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Fattyspice
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I just googled it. How the hell is that show still going? Dear god, people aren't actually watching it, are they?

There is a zero percent chance the company that gave a second season to Hemlock Grove isn't going to renew this show.

For the last time ever: This.Fucking.Show

I assumed that Yara and Theon were heading to Dany themselves. Euron's nuttiness aside, he's right that this is an ideal time to establish the Iron Isles as a cornerstone of a new Targaryen empire.

Echoing the top comment here, but seriously fuck CBS. I had no idea this season was airing until this week. But damn what a season its been. Every episode has crackled with tension, and the stakes (which have always been high) seem even more heightened. This (fucking) show is one of my all-time favorites and I can't

Can confirm, very drunk, loved that scene.

If they asked this question again during the football season, I think ESPN would fare much better.

I don't know why GRRM would pride himself on his ability to juggle characters. I think that he has proven himself to be incredibly inept at that. He just keeps mindlessly killing off characters and introducing less interesting ones and separating them and keeping readers from feeling any sense of satisfaction or even

Caviezel, Aaron Paul, and Taraji Henson or Kerry Washington are my dream cast for the big three.

There are different groupings of novels with their own sets of main characters. Best starting places are Wyrd Sisters, Guards! Guards!, or The Colour of Magic.

I was about to post this exact same thing. My older sister introduced me to Discworld when I was 11, and very few things have shaped my worldview like Pratchett's writings.

My all-time favorite Pratchett novel is Thud. It felt like a great culmination of a bunch themes that ran through the rest of Discworld, and the Watch books in particular.

Sometimes in life two people sleep together and it was okay but nothing comes from it. This show has done a great job thus far avoiding the stereotypes other 'teen' dramas, and I would be very surprised if they devolve into love triangles now.

I don't think we're necessarily supposed to buy into the ambiguity or that an ambiguity needs to exist before Clarke can feel guilty about killing a bunch of innocent people. The consequences are more personal, and Maya's death will influence future interactions between Jasper, Clarke, and Bellamy, all of whom are

Just some random thoughts:

How many foreigners have you killed whilst laying in your bed? Exactly.

I do get Lexa's decision. Temporary alliance aside, the Sky People are still a potential threat to the grounders, as are the mountain men. By sitting back and letting the other two forces bloody each other up, Lexa has put herself in a position to come out as the strongest force no matter who wins.

I guess I really don't understand the issues that this reviewer has with this episode, or with the show as a whole. He complains that this season is rehashing the same narrative ark, which is complete bullshit. His half-baked analogy between the Mountain Men and the 100 from last season falls apart quickly. The

Claire is supposed to be a hateable character I think. The moment when she is left disillusioned and abandoned by her master will be a good one. Especially after Root kneecaps the shit out of her.

The Samaritan plots from Maple and this episode actually fit very well together. The chips we saw in Maple were for monitoring activity in the brain, while the technology we saw in this episode was about emotional manipulation. Combining them together, Samaritan would be able to study the changes in a brain while it