Person of Interest and The Americans are also very good with music.
Person of Interest and The Americans are also very good with music.
That was the only good episode of the new season.
1. Her hearing implant, which is also connected to the machine.
2. Herself, the new version downloaded from the satellite.
I think 18 episodes would have been better. I don't think we needed a full 22, but this did feel… rushed.
When an editor shows you a scene twice, they're trying to get you to think about the scene in another way or from another perspective (or occasionally, to remind you of its position timeline wise in the story). I think the perspective did change in that scene, and I'm sorry if you didn't get that experience.
It was rushed by forces outside of the control, and the finale, on it's own, was done masterfully.
Which goes to the central themes of the show:
Had the machine been able to communicate in more detail to them at that time, it would have been able to tell them exactly what they were looking for and why he was a threat. However, had they known that he was inevitably going to be a Samaritan agent it would have probably…
"WE HAVE TO PROTECT THE PRESIDENT!"
(President Harrison Ford emerges from the shadows)
"I don't need protection."
In Season 9, we would have found out the guys from "Psych" were also working for the machine.
If they don't set up anything official, let's just meet up in the "What's On Tonight?" comments.
Alan Sepinwell didn't review this episode either. I like his reviews but the HitFix comments section can be a bit of a nightmare. Not TVLine levels, but…
The people of Reddit seemed to really dislike this episode. I miss you all when you're not here. We should arrange a livechat for the finale.
TEA: THREAT TO ADMIN
EVALUATING OPTIONS
I absolutely loved this episode. I don't always know where the show is leading, and it one of the only shows on television that keeps me guessing. I figured out the twist that Jimmi Simpson was a good guy running a second Team Machine when they show was edited to avoid showing him via The Machine POV, but still I…
If anyone remembered Joey, I would be surprised. It was basically the show-runners telling you to go back and watch the entire series.
As indicated in the review, Harold has named his virus 'Ice-Nine' which is an allusion to the Kurt Vonnegut novel Cat's Cradle. Cat's Cradle is—thematically—about free will and man's relation to technology. (Sound familiar?). Our main character is John (again) but calls himself Jonah (whoa), who was planning to write…
I will point out the irony of having LaToya come in to fill in during this episode. If anything it is thematically fitting.
Just like my ex-wife.
I can do Paul Harvey.
Walton Goggins for Teddy Roosevelt.