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Kefka
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I'm with you. I'm all in. Bumps? Absolutely. More common in a series' second season, but they came in this season. Did they take time to recover? Maybe even a couple episodes longer than they should've? Sure (Hell, Continuum, which was basically the best sci-fi show since BSG had drunk Carlos in S3, but great shows

That was River Tam shit. ADC is wasted on Fear The Walking Dead, but goddamn, her fighting (and again with the kissing that isn't exploitive!) and that Clarke finally told Lexa she loved her (heavily implied, but I don't think ever said prior to tonight's episode, but I could be wrong, although tomorrow begins the

"Um. I need a penknife, some dental floss, a sewing needle, and a fifth of whiskey. Stat!"

I honest to God thought she was dead the way Jackson reacted when he opened that ambulance door. Jesse Williams does watery eyes without crying super well… like Claudia Black on Farscape well.

I'm with you. With the exception of the Matthew storyline (which I blame on the writers more than Sarah Drew), which actually led to something nice in the end, she's been pretty great on this show. Between this episode and the S6 finale, she really should do a thriller or a horror movie. She can do terrified without

I know there's not a lot of overlap between Grey's Anatomy and Supernatural fans, but the Supernatural S5 episode, "Changing Channels" does one of the greatest GA's parodies I've ever seen, "Dr. Sexy, MD." (also funny b/c Denny and John Winchester are played by the same actor)

If you really want to hear Kevin McKidd sing (opera), check out Topsy-Turvy. Plus if you've never heard how Scottish his accent is (or never seen Trainspotting, in which case, what is wrong with you?), you will really appreciate how good his American one is on GA.

He was so good on both shows, but yeah, he was phenomenal on Homicide, especially when he was paired up with Michelle Forbes. Well, actually, for the first five seasons, everyone was. (And even for the last two, they're not as high a quality, but are still eminently watchable).

So does that mean that Keith Richards is Valen? :)

I think if they had sprinkled the flashbacks one episode at a time, every couple of episodes (obviously impossible, given that both Henry Ian Cusick and Isaiah Washinton both had to shave, those were likely the last scenes shot for the the season), it would've been so much more effective. First flashback - science

When Jensen Ackles cries, for some reason, it gets strangely dusty in my room ("Abandon All Hope" is basically cutting onions while having allergies for me).

Oh, come on now, we all know when the apocalypse happens, the band that survives will be Creed.

Not to be a pragmatist or anything, but the songwriting rights to "Radioactive" are much lower than actually having the song performed by the band (who were just breaking when the show premiered). I imagine it was a fiscal decision. It would've cost them exponentially more money to use the original than to pay for the

Team Callie probably also has the ghost of Mark Sloan, because if this gets real ugly, AZ's kind of screwed that she has no biological claim over Sophia (despite the fact that I'm sure at some point she legally adopted her).

I'm really hoping Sara Ramirez gets written out by the end of next season so she can play Bobbie Draper on The Expanse when it gets to Caliban's War. (I know she's Hispanic and not Samoan, but she's built like the guys wrote the character with her in mind).

Just saying, btw, that the title of this episode sounds like either an intentional or accidental wink to Community's episode titles.

[SPOILERS]
Near the end of the first book, when Quentin is talking to Jane, and Jane explains her watch, she explains that what happened to them was the best possible outcome out of the many that she had actually seen and turned time back on itself to play out again. So it's entirely possible that Penny saw an

This certainly wasn't the strongest episode of the season, but I do have to say, a big positive for me was that this was the first time we actually saw, for long stretches of time, the intricacies of the hand movements that are so meticulously (and painfully) described in the book, and the effort it took to make them

That's what threw me. There were clearly depictions of OLU all over the place, which is specific, not just in the book, but in actual human history, to France.

Yup, which made me so excited when the vampire was played by Major Davis (Colin Cunningham)! (I was kind of terrified when I saw his name in the credits that he was going to turn out to be Reynard)