He reminds me of Fred Durst! Holy shit I can't unsee it now.
He reminds me of Fred Durst! Holy shit I can't unsee it now.
Dude looks like he's lived through some shit. Him sitting next to Christopher Sunday, with their luscious grey beards, you don't feel like he's a crazy whitefella; you get the sense of two wise elders sharing counsel on the dark mysteries of the world. That and patching roofs.
That's a great way to put it- he tries and mostly manages to belong in every space he walks into. He's almost, but never quite at home.
Now is Kevin Sr. telling Grace about Kevin Jr. good news or bad? I'm thinking bad, as Matt said it's only being in Miracle that keeps Kevin from dying, and that's a theory I wouldn't want to test.
I got a major Man in Black vibe from Kevin Sr. this episode, wandering the map looking for Easter eggs.
Come on, it's obviously hovacuees.
It's the hordes of people that ruin it for me.
Did the poor rich kids not get their way? Sweet sf (social media abbreviation of schadenfreude because that's the dominant emotion of 2017)
Wonder who wrote this?
If she's learned English yet.
She is? Holy shit she's very different!
I loved Francesca's dorky little "that's the government for ya" jab; a perfect small detail that makes her an instantly likable background character, like so many other Albuquerque residents we've seen through the years. Also; that shot of Blazer climbing down the drainage ditch was incredible; the city lights in the…
Yesyesyes. There's obviously a bunch of interesting lore implications for what we see, but the thing that hit me hardest was her denying Kevin even existed. They must have gone through some shit for that to happen. And it hurts most because ALL NORA WANTS IS A STABLE F*CKING FAMILY AND SHE DOESN'T GET IT :*(
I didn't know there was such a thing
Gary introducing "Mike McClintock" in his trademark under his breath at Selina's ear was my favorite moment of the episode, cuz there's no way she remembers his name XD
I think it's because of how damn funny it can be, and how strangely fun it is to watch. It's constantly throwing you for a loop, forcing you to think about things and put the pieces together.
Man, who knew a show about the end of the world would be so much *fun* to watch?
This show's saving grace the last two seasons has been its leaning into the humor of this whole situation, because there's a whole well of largely untapped humor around the end of the world; that, and going all out with the more genre-esque plot points.
Him opening his dresser to find 3 different types of clothing again was an awesomely subtle visual callback