blob-loblaw
Blob Loblaw
blob-loblaw

Nah, you're looking at it too much from a man's perspective. It's not supposed to be a compliment to her physicality.

Eh, I'd tell them to watch the opening of that episode with the motel fight too, both for the Genesis exposition and the fight scene.

You know when on a job interview, they ask you for your weaknesses, and then people say you should list a bunch of strengths phrased at weaknesses, e.g. "I work TOO hard sometimes." "I can't quit a task until it's perfect."

Plus, being a dick and hard to work is one thing. Being a disgusting asshole who harasses costars is a whole other thing.

Of course, it can be two things, as the saying goes.

So next season the slugs will take over people's bodies, and it'll be like a body-snatchers type of deal… Calling it, just in case.

Because they made a deal…?

So everything has to be a subversion in some way of what has come before? I'd have to disagree. You can put established tropes together in a way that makes it feel new and entertaining. Honestly, most of movies and T-shows are just a remix of previous stories anyway.

oohhhh, I never got to say this before, but…. It can be two things.

She forgot the mic drop. Missed opportunity.

Yeah, that felt very off to me as well.Everything seemed like it went back to normal for the kids in a blip, not like they just lost a friend who had saved their lives, in Mike's case multiple times. You'd think it would affect them more than one sad look at her fort during a D&D game.

Huh. I had the complete opposite reaction. I thought Emily killing Miles was the most off-character moment that wasn't built up to at all, and Root mercy-killing the seraphim was in-character and made complete narrative sense.

I guess I'm the only one who thought that moment seemed entirely out of character and came out of nowhere.

Girls.

Yeah, it was a bit weird. At first I thought it might've been in case he needed to run. Then later, because Omar is a boxer in this, I thought it meant that he would have traction in case he needed to fend people off. Maybe you can punch harder when you have some traction?

Rebel without a cause, baby.

That cat was cute! This was an obvious example of the Hollywood Homely trope, so I made sure to add it to the page:

He's not wrong. They're both about men wearing suits.

I didn't read the book, but it might be you were simply primed to subconsciously look for possible twists because people were raving about it. It's actually a bigger spoiler than people seem to realize. I know when I watch movies that I know have a big twist, I'll spend the entire movie looking for clues what it might

I don't think it's supposed to be a lesson. Maybe the responsible thing would be to get the police involved, but is that what any teenage boy would do? I don't think so. At least, not the ones I grew up with.