avclub-bdad32300cee64091dd5b5e7e91d7849--disqus
J Mann
avclub-bdad32300cee64091dd5b5e7e91d7849--disqus

I feel bad for Sarah. Bill kidnaps Andy's kids, puts them under guard of a newborn, gets three of them killed, then basically tells Andy "forget about the whole thing or I'll kill everyone ELSE you love" and he's OK. Eric and Pam are straight up sociopaths who murdered Sarah's sister for spite and are holding out a

Elvis Costello - I Want You. There is no need for any other entries on the list once you have that. (ETA: Should have read the earlier comments first, or figured that obviously someone would have beaten me to this one.)

On second thought, my point was all spoilers - this article really could use a "Spoiler Space" page where we could talk about this stuff.

I can't believe I didn't see it before, but I assume the original series was inspired by Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land?

Azudarko, I'm not sure if you're still reading, but IMHO the best plausible responses on stand your ground are:
 
1) It's a distraction in the Zimmerman case because it didn't apply;
 
2) Self-defense proponents think that it's not fair to second-guess whether someone could reasonably escape a situation.   If someone is

South Park has it easy when they argue that everyone is stupid, because everyone is.   But when they decide to pick a side, well, they take their chances.
 
IMHO, if you can't make a good argument that (a) either side is right or (b) either side is stupid, you weren't paying enough attention.   I don't care much which

Truer than you know - at first, Malcolm and Cochran mistook each other for supervillains and wrecked half the restaurant with a 6 page fight.

Cantaloupes are much tougher than TWD zombie skulls. It's a little like Buffy, where theoretically vampires should be really hard to kill, but luckily, almost anyone can easily punch nearby twigs through rib cages with 90% + accuracy.

Some notes:

Yeah, the only thing I can come up with is Raylan thought the local cops might be loyal to Shelby or Boyd. Otherwise, the smart thing to do is drive straight to the sheriff's office and call up everybody who owns a gun and a badge.

Yeah, it does seems like Boyd is playing things so he lives and maybe wins either way, but there's a bunch of stuff that only makes sense if he's setting up the Detoit people - telling Johnny where the Drew exchange was going to be, Colt abandoning Drew in the field, Colt shooting Mort and, if I'm right, pretending

It still seems like Boyd is playing something - my guess is that he figured Raylan would run to the high school from the start, but was stalling Augustine. Does he think that Tonin will be arrested and the mob will back burner Harlan?

Just rewatched this. IMHO, Colt took off because Boyd knows Johnny is tipping Raylan off and Boyd's plan is for the Marshals to take Drew. I can't see why, but there's no other reason for Boyd to tell Johnny where the drop was or for Colt to leave.

It was just one scene, but I actually thought Tim's "I'm angry that Colt got away" face was a bit too much.

Yeah, I was surprised that he didn't at least ask Thompson if he wanted his money back or wanted it given to Ellen Mae.

Supposedly, he saw Theo Tonin murder someone and his testimony could put Tonin away.

@pointforward:disqus, I completely disagree.   Keaton's the only actor I've seen who convinces me that Wayne is an actual person, not just a role Batman plays when it's inconvenient to wear the ears and cape.

I am glad Andrea is back, because last time, she got voted off so fast that I didn't get a chance to say:
 
Has anyone else noticed that she's a dead ringer for Stan Smith's spring break buddy on American Dad?

Also, there's no heroin in Harlan County because of the Crowder-Duffy standoff.

Hank's foils weren't limited to liberal douchebags - the other major group were capitalist greedheads, like Buck Strickland or Megalomart or those mold insurance scammers.