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I'd expect it to be either like food court pizza — like California Pizza Kitchen — or perhaps like the (slice of) pizza that people rave about in NYC. It is actually terrible (imo), but I don't know, people seem to love it.

Michael also made her spend hours with him carefully inspecting "suspicious" rocks.

Yes, and it really bugged me that they had to wash dishes and do laundry. What kind of paradise makes you do chores AND eat frozen yogurt? Side note: the rebooted version replaced the fro-yo places with bad pizza joints like "All the Pizza" and "Perfect Temperature Pizza."

I started a rewatch also and appreciated that Michael changed the initial waiting room greeting from, "Welcome! Everything is fine." to, "Welcome! Everything is great!" when he reset the experiment. When you think about it, usually when someone says, "Everything is fine," that totally means the opposite.

And his name is Todd, which was perfect. That made me laugh out loud.

I don't read horoscopes, so I got a big kick out of reading the ones in Celebrity Baby. Apparently, Mars and Saturn are feuding, and things get more dire and nonsensical, but the page got cut off. Here are a few, starting with Eleanor's (fun fact, Eleanor's lucky numbers comprise the neighborhood designation: 12358W):

I need to watch it again, but he seemed to be throwing a tantrum. He has severe abandonment issues — who wouldn't, he was literally abandoned — and when Spencer rejected him, he regressed to an almost childlike state. He might be projecting his issues a bit.

I laughed so hard at the myriad emotions on his face. I think he was more offended by the undignified nature of the excuse. She may as well have said it was time for a story and a nap.

Based on this Hollywood Reporter interview, perhaps we can infer that Cranston is uncredited because he did not want to steal attention from the cast:

This was as gorgeous and hypnotic as I'd hoped. I was expecting a touch more absurdity, but I can see why HBO had a difficult time marketing it. I'm looking forward to Jude Law chewing the scenery in the most beautiful way possible.

This wasn't terrible, but some of the exposition and dialogue were remarkably clumsy; e.g.:
"You're a con man!"
"Yes, I am a confidence man."

"Did I use that word right?" lol Tahani never stops seeking validation.

It doesn't matter because it was merely a construct of a dog.

I did not recognize him until almost halfway through, and only then because I finally recognized his voice.

"To be honest, I’m not sure what to make of the montage of Edward and Wallis dancing in an empty ballroom. I guess it’s supposed to indicate that their love story is a genuine one, but it rang kind of hollow to me."

I also liked that, as well as the looks exchanged between the guys when Felicity was railing on about how men don't listen. Lots of blinking and shrugging then Oliver gently telling her it's because they're stubborn, instead of being defensive and saying that maybe it had more to do with Billy being a detective on a

I thought that looked like a cash register. They straight up used a $5 pill cutter once for one of Felicity's fancy forensic tech. Didn't bother to modify it one bit. I stopped and paused the screen to laugh.

Holy kill count, that is a ridiculous amount of people, even if most of them were mobbed up to their eyeballs.

Star(ling) City dry cleaners are experts at getting out bloodstains. And smoke damage. And bullet / shrapnel holes.

Twenty six people is a huge number. And Oliver killed before he returned to Star(ling) City. Our hero has amassed quite the body count.