If Emma only appears in one episode, it will probably be the last episode: Oh no, Emma's gone missing, we've spent a whole season trying to find her, oh there she is.
If Emma only appears in one episode, it will probably be the last episode: Oh no, Emma's gone missing, we've spent a whole season trying to find her, oh there she is.
The pattern of your capitalisation reminds me of Pennywise's heartbeat, and I feel the same way about S7 as I felt about the destruction of that. Excited but apprehensive.
Er…it matters because it shows they didn't give up hope? (*glass shattering*)
Let's let it happen before we start pretending it doesn't exist. Like Season 9 of Scrubs, Dexter season 8, the vast majority of HIMYM season 9, and most of Lost Season 6 (I also like to pretend only Sawyer, Juliet and Miles went to 1974 and Sun and Sayid stayed on Flight 316).
Apart from the overuse of the phrase 'Final Battle', Gideon (and the fact that he was named the same as the tormentor of an infant who grew up to be evil from another show, and treated the same as an infant who grew up to be obnoxious from yet another show), and the lack of moral ambiguity in the Dark Swan, this…
Were the Henry at the end and the dad at the start played by the same guy? Because I thought the guy at the start was an unbelievably accurate dead ringer for an older Henry; the guy at the end less so.
Who sent you? Was it Lalo?
And that's not her name.
A more important question is: did you not get that the previous question was a Lavigne quote?
#BlueDudeDiesFirst. (Or rather, Second. Or Third, counting the woman from the cold open. Or Thirty-Eighth).
An explanation for why there was only 1 new Doctor Who episode in 2016 is Gwen Cooper's line from Torchwood: Children of Earth (2009): 'Why doesn't the Doctor always come to help? Sometimes the Doctor must look at this planet and turn away in shame'.
The Beast Below, which aired a month before the 2010 General Election, in which the incumbent Labour Party, whose supporters include David Tennant and lots of people in the TV industry, lost power to the Conservatives, included the line 'Once every five years, everyone chooses to forget what they've learned. Democracy…
The very, very grating voice of the obviously Australian 'British' detective character in the 'The Limey' episode of Castle. I tried to watch it again last week and I made it through 20 seconds of him speaking before having to switch it off lest my ears start hurting.
The 'monkey with a machine gun' line is hyperbole from a man who cannot accept that the law and morality are not always necessarily the same thing. To suggest that that line is true is to make the mistake of believing that facts can derive from emotions. As for stealing from his dad's store, that too is nuanced more…
Jimmy is a good man who uses bad means to remain a good man, and becomes bad as a result.
Absolutely right. However, acknowledgement of one's mental illness is important in being able to function properly. You don't have to be cured to be competent, but you do have to not be in denial.
Overcoming PTSD is dependent entirely on acceptance of your current, post-traumatic situation on both a physical and emotional level. If you don't do that, all drugs will do is suppress the thought processes that trigger PTSD. That's not a cure.
If you accept your illnesses, you can manage them. Panic attacks, for example, can make you think you're about to die if you don't understand them, but once you do, you can feel one coming on and grit your teeth for a few seconds, and it passes.
Those who are mentally ill and recognise it are far more trustworthy to do competent jobs than those who refuse to recognise it. Mental illness should not be stigmatised, but it should be treated. If someone refuses to treat their own mental illness, it is an irrational decision and therefore indicative of their…
You're only saying that because you replaced Mike under the bridge.