if they haven't been able to use that he beats people, steals evidence, and makes unlawful entries to get his cases dismissed, i don't think hallucinations would do much.
if they haven't been able to use that he beats people, steals evidence, and makes unlawful entries to get his cases dismissed, i don't think hallucinations would do much.
i definitely considered both outcomes equally and i didn't watch that season of house.
chuck schumer followed me from high school to community college to undergraduate. i didn't particularly mind, but i found it hilarious.
graduation ceremonies are uniquely excruciating. i didn't intend to go to one of mine because i'd been a commuter student with no connection to my graduating class, but my family made a whole big thing of it, and my grandma was really excited. i'm glad i went for her alone.
losing cognitive faculties could be REALLY interesting for a person like sherlock, for all the reasons you mentioned but i feel like most of it was overshadowed here by Who's That Woman??? when ghost substitute dad showed up in season 2, it was clear that he wasn't real, so we could focus on sherlock struggling…
the tv room is joan's room with different set dressing. i guess there are stairs attached.
i think for the season finale, yeah. they always seem to have an end date locked in.
she did pass away, but not until after mrs. landingham and 2 or 3 other roles within the same couple of years. i remember reading that she'd told the showrunner of i think desperate housewives to do anything but kill her off because she was over it.
he seems to do a lot of character work, turning up regularly in established shows. his recurring role on izombie last year was kind of excruciating, though.
oh wow. i remember him, but i had no idea he died. only 29, how sad.
i try not to nitpick these things, but it's an interesting topic and they barely scratched the surface. leaving out phil hartman was kind of a travesty. also andy whitfield died of cancer after one season as the lead on spartacus, and this one's a bit more obscure because it's a BBC show, but geoffrey hutchings on…
i already addressed this downthread.
he's white, so nah.
i meant not part of the main cast. it's a cameo.
it's weird how being raised by a guy who was little, tan, and friendly with an unconventional accent is a big chunk of why i have empathy for refugees from latin america and the middle east, yet he himself parrots all the invective against them.
that's sort of how freddie prinze senior's death was ruled accidental. they said he shot himself because he was under the influence.
my dad used to listen to rush limbaugh and bob grant on the radio. we don't really discuss politics with him much, but it's funny as hell to me because he's an immigrant who came to the US illegally and he spent the next 40 years working in restaurants with other guys in the same situation. i always tell him, "i'm so…
if you want to skip to 5, that's your choice, but each earlier movie has something to offer.
1 - the origin story, which i feel is necessary
2 - eva mendes, tej and his adorable garage crew, undiluted brian/roman bromance
3 - fun (tho possibly egregious) depiction of urban japanese culture, my literal favorite han with…
gina made up for it in the fight scenes, though.
tokyo drift is unappreciated by f&f fans just because brian and dom aren't in it. weak.