of the most fun I've ever had.

He mentioned Will in their meeting in the last season, when she thought by partner he meant her fiancee - he clarified he meant Will and his corruptedness. I guess Bishop is just an added worry.

Totally agreed. You have to let up on the mystery of a character eventually, but the way her friendship with Alicia went kind of haywire with the Peter revelation is one of those things that kind of closed off many possibilities on how to let Kalinda reveal her past, bit by bit. Who's she going to tell now, or show

He seems way too vindictive to join the revolution - what could they give him he doesn't already have?

>>ChumHum sounds like getting a blowjob from your good buddy

It's so difficult to like this episode when it had me so terrified and distraught over every single that was happening: