deejaymcallister--disqus
Deejay Mcallister
deejaymcallister--disqus

This seems to be mirroring the Mongols. They started wars with both the Hell's Angels and the Mexican Mafia. They barely survived and some members were very vocal about the fault lying with the current club president.

The Chinese seem to be acting a little more trusting than a crime syndicate should be. I have trouble seeing how they couldn't put two and two together and realize their missing boy happened during the party the Son's threw. Especially with Jax's odd behavoir. With that in mind it should be obvious the Son's are up

It would be a good low risk way to start trouble with him or the club. She has no reason to love them and every reason to hate them.

Well that could be written up as she was a recovering junkie and wasn't thinking, she didn't know or care about the severity, or she could be doing it on purpose. She has no reason to love the club, and could be doing this to start trouble indirectly with little risk to her. Of course it could be a crude plot

I agree with this review for the most part. The writing is still a little fuzzy, and the acting of Charlie Hunnan is lacking, and they had one of there patented wtf moments. The setup for the Chinese was telegraphed a mile away, it won't take long to figure out whose behind their missing man. That would be good,

I disagree. First I have liked the Stinkmeaner episodes, so far they have been enjoyable Grandad story-lines. This one wasn't my favorite, but it wasn't D level. Second of all, last weeks episode I consider a classic.

Koontz is mainly bad at fleshing out protagonists. This is one of the better that he has done. His general book has a fascinating villain and protagonist that is either a cop, or ex millitary, or a combination of the above, a woman who needs his help, and a dog. Odd Thomas actually had an interesting protagonist, a

I did laugh at the Stevie Nicks episode, I had a wiccan friend in college that went by the nickname Stevie. I can't say this about all wiccans, but the ones I knew loved Stevie Nicks.

This season reads like it was written by a junior high school wiccan. Which isn't saying it's a good thing. I won't repeat everyone else's complaints of no consequence writing, but they have poorly used their villains. I can see how they wanted to use the concept of our greatest enemies are within our ranks, but

I felt the same way. I was let down as all the other episodes kept me in rapt attention. this one I just couldn't get into. The idea was there, but it felt lazy and poorly developed. Hopefully this will be remembered as their one bad episode.

I have to agree, this was a bit of a letdown. Some big things happened, but they didn't have the impact they should have. Ultimately it all came across as slow and bloated.

I am wondering if Jax showed Tara the murders on purpose to set her up or something similar, like they did in season 2 with the feds. I hope not, that was the worse plotline from the series. I know its a tv show, but I like a little more plausibility in a crime drama.

I don't think that this was a great episode. This was a mediocre filler episode. Something to play around with. The show is still finding its feet, working out a formula. That is the same for about every show Wheedon, i.e. Buffy, Angel. A long running plot is starting to flesh out.

If it's Cartman, I would say he's more Littlefinger than Vary's, but Parker and Stone might have a different opinion than I do.

I do not side with Gemma in this. Maybe she was screwed up by stuff that happened to her. But when you get right down to it, she's a bully and a manipulator, who mainly uses her clout with the club to get her way. Just like the beyatchs in high school that liked to date thugs and sick them on anyone who made them

This episode didn't do it for me, but I need to see where they are taking it.  Felt a little forced, and poorly paced.