I DID know the title ahead of time, and as soon as she sold the car I was like "okay, what's going to happen to the butcher shop." I kind of wish I hadn't known the title ahead of time too!
I DID know the title ahead of time, and as soon as she sold the car I was like "okay, what's going to happen to the butcher shop." I kind of wish I hadn't known the title ahead of time too!
I DID know the title ahead of time, and as soon as she sold the car I was like "okay, what's going to happen to the butcher shop." I kind of wish I hadn't known the title ahead of time too!
I DID know the title ahead of time, and as soon as she sold the car I was like "okay, what's going to happen to the butcher shop." I kind of wish I hadn't known the title ahead of time too!
He actually did that in real life? I just thought it was a funny Fargoish conversation.
This article is so creepy, but that makes the seminar so perfect for this show. It's just the right sort of eerie weirdness to fit perfectly even WITHOUT a mob war massacre involved.
Peggy is late-season Lester, the manipulative liar, while Ed's more Lester at the very beginning, a highly repressed "nice guy" who's totally going to explode.
Yep. That line strangely enough made the entire episode for me.
I kind of think they're both the Lester, in different ways.
Was this the first actual mention of Sioux Falls this season (not counting the old movie at the beginning)? Did they say the seminar was in Sioux Falls before and I just missed it? Because it stuck out for me this time and I also… didn't get chills, but my heart dropped or something. It all clicked in my head. To be…
OH the chemistry. I know very well it will only lead to disaster, but I caught myself shipping Coulson/Rosalind SO HARD last night that I don't think I'm over it yet this morning.
Well she's been concerned about him getting too …chummy with Rosalind for awhile. I don't think it was a mind-changer to her as much as just confirming her fears.
I didn't see it when it was first pointed out, and thought it was out of nowhere, but I'd seen enough good points given since that I think I would have been disappointed if he WASN'T.
He IS genuinely concerned about the psychological health of the inhumans, and knows that some of them adapt to it better than others, so maybe that motivation gets warped to the extreme and that's why some inhumans must be killed but others are worthy. He knows and trusts Daisy with her powers, for example.
My husband had predicted Andrew=Lash immediately when the shop exploded, and even he sounded shocked at the reveal last night: "I was RIGHT?!"
Something about the familiarity of seeing characters every week, now I'm MORE interested in these SHIELD agents than I am in the big famous superheroes with their movies. And I love those movies.
Right— I think it was inevitable, because they're the only humans on the planet and they have every reason to believe they may be stuck there forever and they get along well. What saves it from being a tired rehashed trope in my opinion IS that they didn't immediately hook up. I mean, that guy's been alone for 14…
You can post them whenever you get around to watching the week's ep! You don't need to stop entirely!
I can kind of see them going back and everyone THINKING he was a hallucination when they can't find him, but in the end turns out he isn't?
I was like "I KNEW it was the wine that she was reacting to at the restaurant! I KNEW IT!"
Also to her credit, I always think of her as more a love-interest movie star type, but she's making me forget all her past characters and I totally believe in Peggy in the moment rather than thinking "that's some movie star trying to play ordinary person."