I feel like I've read this every week for the past several months now.
I feel like I've read this every week for the past several months now.
Still better than GIMP.
If you're not ready for pain and potential disappointment you probably shouldn't be a parent.
That's funny because it was the promotion that got me to watch it. It kept showing up at the top of the Netflix home screen and they also sent a recommendation email for the show. I checked it out because I like some of the actors but, yeah, it's not good. It's very stressful in a way that's pretty realistic but not…
For me, having a child wasn't *everything* but IVF was totally covered under insurance so, meh, why not?
Family members who adopted paid about $50k for the process, plus you have to convince strangers that you're fit to raise a child. The fertility treatments and IVF that my husband and I did were almost entirely covered under insurance. I think we paid less than $1000.
Very yes
I also thought it was rape from the start. It didn't seem very twisty to me.
I thought when they introduced her she had gone through med school really young and basically admitted to being clueless about how to act in the real world. I may be misremembering, though.
Yeah, and let's also not forget that Maggie just went through her mother, Jackson, and others lying to her and hiding her mother's illness from her. So naturally this is going to be something she's sensitive to.
Just so long as they downsize without another mass violence episode. I'm still not over the hospital shooting…
Your use of that hashtag gave me a tiny panic attack.
It's one of my favorite books ever, so no fight here. (Admittedly, I was 18 and thought I was in love when I first read it, so I'm sure that had an impact. But I've re-read it a few times and found it enjoyable, unlike some other books I've read.)
I keep having these moments where I think "Wow, MK looks so much like Alison" and then have to remind myself they're all the same person. I think it's the bangs…
I thought they'd established that August fired her previous opening act because they defied her in some way. So then when Scarlett refused to talk about her and Gunnar's backstory, August decided to get her incredibly disproportionate revenge by messing with the two of them.
It's interesting you bring up the BB roomba. I felt so bad for Don in this episode and kept thinking the last time I felt that bad for a TV character was Jesse and the ricin cigarette.
Agreed. An unexpected cancellation seems likely to leave a lot of things unresolved.
Thirded.
Having had a baby a few months ago, my husband and I were both bothered by that scene in a new way.
I'm pretty sure it did cross over.