Tommy's fate makes me sad about Richard Harrow all over again. It would crush him to see what happened.
Tommy's fate makes me sad about Richard Harrow all over again. It would crush him to see what happened.
I'll stick with my original picks, so I'll replace MLS with Elementary. I'm anticipating that CBS will suddenly not care about syndication at all.
I thought I picked Elementary as the returning show.
I thought my picks were:
Whiplash
How did I get to 185 points?
Whiplash
“There are no two words in the English language more harmful than ‘good job’.”
I finally finished the season this week, and I loved it. Everything just worked together beautifully, and the atmosphere that was created by the acting, the writing, the directing, and the music was simply amazing. There was a lyrical, flowing quality to the show that really made it seem like a long film, and the…
OTHER THOUGHTS:
Veronica Mars "Leave It to Beaver" Review (1x22)
“Don’t forget about me, Veronica.”
“I could never.”
Yeah, the schedule's all over the place for me, so they're just popping up in random WOTs; easy to miss.
What if you're in a situation where you either grab a teacher's crotch or give narcotics to a student?
Hasn't been a huge comment section, but I've enjoyed reading it every week and commenting when I did. I kind of wish they hadn't already covered season 7, because it's probably my favorite television season of all time and absolutely deserves another look by the site. I'm looking forward to Wallflower's Solute…
Veronica Mars "A Trip to the Dentist" Review (1x21)
2/3 of the way through Coven, I was ready to kill myself.
There's also him telling Martin to think of people other than himself, followed by Noah doing the exact opposite by cheating.
Yup. Alison saving Noah's daughter in her story definitely ties into the loss of her own child.
There are clearly multiple factors in play here, from the interrogation—possibly with some element of intentional manipulation—to the psychological issues to the more generic reasons—e.g. dissatisfaction—for cheating. The whole show seems to operate on some type of heightened reality with many dreamlike qualities…
I will never get used to seeing Peter Bishop like this. I also miss Fringe.
The final scene of the series is of Van Alden and Richard Harrow—both alive again—seeing each other's faces, then high fiving and skipping off into the sunset as they flip off everyone else (everyone else is dead).