avclub-f9502a4e2c9cb33351220ddd8ac39da5--disqus
nneverknowsbest
avclub-f9502a4e2c9cb33351220ddd8ac39da5--disqus

That did make me laugh too. I love callback jokes and yet they are oddly rare. I guess not many writers actually watch their own shows.

Why does evil Regina get to have the most remarkable cleavage known to man? Don't the good guys deserve some boobage?

Disagree, Ted is the romantic heart of the show, he's an adorable geek on occasion, and not afraid to be especially annoying, but he's one of the few on the show who feel like a real person rather than grandiose caricature.

You are kidding. Angel was a phenomenal character. The show rarely got better than when his childish petty side shone through. He was an ongoing satire of the brooding gothic hero, in that for all his charisma (the attribute, not the Cordelia) he was remarkably self-centered on occasion.

Thank goodness they don't have an extradition treaty with the United States… oh wait, they do.

I'm thinking they may have been busy, what with the Glades about to explode and everything.

I love season 2 as a whole, but I will admit the Lila-Doakes story closure was ridiculously convenient. It just smacked of 'pardon my deus ex machina'.

I have a question, if Felicia Day invented a time machine, travelled back to the 16th century and married English diplomat John Man before divorcing him and having an illicit relationship with French Renaissance composer Nicholas Champion before returning to the modern day and starting work as a reporter for a popular

Thank you Linus

@disqus_AYZDOZAM7B:disqus An excellent point. I wasn't criticising the series as a whole, but what it had become by the end. I am Rita's biggest fan for precisely that reason. She had no illusions about Dexter's shortcomings, didn't idolise him, didn't make him the all-shining, all-singing bright centre of her world,

The epilogue:

It's funny, we were mocking Lumberjacks back in July, and yet one show still went with that ending.

Too true. Great analysis.

It's on Showtime, so Homeland could tank. It's rarely made sense, but is usually entertaining enough to overlook those flaws. I think Chip ended up far better off for getting the boot from Dexter.

There was no bag, he just covers her in a sheet, and drops her in. That corpse is turning up on the beach bloated and decomposed for some poor kid to find. Dexter used to chop up the bodies (something sidelined for no reason in the last few seasons) and wrap the pieces in black bags weighted with rocks. This was, of

That 'don't apologise for anything Dex, you deserve to be happy' line almost made me throw up. Deb would never say that. She'd be like 'If you let us do our jobs I wouldn't have a bullet in me, now sort your fuckin' life out Dex.'

No Meth: Walt dies in a bed surrounded by his family and friends who find a way to get by and cherish his memory as a loving but unremarkable father.

Doubt it, there is no reason Walt would spare her. He wanted to destroy her as much as the Nazis. She's dead.

Yes, I was thinking this. So many times Walt has had the chance to do the right thing at the expense of his pride and always chosen pride. You see this perfectly in the scene of the house party where they celebrate Walt's remission and there's a toast to Elliot and Gretchen and how intensely jealous and angry it makes

Socio