Sup?
Sup?
I do, yes, but "getting your dang arm chopped off" seems at least as serious a wound as "getting shot," so it all falls under the header of Yost's (un)official rule: If they don't actually confirm a character is dead, and/or he or she wasn't shot in the head, that person is not necessarily dead.
Well, when I say he doesn't have an opinion, I suppose I mean one that he would ever voice to Art or Rachel, let alone to Vazquez. And anything Tim fully internalizes is going to be damn hard to tease out, given than I'm pretty sure Tim is good and messed up inside.
Eh, I think it's really easy for us on the outside, who get to spend time with Raylan and have some sense of what's going on inside his head, to miss just how horrendous this all looks to anyone standing on the sidelines. I imagine Vazquez is lashing out a bit, but it really isn't that ridiculous a leap from his…
I dunno, if you can watch that scene and come away confident that bullets work the same way on Justified as they do in our universe, you're a braver person than I.
Nah, I was mostly just covering all bases there. But I also think it's fair to say that Tim doesn't have a high opinion of Raylan at this point. He probably kind of just has no opinion of Raylan at this point.
True, but I think Tim would be the first to admit he can't even tell where his serious ends and his snark begins. Then he might also admit that he's pretty drunk right now, not that you'd ever be able to tell.
Right, but I think a big point here is that Raylan has left people with so little room to conclude anything but corruption. Maybe he's technically in the right in this instance, but he hasn't made it easy on anyone getting there.
I think it was in season two that Vazquez first turned the screws on Raylan, and his parting shot after Raylan was exonerated was basically, "Yeah, but you know as well as I do that you weren't doing what you should have here." So maybe not corrupt, but Vazquez has always taken the dimmest view of Raylan among the…
For the record, I'm all in on the BCE/CE scale, and I suppose it was silly of me to not realize that AD is a pretty specifically Christian convention. (I'm not one of those atheists who is actively anti-religious, but I am one of those atheist where all religions kind of run together for me.) Either way, I think it…
You're not wrong about any of this.
Though The Wynnebago Chronicles remains the obvious spin-off choice, irrespective of Wynn's latest troubles, Better Call Limehouse is actually a really solid idea. More than anyone else, Limehouse is the character who appears to have a rich, complex life that only tangentially relates to what goes on with our main…
I mean, I did get all that, more or less. I just wasn't 100% sure whether Avery was legitimately proposing some kind of unholy alliance between him and the great-aunt. And again, I did kinda feel like some of that uncertainty was baked into the way the show is handling Avery at the moment, as he's getting pretty damn…
I like the implication that my recognizing an Iliad reference is less important than my missing a Tick reference.
A book!? Some of us take oral tradition seriously and some don't, I guess.
I mean, maybe if we'd played some doubles tennis with Mikey when we had the chance…
Replying months late for no particular reason, but…
Coming in late, but that sounds about right.
Dang it, this is where it would have been really useful if the TV listings for Kroll Show mentioned the episode was the series finale. (I was aware the show was ending soon, but I didn't know off the top of my head which week was the end.) For what it's worth, I've adjusted WOT to reflect all this. Sorry about that.
Nah.