I don't think it is impossible to come back from. The ability to come back from something like that is probably the true test of someone's character and maturity. The ability to forgive somebody for cheating on you.
I don't think it is impossible to come back from. The ability to come back from something like that is probably the true test of someone's character and maturity. The ability to forgive somebody for cheating on you.
I really think you're doing the script a disservice by placing all the blame on Ffion. As Garrison Keebler pointed out in his first post, they make mention of the fact that Liam has been paranoid and obsessive in the past. The reason why Ffion ended up sleeping with her ex in the first place is because Liam suspected…
Which sends him off the deep end until he's brandishing broken bottle in another man's face and ultimately finds him gouging the grain out of his own head.
I'm going to say…. yes.
I've already gushed about this episode elsewhere on this site, but this time I want to take a little time to praise how well thought through and designed the grain technology is.
So, did he get the promotion in the end?
Straight up A here.
I was on a busy train and trying my best to hold it down. But the minute they went down the Yoda/Olive Garden/Orson Welles tangent, I couldn't keep it together.
Fuckin' yeah.
I was called to a meeting before I had time to finish this hastily typed half-thought, but yes, you're absolutely correct. There's a scene where Jason Flemyng's odious publicist extols the virtues of the internet as being the purest form of democracy available.
Very recently over here in Blighty, we've been having a strange, half-hearted, semi-informed debate about the state of democracy after that clip in which Russell Brand defended himself against the aggressive questioning of Jeremy Paxman on Newsnight and ended up saying, "Democracy is a right proper shambles, guvnor,…
Yes, but in those dreams i was wearing an apron and baking a pie and then the door opens and the words, "Libechen! I'm home!" echo through the hall in the unmistakable tones of Werner Herzog.
Nothing to say, except I am seriously jealous that you got to see Maria Bamford. Don't know if she'll ever come to the UK.
That is one well deserved, huzzah.
And I can dig it.
Part of me wishes Brooker would turn up at the beginning and the end of each episode like some bilious Rod Serling, sarcastically summarizing what the moral of the story was, hectoring the audience for being idiots and daring them to change the channel.
I guess when it gets to the point where dissent can be repackaged through an X-Factor talent show, it really has become meaningless.
Tom Morello's solos were always a highlight for me.
Graham Coxon's solo on "You're So Great" is incredible.
YES. i have no idea what Adiran Belew was doing to his guitar to make it sound like a modem.