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    I'm coming to the conclusion that Gilligan and his writers work on some higher level than the Walking Dead gang. I like TWD, but there are so many head-scratching moments when you can only wonder "What were the writers thinking? Did no one point that out in the writers' room?"

    He was also terrific as the bandleader on the old Glick show. He played the harp. Man, I miss that show.

    Same here. He's a good guy. Sure, he's looking for a break and an angle, but he treats those old folks well. He took care of his brother. Clearly he is kind-hearted.

    Yeah, that last scene where he answers the phone with that fake accent and his voice catches a little bit….. just brilliant.

    Like the guy in the final Sopranos episode.

    I got lost on that beltway a few times when I lived in Md and Va.
    But you're right. They wouldn't have seen the Monument from that direction or angle.
    I'm hoping in a future episode for a long zombie parade going across the Chesapeake Bay Bridge.

    I really liked the anecdote about his grandfather.

    Maybe they can introduce a *criminal* lawyer who adds a little comic relief to the show. Like Saul Goodman did for Breaking Bad.

    Tyreese seemed to be fascinated or troubled by something in one of those photographs he was looking at. At first I thought he was just thinking "How sad," but then I got the sense he saw something that had him wondering….

    It's your life, pal, but I don't understand tuning in, even if not paying full attention, to a tv show you find "quite boring." Is life itself that boring???