disqus9uxurvdzqv--disqus
qwerty
disqus9uxurvdzqv--disqus

that's forbidden

Daisy's 27 in the series, I don't get why he said "early" 20's

they both need access in the organization

she would have shown remorse or concern if that was the case

it was fanservice, nothing more. They wanted a fight scene with May but didn't know how to write it in, so you have the standard "you don't want me to do it because I'm a woman" tempered by the warning about her attracting to much attention, refuted by her beating up the henchmen in an isolated area and telling them

but it was in fact a date.

I don't think that will happen until the Inhumans movie comes out, in that case Black Bolt could be the Magneto type, or it could be the reveal of the Kree experimentation etc.

sure, but that would be pretty lame so I don't think it will happen. Also, that's the kind of stuff that would seep into the comics and with the whole multiverse rebooting I'm sure they wouldn't mix that in just yet.

the parallel to mutants was too on the nose and a bit forced to be honest, I would have expected at least puzzlement instead of outright fear and anger from the guy with the truck, the scene was even staged in his living room, right out of the "coming out" scene of Iceman in X2.

well having May had a husband meant they had to write and cast another supporting character into the show.

that's like, the very definition of democracy.

I never got that real shield has been only on Coulson, I take it that most if not all of the surviving agents on the carrier and most of the chain of command went underground and incorporated to it, Coulson's cell may have been just one out of many that was meant to join Shield proper except they were contacted by

yeah, except nose and ear removal has never been an actual punishment for adultery in western Europe. I'm mostly phased by the casual "sure, how stupid is she not to do that! it's so obvious" tone of the comments, which reflect the modern attitude more than anything else.

Rollo's descendants end up conquering the whole of England

a guy that shows up later in the first season may have been the actual guy the myth is based on. Pretty meta stuff.

Can anyone tell me which book from the Bible has this tale? I can't find it.

I see what you're saying about Ragnar's attitude, although it seems a bit out of place, sure he's now a king and it's natural he feels for the settlement, he had a few lines talking about how everything he does he does it for his people, but it comes across as far fetched that he would take personal responsibility for

yes, exactly. What makes it worse is that as you mentioned a lot of those type of scenes are already in the show and could have easily been repurposed to explain his wavering with more effect than a vision, that as a cherry on top was perhaps triggered by Alfred being born, because why not?

I for one do, yes.

Bjorn obviously