Last episode, Dany told her to whore it up around town to get some information. "Men like to talk about other men when they are happy."
Last episode, Dany told her to whore it up around town to get some information. "Men like to talk about other men when they are happy."
The ones under 18.
I did laugh a bit when Robb used the old "that's exactly what a spy would say" line.
@avclub-d9c9a056f6052ffbfa3526be3478d45e:disqus It's hard to tell how much time has passed exactly, since they never mention dates. You can build some rough timelines based on ages, but that information is mostly left out of the show. It's more or less a year from Dany getting pregnant to her entering Qarth.
It's not the particular dress Dany wore but the style of Qarth itself. They probably didn't want to deal with having most every woman in every Qarth scene have one breast out.
One of the problems shows, in general, can run into is that they start off and have an initial idea, developing the characters and setting and stories, and when they know the show is ending, they build a season or so towards that ending, but in-between they just do stuff. If they stay there too long, it gets worn out…
A lot of introductory offers for premium channels include at least both HBO and Showtime.
Cersei asked her back at Winterfell, at the big feast, and it's been said by Cersei and/or Joffrey that Sansa and Joff's wedding will happen after she starts.
@avclub-db0c35ce2663c0e8c4b3f38642a49748:disqus though since Dany has, by all accounts, a reasonable claim on the throne, that probably makes it agnatic-cognatic primogeniture (females inherit if the ruler has no surviving sons or brothers).
It's like pokemon.
It's in the HBO viewers guide (with slightly different dates than the book I guess but over thousands of years who really cares).
And before that were the children of the forest, which sound like elves. They carved faces in the weirwoods and worshiped the Old Gods, which the First Men adopted after they came (~12,000 years ago). Then the Andals came with the New Gods and conquered everything but the North and cut down all the weirwoods in the…
To be fair, if there was one place in Westeros where a random guy would know about monkeys, it would be King's Landing. It is the capital, one of the two largest ports on the continent and probably the closer to where they'd be from.
Watching it again today, it does. Not the whole time though, it kinda forms a Stannis-like (Stannish?) face near the end.
Not just technology but magic was involved as well. I don't know if you'd consider the end result to be, for example, a magic sword, but there was at least some involved in the creation of it.
@avclub-12f074d495847731c3dabe98746501b5:disqus In the books it looks like Sansa was ~11 and Arya was ~9 when it started. Around a year has passed by this point. If they kept the age gap the same, they're probably 14 and 12 or so right now. Also Gendry probably wouldn't be older than 18 or so since he would most…
Probably due to the low number of single characters that have characters similar enough in age to pair with.
It might've been a casualty of Dany having like 3 scenes this season prior to this episode. Seemed a bit jarring that they went from "what do dragons eat" to "now the dragons can feed themselves" without a step in between of Dany feeding them (or finding out by accident).
Keep in mind the Wall is hundreds of miles long and currently guarded by 3 castles and a few thousand men and who knows what crazy things are north of the Wall.
@avclub-d0cf409eb912cc0cc950b41b6d892d07:disqus The side effect of making the kids older for the TV show is that it makes the adults older too, which could be a problem for people who are supposed to be late 20s/early 30s.