How did that even work?
How did that even work?
I also know the first (and last) stanza in German!
Although apparently it wasn't just moved to CW. After Showtime passed on the pilot, the creators pitched it to a lot of networks, before the show's co-creator saw Jane the Virgin and thought Crazy Ex could pair well with it—pitched it specifically to the CW that way and CW said yes.
Uhtred might have remembered that first story beats true story after his first meeting with Ubba. Slow down and think, Uhtred.
Women could at least make decisions about themselves, and there's a lot to be said for that.
Probably the only auto body shop in town.
German misery for the Gerhardts.
Yep. He's no legume, he's alert as shit in there—he just can only move his eyes. Locked-in syndrome, from the way he played it. It would be a nightmare for someone like Otto. (Well, really for anyone.)
The Farrah hair distracted the hell out of me, the way it was glued to her body (or possibly bodysuit?). I tried to ignore how unreal it looked, but I really couldn't.
Me too. Ah, Southie—
Tortoise, turtle, you're gonna have to eat whatever you can get your hands on.
I'm starting to miss Bored to Death a little less, as this show develops another trademark Ames collection of people who are fucked up, but basically goodhearted. There are enough shows about people who are assholes with no sweetness.
Doesn't seem to be any reason she couldn't say personality bleed was part of the "psychic" thing.
Yep, thought of that movie as well.
Well, the real Virginia said she didn't marry Bill out of romantic feelings, and she did have other relationships during their partnership before the marriage. (If anything, she suggested she was less into their early sexual "experiments" than the fictional Virginia: she said agreeing to them was "an emergency…
I want to see these Icelandic actors in more things.
Then you have some really good binge-watching ahead of you someday, if you care to. Better than this show. Which is not to belittle this show.
Harmon's a bigger guy, so if he's matching him drink for drink, he's gonna lose.
But, if she did—
It's worked into the actual show itself, in a sort of prequel to the commercial, when Emma gestures to the "sweet navigation system" of the car to argue they have plenty of time to listen to her boyfriend's mixtape.