She indicated with Lorelai that she is typically not the person who handles intake, likely focused more on the fertility science side of things, but took an interest in her case because she's like a mother to her.
She indicated with Lorelai that she is typically not the person who handles intake, likely focused more on the fertility science side of things, but took an interest in her case because she's like a mother to her.
Typical logic goes out then door for binge reviews when you have 90-minute episodes and a whole lot of opening context to orient the viewer to your perspective. And when I'm incapable of self-editing.
I dunno—the thing with Paris makes sense to me given that she was having such a difficult time choosing between med school and law school, and so it tracks she'd end up in a career that involves both.
I think that makes a lot of sense, although the text never really leans into that in a meaningful way.
The boat theft was at the end of Season 5—did you not finish Season 6?
I regret nothing.
See, this is a good comment. Make this comment! It's a legitimate critique of the show, which uses its tone to play fast and loose with continuity. The tension you're responding to is central to its "soapcom" structure—it invests in serial narratives but is also dependent on patterns, and I totally see how that can…
This genre of comment is always perplexing to me—why bother taking time to comment on this when you know the space is primarily designed for people to discuss the show—but it's particularly weird when you provide no justification. So here's your chance to get it off your chest: what makes you feel this way? I want to…
Did you block the Life and Death Brigade out of your mind? You wouldn't be the only one.
Because he's spent—we presume—years refusing to be with her, accepting his family's dynastic marriage. We don't know why that is, or how he even really feels about it, but the fact is that Rory has no reason to think that Logan would make that decision. She also, from the way she breaks things off after the Wild Ride,…
Well, Jess will publish the book.
(Thank you for the kind words and I apologize that this will read as being directed at you, but I've discovered I have strong feelings about this and it just works best as a direct reply here.)
Look, I'm not going to claim to be an expert on pregnancy, but there is too much context surrounding the baby being Logan's—including a much more logical, weeks earlier, spontaneous, unexpected sexual encounter—for there to be another option here.
It was not, no.
I would agree that Amy laid out the tracks, as it were, that fans can fill in their own narrative. But I agree with Tavernacle that there's a lot left to be decided, and a lot of perspective that Rory has gained from her own childhood, and from her relationship with her mother, and from her history with Logan and…
I think it's less about Rory NEVER telling Logan, and more how she wants to present it to him—he's going to respect her wishes, ultimately, and if she goes to him and says "I'm raising this child on my own" (effectively what Lorelai did with Christopher), Rory is trying to gauge how Logan might respond by seeing how…
I mean, I have to presume that they're pretty cordial if they were willing to do this—it's not like they were forced into it, and it's not like they were likely cast separately. I presume that was a conversation they had with Sutton before thinking "is Christian right for this?"
Well, if we had gotten a 22-episode revival, then we'd probably have seen that—Amy and Daniel were never great at "showing their work" on Rory's journalism anyways, but it was always going to get the short end of the stick here.
You have to accept that pop culture literate TV characters complete disassociate their life from what they see in pop culture. Your brain will break otherwise.
Nah, Paul would never be open to that.