Believe it or not, he may have taken it off the closed captions which had the same thing! I'm just hoping he does have an idea what it means.
Believe it or not, he may have taken it off the closed captions which had the same thing! I'm just hoping he does have an idea what it means.
I think she just called it "Bob". That's what the closed captions had.
He certainly doesn't look very German, though he seems to be part of the family.
Strange, yes. I assumed it was genuine and couldn't quite place it.
Until I saw it, or a bit afterwards, I had no idea what this missing "TP" at work was supposed to be about. Is that a standard abbreviation/word for toilet paper, that everyone knows but me?
Not cartloads of it, like she has. If filled two or three cupboards there.
If this is 1979, and Floyd is somewhere in her fifties or sixties, that means she was meant to have been born in the 1920s. I am finding it hard to believe that her parents (not necessarily German like her husband's) named her Floyd in the 1920s. Girls were not given boys' names back then - that started after the…
Right. He also managed 'verkakte' very well, which today's reviewer misspells as 'facacte', as did the closed captions - 'farcacte' would be OK as a transliteration. It means "shitted up" - we'd probably say "fucked up" or "messed up" in English, which makes the Yiddish more colorful, so to speak.
Molly is the little girl (in this season). She doesn't need to get well - she's perfectly fine. Are you referring to her mother, Betsy? (I had to look her name up.)
Can someone remind me what Howard Lyman is even doing in the "new" firm? Why would any of Alicia, Cary or Diane have wanted him in their firm? I vaguely recall some rather implausible plot point that resulted in David Lee coming along, but why Howard?
What was funny about "Mallden", by the way? Just that it rhymes with "Walden"? Duh. Can't be. It must also reference something I don't know (which includes most pop music, so sorry for being dumb)? The only "Mallden" I know is Kurt Malden, and that's not funny either.
So, Neeloofar is who I immediately wanted to root for, not Nina, and I did. He is very sympathetic, endearing, wry, and knew he was being a bit absurd but kept on. Who is the actor? I kept thinking he must be one of the regulars, but I guess he wasn't. I'm surprised there was virtually no mention of him in the review.
He had a girlfriend named Dimwitty?
It DID work for Grimm, which was cut by AV Club after a couple of seasons, then brought back when "underground resistance" comments on Grimm virtually took over the comments section of Constantine (?) reviews (shown on the same evening and channel) for an entire year, garnering more are more participants. AV Club…
He didn't?
It was only when the customer refused to discuss the matter with Ed any further, or let him think about it, but rudely insisted on his $20 and an apology, that Ed rebuffed him. He had nothing of substance. Of course, it tuned out he was right.
I'm wondering if perhaps Wellick might be a real person, whom Elliot met once or twice as in the first episode of the series, but (most of) the rest his scenes - including killing the CTO's wife, being fired, coming to see Elliot - have all been fantasized by Elliot, who is making up this narrative in his head. It…
Halt and Catch Fire, as Yyynaaarg says below.
That's correct.
Downton Abbey: all three daughters have had Daddy issues of on e type or another, which have been gone into, especially in Mary's case. Also The Honourable Woman, if you saw that - where they were even stronger, and absolutely central to the story. These are both British series, not American, of course.