Doesn't the King's Council in Westeros already know that Jorah has betrayed them? Jorah said that the whole thing was Tywin Lannister trying to split them up; how can he pass on bad intel if they already know his loyalties have changed?
Doesn't the King's Council in Westeros already know that Jorah has betrayed them? Jorah said that the whole thing was Tywin Lannister trying to split them up; how can he pass on bad intel if they already know his loyalties have changed?
About the mountain going to die: I really wanted Tywin to turn to Tyrion and say something like "well, call it a draw?"
"You could at least wear a helmet!"- Tyrion Lannister
I'm sorry?
Why is it best for Ted to cash out? I don't see why what Don said couldn't be true; Ted loves the work but hates the inter-office politics. That was his biggest pet-peeve last season, with everyone stepping on each other's toes for different accounts.
*sticks fingers in ears* lalala I can't hear you!
Well, I'd like to think it's his ghost, but even if it isn't, what is there to suggest that life for Don is antithetical to business for Don? I feel like this past season shows that Don can't live without doing his advertising work, and that's more or less the same thing he said to Chaough.
I see how you could interpret his views on the moon landing that way, but I don't see how that explains the song. The song, to me, seems really antithetical to all the worldview advice he'd given Don back in the earlier seasons.
My parents were between 9 and 12 years old at the time.
Speaking as someone who just recently rewatched the first 3 seasons of the series, Don and Bert were a lot closer back in the original agency; Bert saw him as something of a student and wanted to induct him into his club of Ayn Rand-loving, decision-making power brokers. He talked to Don a lot about he was one of the…
I'm usually not great at reading into these things, so this probably doesn't make sense, but I was surprised that Cooper was so invested in the moon landing because it seemed so antithetical to his beliefs; it wasn't the achievement of one man but of the combined efforts of many, working through a representative…
I'm here after watching it, waiting for the review to be put up so we can discuss it. It was the greatest episode of Mad Men I have ever seen.
SURPRISE! THERE'S AN AIRPLANE HERE TO SEE YOU!
I love it more than anything! It is my new favorite movie, up with Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part II. How many times have you seen it? I lost track of my count after 10.
Victoria pulled an Angelus on them!
If Sterling is Shaggy, then Don has to be Scooby. We'll have to abandon Chauncy yet again.
Maybe not 'cracking; so much as having a 'crisis of conscience'. Maybe it was just me, but I thought she looked a little disconcerted by Olenna's revelation that she had helped kill Joffrey, like she was suddenly slightly afraid of her own grandmother.
I was terrified that she'd crack under the pressure and spill the beans. After reading some of the comments, I see that it wouldn't have mattered (Tywin would just pin it on Tyrion again, because the Tyrells are too important), but I hope this isn't foreshadowing her cracking in some way. I love you too much for…
I think it's entirely likely that she's testifying under duress, but that just makes me more annoyed with her for not leaving Kings Landing back when Tyrion and
Varys first told her that she was in danger. What did she say to that? "Let them come, they can't do anything to me!" And now Tyrion's paying the price for…
That was the first show I ever saw him in, and now whenever I notice him in something else I keep expecting him to start coughing up teeth.