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Art3mis
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"Say. Medici. Again."

I'm totally on board with a Sherlock relapsing plot (though like Myles, I hope it doesn't cause Joan to be pushed to one side without independent storylines of her own). But I'm not on board with THIS Sherlock relapsing plot.

I agree that the back half of this season needed more direction, and I'm a little baffled as to why they didn't build the murder of Andrew/Joan's jailed nemesis into something that could play that role for a half season. It seemed like they created that situation for precisely that reason, but then they went and

Yeah, there was basically an entire episode about Marcus' relationship with his brother (and I'm pretty sure they mentioned during it that their mother had died).

I think he'll want to use the one where he shocked Kitty repeatedly. That let him showcase a whole new side of himself, and we all know that in the drama categories the voters gravitate towards the darker characters.

Although Fisher Stevens being within a hundred miles of this case made it pretty obvious who the bad guy was, I don't even care on this occasion because I was so delighted about the Hackers reunion between him and Jonny Les Miller.

I didn't know it was a thing before this episode. I think it's plausible Joan didn't either, since the bullets she normally deals with are of the criminal variety rather than from hunting or competitive shooting. I would guess there aren't many murders in NYC in which the shooter used reloaded bullets.

That moment was PERFECT. God, I love those two.

That's what I thought, too. Completely plausible for people at a random corporation to put stuff like that in email; not at all plausible for lawyers at a corporate law firm to do the same.

I just don't understand the praise for this. What did we really get here? Suddenly the wrongful eviction thing, which no one cares about, is back and David Lee is double crossing them (again). More "but Alicia is compromising her ethics!" with the campaign, which has been the focus of pretty much every episode

This episode was terrible. Like, Elsbeth seeing clowns level of terrible. I'd say the absolute low point was the laughably fake shadowy Will stand-in, but really the whole thing was the low point.

Danny smoking doesn't seem unrealistic to me at all. I know several very smart, otherwise health-conscious individuals (who run and do yoga, one of whom is a vegan, etc.) who absolutely know how bad smoking is for them and do it anyway. Especially if you grew up somewhere that smoking was prevalent for cultural

I loved that line because I thought it satirized the off-the-charts concern trolling/pathologizing of women who are pregnant and (a) over the age of 36 (seriously, the scary and totally unfounded medical articles about this are EVERYWHERE and have prompted more than one of my friends to freak out that she must have

Yup, I loved it too. I think the review nailed the areas where it was weak (the decision to ultimately blow up the Room of Answers, and Irving's wild swings of character), but this was really fun again and that's ultimately what I want from this show.

I'm with you, but at least she left. And he did get to lay out to her pretty clearly that hey, those people she keeps saying are all scum include his dead wife and his little daughter and so no he doesn't actually agree with her.

I really thought Tom was going to cave on Bunting's departure. The fact that he didn't and she is finally, blessedly, gone makes this an A episode for me.

Ugh, I HATE how she treats Branson. That's what turned me off on her when she first appeared, and her general awfulness has only strengthened my dislike of her since.

I am not seeing that. They started out the season in tension because he was mad she moved out and she was (a lot more reasonably) angry he took off to London without saying goodbye. But they've been steadily rebuilding that relationship all season, and I think last episode (the discussions about Sherlock's sobriety,

Completely agreed, except that I don't think Cumberbatch at his best is even close to Miller. I hate his take on the character.

I don't think there's any chance Kitty is going to be killed off. Sherlock has already done a "woman he cares about is (he thinks) dead and he feels responsible for it" storyline, and they've invested too much time in the arc of Kitty healing and building a life for herself to abruptly destroy it all by killing her