chimpjnr
ChimpJnr
chimpjnr

Great line-up, though I'm very surprised to see Muse headline Thursday. That's normally a throw-away night which far fewer people attend. I wouldn't have expected so big an act that night.

I don't know…it happened almost seven years ago. What would be her motivation for looking for him at this point? Unless it's to serve up some really cold revenge, but again, that seems contrived. Besides, aren't there only two episodes left? Seems a little late on the game for that storyline to be satisfactorily

Never mind Quinn, it's Max's character arc that confuses me the most. How did he go from being the autistic younger brother of the first few seasons to the superspy he is today, seemingly without anyone either knowing or remembering him (am I imagining it, or did Saul not even recognize him an episode or two ago,

A Game. No phone. Doesn't even own one.

I agree, though I'll believe it when I see it. That said, the sheer star power of the show may mean that many of the characters simply can't commit to an ongoing series.

Any word yet on whether this is going to be just a Limited Series as advertised, or whether it's being renewed?

I don't disagree that given the choice, I would do the same if I were a therapist (I personally think that if a couple has committed to coming, and one chooses not to one week, then that's on them). I just didn't think they were allowed to.

I know, but she shouldn't have even been allowed in the same room as her alone in the first place, let alone letting the discussion of the other person evolve to the point of that revelation (which is not, I should add, my saying that such things shouldn't be brought to light for one second). My couples therapist not

Like so many overweight people in stressful jobs, Chuck's weight problems stem from his appalling diet. Evidence A for the prosecution - his dinner in the closing scene last night.

I was thinking the exact same thing. Either that, or I'm really terrible at my own personal time management.

Wouldn't it be a little too contrived for it to be Perry? The one town that Jane flees to start a new life, and her attacker proves to be the husband of one of her two closest new friends?

Based on my own experience of attending couples therapy, it was my understanding that therapists are not allowed to speak to one patient without the other being present. Is that not the case?

I am curious as to why Red Dead Redemption made your list, given your caveat at the end. Don't get me wrong - it's one of my favorite gaming experiences ever - but I would have thought the style of game was already covered by GTA 3 which came before it?

Good list. I'd probably go with Final Fantasy VII, though I haven't played them all. I remember is being ground-breaking at the time though.

So, what comprises the video game canon, and from where to we start? Pong onwards, I guess?

I hope for Wendy's sake they haven't been married more than ten years, otherwise she's on the hook for the dreaded "indefinite alimony".

I often watch the scene independent of the rest of the movie. It functions perfectly well as it's own self-contained short film.

Is it? My bad. For some reason, I thought it was 8 episodes. Maybe it just feels that way as it goes by so quickly.

It would shatter and destroy my otherwise solid Indie music creds, but I must admit that I added "Larger than Life" to my daughters' car playlist without ever playing them a second of it. It's one of my guilty pleasures.

HBO has it right. 9 or 10 episodes is the perfect season length. Almost every other show is either too short ("Better Call Saul") or too long (almost every network TV show).