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You're probably right. Oh well, maybe we're lucky and someone'll post it on youtube at some time
later.

Neither did the fanbase.

I tend not to read the book a tv show is based upon whilst that show is still in production. Same goes for Game of Thrones. I might check it out afterwards, though.

After all those middling to terrible revivals we've seen over the past months and years I truly wonder how Twin Peaks - probably the one with the biggest build-up of them all - will fare with critics and fans. It already feels like a completely different beast from both the tv show and the movie and I fully expect to

Do you, by any chance, know if this can be streamed somewhere?

The first season kept me engaged, if mostly for the gorgeous cinematography and scenery. I hardly remember anything about specific plot points, but Amazon usually provides pretty good previously-on videos to kick the new episodes off, so I'll probably start with that one.

Is the one guy still called Frank Frink? Because that was just an unfortunately stupid combination of first- and surname.

And I have no problem with that at all. Heck, most sitcoms - even the modern and hip single camera ones - rely on tropes a great deal. I mean, why wouldn't you? You have to fill up 24 episodes a season (if all goes your way) so you're basically bound to repeat something that others have done.

Soooo, Trump, ey? What a goofball. Have you noticed that silly hair of his?

Also, The Mick takes up its new time-slot. I quasi-liked the pilot, even though it was heavily overstuffed at times. But Kaitlin Olson made up for all the clumsiness of the writing. Definitively going stick with this one for at least a little while and see where they take it.

You still watch that? Man, I barely made it through that insufferable pilot. Like, how many fucking sitcom-plot-tropes can you go through in a single episode? From the premise you wrote I take it they're still not bothering coming up with something… if not original, then at least an interesting take on a used-up plot

The pilot was overstuffed and the set-up to get Olson to live with these snobby, over-priviledged kids was far from organic. But still, I liked it a lot. Olson is a riot - often the funniest one even in the worst episodes of Sunny - and I liked her chemistry she had with both the kids as well as with the maid.

And finally do we think the guard etc is all in Noah's head due to his drug use?

Yeah. I mean, Dominic West played the hell out of that scene but nothing about the writing rang true to me because it came sort of out of nowhere. Like, the writers read what commenters had to say about Noah's assholery throughout the last season and now felt like they had to come up with some sort of explanation or

At this point, I really just hope that Fraser's character won't turn out to be a figment of Noah's imagination altogether - like, even during his prison experience. Otherwise, yeah: Pretty obvious how it was all handled.

It was really the best I could muster. I have no words left in regards of those news.

Fuck.

It's a great movie. And everbody I ever talked to who saw it said likewise. So it's not really an unpopular opinion to have. Thing is, not that many people seem to be aware of its existence, is all.

So, you're not watching means nobody is?

I must be a fucking idiot but I just realized - because I read through the cast list - that over the past couple of weeks I have been watching two shows starring the same actor: Alfonso Herrera on The Exorcist and Sense8. I never once made the connection.