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Spencer Hastings
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I think the obvious thing is for the Starks to kill him, probably after making him feel safe, and maybe even using him as a "sacrificial decoy."

This is the same Ayn Rand who spared several thoughts for a man who mutilated and killed a young girl, but none for the girl who was murdered?

She seemed to be okay with people who kidnap, mutilate, and murder 12 year old girls, though.

Now that I've actually read what Rand has to say, let me just say: That is a morally repugnant philosophy. And she seems to be aware of it on some level, which is why she chose an extreme example rather than one generally applicable to real life. (It's still morally repugnant when applied to her example. It's

Nice! I was hung up on "Reina" being Spanish for "Queen"

Robyn?

I'm guessing you've never seen Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf.

This is a really weird misconception. It's true that Annette Funicello never wore a bikini in those movies, but a few seconds on YouTube confirms that plenty of other ladies in them did. See, for example: https://www.youtube.com/wat…

He got FA up from $140,000 to $1,000,000. It was more of a draw than a loss.

The whole deal with the buckle felt very "asexual frenemies" to me. But I wasn't paying attention to the level of physical contact; that's an interesting point, and I wish the reviewer had made it in the main body of the review.

There's a certain episode of Psych you should probably never see …

Not a fan of Kurt Russell or Ryan Gosling, huh?

You're referring to the Baby produced by The Machine and Samaritan, right?

I had never seen a diagonal 4-way intersection before I moved to Los Angeles, but they're extremely common there.

She thought that Amy wasn't that kind of person.

You're right. The "NBC logo" is the peacock. The Universal logo may have the word "NBC" somewhere in or near it, but it's not "the NBC logo."

Is Darkness at Noon meant to be a swipe at True Detective? Certainly when it started it was an urban police drama with gangs and mobs and stuff. Maybe the later iterations of the show have been more True Detective-y, but I don't believe it originated as any kind of TD reference at all.

Kiefer's real-life daughter plays Selina's daughter.

Even the non-evil one murdered an innocent woman to keep her from spilling his sinister plot.