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Christine Porter
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I have thought he was not to be trusted after the scene at a protest. I think he chained himself to the gates of a military facility and was arrested. While that might be okay if you are protesting by yourself, he was a youth pastor and was in charge of the kids who were at the protest with him. Not only did that make

I don't practice and barely remember any of law school, but I think the legal team mentioned something about an alternative program and maybe an apology can be part of it since it was not an actual legal proceeding in the same way that adjudication is part of the legal system but does not really follow formal

I get the feeling that if I was Gus's employee I would think he was the best boss if not one of the best guys in the world.

I think he is great, but I think he projects vitality and strength even when he was playing a confused old man. I wonder if the directors found somebody older who could go from down on his luck small con man to scary big god it might be a bit more effective. I like the idea of John Noble from Fringe because he already

The thing about this relationship is that they are not acting like grown women, it is a teen girl friendship that never matured, so Lacie was more obsessed with being part of a "popular" girl's circle of friends than the actual person.

The thing that has bugged me since the first episode is that the crime scene showed an inhaler on the bed, but Naz had his inhaler when he was booked into jail. Did he have time to get another inhaler when he was leaving the house or do people normally have two inhalers with them? It's doubtful that the police would

I think the cat is somehow curing his foot condition.

It sure seemed like the show was heavily using the Wizard of Oz symbolism in the show. Even Betsy was dressed like Dorothy just to hammer the point home.

In the very first episode didn't it show Elizabeth getting raped during training? So, if scummy strangers start to threaten her and her daughter, isn't she more likely to overreact?

What is striking is that John Clare's idea of the worst thing to happen to a person ( having the skull cut open and things taken out or put in) is exactly what Frankenstein did to him. Also, this episode showed that every one of the actors had stage experience ( that's kind of a given with Miss Lupone).

I think the creep factor ( other than befriending a teen when you are in your 30's) is that he looks like David Koresh.

I think given that it is Wes Studi in the part, he would object to the main review mentioning the stereotype of scalping. It was something that was not really done as regular cultural practice among Chiricahua Apaches and was typically something the army would pay for non-Indians or non-tribal members to do to Apaches