didtheyreally
itsmeitsreallyme
didtheyreally

I'd love to see Patxi knock Leto out with a pelota.

All those other things you mention are directly relevant to the forward movement of the story…

I thought that was going to be the twist too (I was wondering if it was going to be revealed by Freddy) until the very end when he attacked Nas. I don't think there's a good reason for him to attack Nas if it isn't true, because his story seems pretty convincing already.

I kind of think the state of Stone's feet will be a sort of bellwether of Nas's chances. In the next few episodes thinks might look up for Nas as more evidence/intrigue unfolds, and simultaneously Stone's feet will start improving with all the extreme treatments.

The original movie had the appeal of being kind of a straightforward take on the "AI become sentient" trope. The AI never really become 'self-aware' so much as they become buggy, and the best you can assume is that they really believe the roles they're playing in the resort (eg. the snake 'really acts' like a normal

I was going to say— the prospect of an unlocked police dept only sounds ridiculous if you didn't grow up in a small town. I mean, it's still ridiculous, but realistically so!

Maybe in the next episode of OITNB they can kill off Soso, and then show a scene of the ghost couple frolicking through the prison garden for all eternity!

This seems like a series that, no matter how well done it is, will inevitably earn screams of "just dumb feminist SJW propaganda" from a certain insecure subset of the male population. But whatever. I'm rooting for them to make a great adaptation, and I'm sure Moss and Wiley will knock it out of the park.

I think at this point it's pretty clear that if Naz actually did do it, it would be because he was off his rocker with the cocktail of drugs he was on, and there's no further ulterior motive to the action.

In the last 5 minutes of the finale, Naz is cutting his toenails in his jail cell and finds a message tattooed on the bottom of his left sole:

I think the main argument for Naz possibly doing it is that he was basically on a cocktail- from all the drugs he's never tried before to alcohol to his inhaler. But this isn't really positive evidence against him, just a possibility. The fact that he didn't have blood on him is a big piece of evidence against him

Also the fact that Freddie was a "boxer turned criminal" reminded me a lot of Avon Barksdale.

I think a lot of the episode was purposely meant to have misleading sexual overtones (for eg. Naz in the shower), but Freddie is all about the business. Much more likely just a 'messing with his head' move.

And Laura Bush killed a guy! Doesn't get more extreme than that!

I think it's just a tongue-in-cheek reference— there was a stupid article on here the other day where Serial (or was it MaM?) was basically hailed as defining the true crime genre.

You Americans can give it but you can never take it. Unless you're taking a fat slice of cake amirite?

It seems like a tough sell now. But as they start retracing Nas's steps with the footage and everything and concurrently retrace the girl's history, they might be able to place someone she knew, and *who has a motive*, at the scene of the crime somehow.

At the end of the day, I think Kim's wild success makes a lot of people uncomfortable because it reflects society's thirst for utterly vapid bullshit. Kim K cannot be famous in a vacuum, especially because she's not exactly producing any artistic output that can be judged on its own merits. Nevertheless, I agree: 100

In a sad twist of irony, logic was considered another demonic power that no God-fearing Salem woman should have.

White power bottom looking for now. No fats or fems or Muslims or Mexicans