You must not have watched for very long!
You must not have watched for very long!
Blame the radiation?
There's also the possibility that they show up, Bellamy sees Indra, and is like, "nvm, she's chill," but everyone else in the group points out that's what he said about the last grounder they stumbled on, and massacre ensues.
I mean, two characters can break up without one of them seemingly not caring at all whether the other lives or dies. The last time I watched the show, Mickey was being shot at, and Ian was like, whatever, time for a nap.
It's very good!
It's very good!
I stopped watching Shamless, well for a lot of reasons, but mostly because I was so annoyed with how they sabotaged Ian and Mickey's relationship. Why would you ruin the best thing about your show?!
I stopped watching Shamless, well for a lot of reasons, but mostly because I was so annoyed with how they sabotaged Ian and Mickey's relationship. Why would you ruin the best thing about your show?!
At least she bothers to feel guilty about it. Bellamy doesn't seem to have any qualms about their mass murder exploits and [SPOILERS] is now off to do more of the same!
Eh, they're all screw-ups, but Jessa is actively cruel. Most of them are mostly self-destructive; Jessa's a damn tornado. Whatever. They're all pretty interesting characters, and I'm getting kind of tired of reading about how much we all hate them—yes, we get it; they're unlikeable. That's the general premise.
I friend'shipped them very hard, and I'd be down to regular 'ship them in theory, but I really hated the execution a solid 80% of the the time (e.g., kyrumption—show don't tell, folks).
Boo, Greg is cute with Heather!!
I hated her with Angel too. Honestly, the only person I really shipped Buffy with was Faith, and that would have been another doomed relationship anyway.
Yeah, I tend to get more invested in secondary characters' relationships because they have more space to develop organically and they won't take over or derail the show. Central character romances are generally exhausting and contrived.
Do the characters have to be straight (or at least not explicitly queer) for it to be slash fiction? I thought that was just a term for same-sex fan fiction.
"Me and Angel have never been intimate, well, except…."
I was more of a Logan/Weevil girl myself.
I was more of a Logan/Weevil girl myself.
Jesus, major spoilers at the end there. I get that they're books and everything but so is Game of Thrones and people have to stalk their sets to figure out what'll happen!
Were there people who thought they died? I've somehow managed to avoid these people.