deanbuckley--disqus
Dean Buckley
deanbuckley--disqus

See, this is what always makes me laugh about you silly little creatures. You act like I'm some hypersensitive militant, but you're the one calling "I know you can do better" an "attack", as if I'd organised a mob to burn down the reviewer's house, killed his dog and then beaten the reviewer himself to death with his

The irony is not that her toes aren't on the ground, the irony is that if someone stepped on her toes, she wouldn't feel it, because she's paraplegic, but the phrase "to step on someone's toes" is based around the fact that, ordinarily, stepping on another person's toes causes them to feel pain.

"Ironic, then, that the toes he steps on are those of the wheelchair-bound Megan Fisher."

Here's the problem with Kyle Fowle's reviews: he is so stubbornly attached to his own lazy reductive assumptions about Gotham that he just presumes Gotham isn't doing the smart things he thinks it should do, like when Bruce decided to go live on the streets and he said the episode did nothing to have Bruce interact

FINALLY. TWO GODDAMN YEARS, BUT IT'S FINALLY BEEN SAVED.

No shout out for Melissa Leo as the leader of the co-op?

That wasn't Ito during the preliminary hearing. He didn't even get assigned the OJ case until after preliminaries.

I think this review really overlooked one of the only weakspots to this two-parter, which is the manufactured conflict between Jason and Peggy when she and Souza arbitrarily lose interest in helping or even expressing sympathy towards him, just so he can feel maligned and lose his cool at her. What the hell was that

They "plucked it" from Channel 4. The UK has other TV channels.

I don't think the anger/gender thing was as muddled as the reviewer says – Kara's anger issues are complicated by, as Hank put it, the fear of what she could do with her powers if she lost her temper. So yeah, the news report is completely unfair, apart from the fact that it's a reminder to people that their faith in

"The miniseries invents an eyerolling epilogue where Danny graduates from high school and is played by Wil Horneff, who plays Tony, suggesting that Tony is speaking to him from the future."

The joke wasn't that Duncan took Walter hostage just as he realised he had PTSD.

Hannibal's little giggle at the suggestion that he views Chilton as his nemesis.

The opening of Parks And Rec S2, when Leslie does "Parents Just Don't Understand". I skipped S1, so that was my starting point for Parks, and it made me fall instantly in love with everything the show was about.

*when they got the town going again, they got brand new adults out of storage and they taught Amy.

They only refroze the surviving group B adults and any mountain personnel who didn't go their way. Presumably, when theyot the tow g

I'm sorry, but the idea that a cliffhanger twist has to justify its own plausibility is just…ridiculous The whole point is to make the audience go "what the shit" and then withhold explanation. I don't have the energy to argue with someone who expected a flashback to explain a cliffhanger twist /during/ the

All of the adults from group B who survived. There's an entire mountain full of other adults to populate Wayward Pines with after putting the group B survivors back in cryo.

There's not just kids in the town though? When Amy says "the adults", she means the adults that she and Ben were with before he went out. The people sitting on the grass behind Ben at the end are pretty obviously adults, as are the hanging people. The First Generation are in charge, but it's not just kids and

I think people are underselling the ending. What happens has nothing to do with "those who do not learn from history" or "the evil in mankind" or something, the First Generation are the way they are because off the awful storm of entitlement and glorious purpose that burdens them.