avclub-9fc9e31380b5879b1da60ff086fe9a77--disqus
rtozier2011
avclub-9fc9e31380b5879b1da60ff086fe9a77--disqus

So am I. I never thought that counted as a mystery. I accepted Sawyer's 'crapped gold' retort as the truth: it didn't say your name, you just imagined it because you're in a tense situation (not to mention your girlfriend was just murdered and you're trying to track down the killer).

It was the polar opposite of a suicide bomber - he exploded in an attempt to save lives.

It would explain how she was so certain Ben was one of them. Perhaps she did recognise him, but suffered from such a combination of sixteen years of solitude, being trapped on a strange island with monsters and abducters, and repressing the trauma of the crash, the monster, the killings and Alex's abduction, that she

I think one of the main points of the show is to have deeply flawed, disturbed protagonists. They couldn't have been lost otherwise.

One could argue that Locke is the man of progression and Jack is the man of stagnation.

'It is a good world.' Excellent advice, especially when it's a shitty one.

It was Desmond, saying to Charlie 'by my count, you've killed more of them than they've killed of you.'

I explain it by the Man in Black messing with him somehow as part of one of his get-a-candidate-killed schemes (like Hurley in Dave).

Maybe that's why Jacob disliked Ben.

I knew Dave was imaginary as soon as Dr. Brooks got to the line 'Dave doesn't want you to lose weight, does he?!' It was something in his facial expression that said 'Of course he doesn't, because…'. Coming right after Hurley talking about how Dave makes him feel…

I'd rather they solved the sexism problem by having women refer to themselves as 'of the race of Women' than by using the word 'human.' The former feels more compatible with Middle-Earth.

I always thought of the Angelus thing as being an allegory about how good people can become bad people in the right circumstances.

There are things I like about the Hobbit movies. Bilbo's meeting with Gollum is not too heavily about its future implications, the dwarfs' journey is still mystical, and the song at the start is cool and deep. Sometimes the call-forwards are excessive, but the only thing I really dislike is the 21C-Westernisation of

No, it ends mid sen

P.S. The tune for the first three lines is almost exactly that of Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star.

There's a scene in Season 3 of Happy Endings, where Brad is working at the kids' play area, where the play area is under threat of closure and his boss says something along the lines of 'I can't say for sure, but I think we're probably gonna close'. I always interpreted that as a reference to the show itself, which by

That's classic compulsive behaviour.

A—B—C—D—E—F—G/ H—I—J—K—-LMNOP/ Q—R—S—T—U—V—W/ X—-Y—-Z. Spacing appropriate. I'm English; I don't bother with that whole 'now I know my ABCs' bit that comes after it.

It's Cece.

I request the pleasure of your company for a free exchange of ideas. Maybe speechmarks or italics next time.