disqus3zcfwg2am7--disqus
Joshua
disqus3zcfwg2am7--disqus

So I guess Earth is basically the Earth from Futurama now.

The episode also works as a critique of the way that hipsters and urban progressives view poverty and urban decay as "authentic" rather than an actual problem to be addressed. It's clear everyone viewed the McCormicks as animals in a zoo and I did think it thoughtful how Trey and Matt used this to explain the

Atheism certainly is not a religion, but the "I Fuckin' Love Science" people are obnoxious as hell. Can we please not turn appreciation of science into fashion statements about social consciousness? It's so unnecessary.

The episode is simple enough: hyper PC people are no different than boorish fratboys. Both are obnoxious and completely full of themselves.

I presume Will told him where the convoy was headed. No idea if he expected Dolarhyde to do that exactly.

Well, logically Bedelia wouldn't be able to amputate her own leg and cook it all by herself, but absolutely nothing on this show makes any damn sense so whatever, it might be that that is the case.

It was amusing throughout, but I think the religious satire subplot was pretty low-hanging fruit that's been done to death.

Pretty sure the bleeped line was bird cock.

I gave up on TWD after season 4, which I concede might have been a mistake since season 5 got such glowing reviews.

Also Sawyer's baby mama on 'Lost'.

Raul Esparza was delightful and I hope he gets more work with Fuller on future projects.

Sheesh, poor Chilton. It isn't his fault they made Freddy Lounds a woman in this adaptation and thus having Dolarhyde do that to her would become problematic.

Bedelia exists to externalize for the audience Will Graham's thoughts. In the book he internally wonder to himself if he deliberately put his hand on Lounds' shoulder in the photo to conveyto Dolaryhde that he's the "pet".

Seriously. "Ant in the afterbirth" is a waaay cooler metaphor than "slug in the sun".

"Oh, what are we doing?"

I love that Molly acknowledged her culpability in pushing Will to take the case. And also Jack Crawford, because screw Jack.

But he's not evil, he's insane with intense delusions of grandeur.

Put it this way: there's a scene in both the book Red Dragon and its two movie versions that is shit-your-pants scary involving Dolarhyde and Freddie Lounds.

Mads' character, to Leia after the Death Star annihilates Alderaan:

Molly is one cool customer, but is there not a gun in that house? They live in the middle of nowhere, keep a shotgun or a pistol handy.