Dany episode 4: "I'm just going to take one dragon against hundreds of armored soldiers flanked by archers, it'll be fine."
Dany episode 4: "I'm just going to take one dragon against hundreds of armored soldiers flanked by archers, it'll be fine."
So, if we assume Jon becomes a dragon rider, OF COURSE he'll ride the one named after his dad.
Considering we've seen the Red Keep as a blown-apart ruin covered in the snow of deepest winter in more than one vision, I feel like bringing ANYTHING belonging to the Night King into King's Landing is a very bad idea. Cersei enjoyed her fire bomb? Wait until you see what a frost nuke does.
I petition we call the group at Eastwatch the "Crazy Eight" and now that Davos stays behind, the "Supernatural Seven"; two technical zombies, a priest/paladin, a warrior-smith with the most swole arms in all of Westeros, a formerly-plagued knight, a barbarian, and a big guy that apparently can't die and sees the…
"I understand that we're in a war for survival; that whoever loses, dies and whoever wins could launch a dynasty that lasts a thousand years"
- Oh, you poor dumb Wildlings; you're going to your (un)deaths.
I'm not sure Sansa will survive, especially with Littlefinger still glomming onto her. Ditto Daenerys and Jon; I feel like one or both of them will die heroically in battle, possibly taking out the Night's King.
So, I guess that whole Trump controversy got Jimmy Fallon blackballed…
I like that Mark's last moment of the season was Debbie basically telling him "Hold my stuff and STFU." If it was a thing back then, Mark would definitely be a Mens Rights Activist.
So, Helena is going to murder the shit out of Rachel in the end, right? Or at the very least the lady cop. Of all the bad things she's done, Rachel has it coming now for turning Kira into a budding psychopath.
Between True Blood, The Strain and now Cassidy's comment, I'm getting the sense that vampires are getting fond of locking their victims in cages/dungeons
The point of Tulip and the intestines wasn't just a gross-out gag, I think it was also a way for her and Cassidy to bond; she gets a moment to experience the effects of human consumption and he uses his experience to relieve her of the taste of it.
What the hell was that?
So, just skipping right the hell over the Second War and going straight to Thrall's story, ugh. I'm glad there probably won't be a sequel now. It strikes me as odd that a Warcraft fanboy like Jones would dismiss major lore figures and places like Uther, Turalyon, Alleria, Cho'gall, Zul'jin, Silvermoon, Lordaeron,…
I saw Batman vs. Superman again a day before I saw Wonder Woman and she was staggeringly different in portrayal, and I'm inclined to believe this was planned out; in Wonder Woman she was very wide-eyed and driven by impulse, and even when she saw "the truth" about humanity, there was a hope for them despite their…
I like to think Varga got taken to jail in the end. They had to have a solid enough probable cause to detain him, and then there was that subtle half-beginning smile from Burgle as she watched the door/clock. And though Emmit only got 2 years probabation for the tax fraud, we don't know what Agent Dollard and the IRS…
But what if the belief outlives the being? People carry on causes long after their figureheads have retired or died; for example, look at our politics. Donald Trump found a set of beliefs that a large group of people were already devoted to and exploited it to become powerful. And Hillary Clinton supporters continue…
I never understood why she was on this show in the first place; I understand the "hot wife, schlubby husband" trope exists but this one was a bit much.
I kind of thought it was a little tone deaf of Arnold to tell Dev those truths about his relationship with Francesca considering how much he's been pushing Dev forward about it throughout the season.
Confirmed then: Indy touches a mystical thing that transfers his mind/conscience into Chris Pratt. Bing bang boom, Indy lives on, Ford dies in a plane crash on his own ranch.