buttershaver--disqus
Seth Bullock
buttershaver--disqus

I wish I could try. Lost is still a weird situation. They say it's all about the journey—and it was an undoubtedly enjoyable ride during its early years—but I feel so burned from the process that it's made me wary of committing to the genre again. I don't know if it's worth it any more.

Hear hear. Even nine/ten years ago Arrested Development, The Office, Scrubs, 30 Rock, Chappelle's Show, Curb Your Enthusiasm, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, How I Met Your Mother and many more were all in their prime simultaneously. Even Frasier and Friends wrapped up only just a year before that.

From October 2014 through to May 2015, we have (or will have) lost greats like Boardwalk Empire, Justified and Mad Men. Go back another year and you can throw in Breaking Bad and Spartacus (yes, really) into that list too. While True Detective and Fargo did premiere in 2014, they're miniseries with questions about

Just a one-second-long submission to the Academy of him saying "family meeting" should have clinched the win. He was totally robbed. I still get chills thinking of it.

Nice, hopefully with some sweet Abu Dhabi shopping scenes too.

Looking back at it now, it's obvious that Raylan wasn't going to get gunned down in front of his daughter while they ate ice cream together but… as @beema noted, TV history is a hard beast to shake. It's where my mind went first as soon as the '4 years later' text appeared after Boyd's threats.

"I hit the… Stetson?… I was way off."

"Punks" like Boon, you mean… I loved Raylan going on about how it has "other connotations, OK?" It was very Clint Eastwood—I thought it was a nod to him actually. And also very true to character.

And when Hannah is caught, Harrison will be flown to California for repatriation…

I know it's somewhat crass to compare shows when they're trying to accomplish entirely different things—and the body isn't even cold yet—but it can be useful for providing recommendations to others. As far as dramas go, The Wire and Deadwood are in a class of their own, but I think Justified deserves to be considered

Not having Raylan being chauffeured by a driverless car—while reading A Dream of Spring—really took me out of the episode and its depiction of the future.

I was half-expecting a soap-style voiceover of "the role of Grey Worm is now being played by…"

Those are more spoilers. I wanted to give you the benefit of the doubt that you're a considerate and reasonable person, but you're proving yourself otherwise. The questions posed were speculative and somewhat rhetorical, not an invitation for you to authoritatively drone on about events from the book. At the very

I think it's sort of considered an autonomous area, like Greenland would be to Denmark (which also has a monarchy). I think the Seven Kingdoms claim authority over it—they do conduct raids and have outposts. Stannis just doesn't like anyone calling themselves a king other than himself.

Dude, this is the second time you've posted spoilers. Why are you even here? No one cares about how much you know about the books.

Let's just hope there aren't any flash-sideways.

All they had to do was follow any of the Sons for five minutes and they could have caught them in the middle of so many illegal activities in populated areas during broad daylight. It retroactively makes you appreciate shows that highlight actual effective police work—The Wire, The Sopranos, etc.—even more.

That's Moustache 101: Upper lip gesticulation for the back of the room.

I love how everyone here thought it would be McShane too, including the reviewer. I thought it was just me and was fully prepared to CTRL+F and find no hits.

You're telling me :(