I watched that episode of Louie the night after Robin died. It was oddly comforting to me. Incredibly sad, but very fitting.
I watched that episode of Louie the night after Robin died. It was oddly comforting to me. Incredibly sad, but very fitting.
David was indeed the best. But I was still shocked when SPOILERS
The murder is horrific, but doesn't make me sad. It's hard to watch because of how brutal it is (and I still can't believe it aired on ABC at like 10:30 on a weeknight).
I really knew nothing about that show or any of the character when I watched it, and I'm so thankful for that. I really had no idea when anyone would be getting injured or would be going off to college or anything like that, so every single development and twist was devastating to me.
Erin and Michael happily singing "Hey Mr. Scott" (to the tune of "Bad Boys") in the car together as some sort of happy bonding moment at the end just pisses me off. Erin explains, "Well those kids wouldn't have gotten good grades if you hadn't made that empty promise, so that's something!" as if that makes it okay.…
Was that Lem? That was the last episode of the show that I watched. I had never seen the first 2 seasons, watched Seasons 3-4 as they aired on FX, and then fell off. Although I did watch the last 3 episodes of the show when they happened. But yeah, that Lem scene… wow.
PARENTHOOD SPOILERS
That was one of the "very special episodes" that I really loved, the Fresh Prince one. The one I didn't love so much, when Will got shot (I think?) and then Carlton showed up at the hospital with a GUN, ready to go out on the street and get revenge. That one was a little too heavy-handed for me.
You shut your mouth. Season 5 was amazing.
SFU SPOILERS
Jacob's Ladder almost physically made me ill. It's weird, if you watch the opening credits of Season 1, you actually see Daniel in the air as he's being attacked, but the context isn't there for you to see what is actually happening to him. Seeing the attack played out in that scene is devastating.
Never made that connection. That's hilarious though. Namond was saying it because he wanted Michael's share of Marlo's "back to school" money, and Clay was justifying it to Royce for not asking where his "contributions" were coming from. So funny.
In my mind, Namond was going to help out with AIDS in Africa (based solely on the fact that the presentation we see him giving in Season 5 was about that topic). I still think Dukie would have OD'ed eventually. I don't think he could have lasted 20 years on the streets like Bubs. Yes, we saw that he could scam when he…
Randy would have had to stay in that group home on a temporary basis regardless of Carver adopting him or not. Randy's reputation was already on the streets as that of a snitch, and Carver knew it. Look at the Randy that Bunk saw only a year later. He was hardened and lost all of his innocence. That is the Randy that…
Seth Gilliam's performance as he leaves a scarred, bloodied Randy at the hospital was devastating. Then he somehow topped it in the following episode when he silently walked to his car after leaving Randy at the group home. The tilting away of the car mirror, unable to look at his own reflection without getting sick,…
Arya watching the wolf get killed in the show was the worst part. God, the fact that we see her literally right outside the gates and realizing everything is going down and she's completely helpless, that might be the hardest part for me to watch. The Hound telling her, "We're too late" is just devastating.
From the moment Oberyn speechified his intentions in Tyrion's jail cell to become his champion, I knew he wasn't going to get out of that fight alive. Tyrion was right. "If you want justice, you've come to the wrong place."
I watched that fight about 5 times just because of Pedro Pascal's performance. The way he keeps yelling at The Mountain, the choreography of the fight itself, it's so well-done that even with the heartbreaking ending, I find it riveting to watch.
That smug look on Bolton's face when Catelyn sees the armor under his clothes. Jesus. Fucking. Christ. Terrifying.
It really is. While the politics in the show might not be that nuanced, in the books, they are incredibly detailed. In GoT, the politics generally make sense. On this show, however, they rarely do. But I don't care. I don't watch this show for the politics.