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Billybob
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The first season was still very entertaining, it was just frequently dumb but entertaining.

… it's little more than wall-to-wall sex with a phony pretense of characters (paper-thin) and narrative.

And Romana. And Ian was a science teacher. And Martha was a doctor, which counts.

He calls himself a hero (repeatedly. It's one of his most obnoxious traits), but given that he seems to throw every supervillain fight he gets into (despite being powerful enough to disarm, handcuff and blindfold them before they even know he's there), and has repeatedly rewritten history for personal reasons, I'm

I think we're all past being surprised at this stage. This one only stands out because for once they don't specify that it's okay because they're step-siblings (aka the Barry Allen Clause).

It's been 15 years, but I still think of Alexa Davalos as electro-girl Gwen Raiden from Angel, which I guess is kinder than thinking of her as Replacement Jack from The Chronicles of Riddick.

I've never heard the original version of Lemonade. Will I need to rectify this in order to properly appreciate the Titus Andromedon cover, or does it stand on its own merits?

This episode the Doctor specifically described the Moon as dead, as a dismissive aside. It seems that even Kill The Moon's own writer would rather forget the details of that one.

Anjali Jay, the actress who plays Fillmore Graves' morally ambiguous lawyer (and previously played Piron's morally ambiguous lawyer in Continuum) is still probably best known for playing Djaq in the BBC's actually-pretty-terrible Robin Hood series. She was good in it; it was terrible writing and plotting that let the

And I'm guessing that, on this occasion, the Dude just happens to have a spare $1,000 handy.

Except this week he's apparently IV! IV! IV!

I do think that it's a bad show, but he's still terrific on it. He and the scenery are the two reasons to watch that show.

Eh, she's a teenager. They're notoriously apathetic. She probably didn't ask about the explosives because showing an interest in stuff is uncool.

And yet she trained Adrian to be Ollie's equal.

I'd love it if he's suddenly built like Kevin James. "Hey look, everybody, it's Vigilante, looking exactly the same as he always has!"

Ollie knew about it, but for some reason he never visited. Even when he, Slade, and Shado were just surviving on the island, practicing kung fu and living in a crashed plane, they never thought it was worth checking whether the actual buildings had anything they could potentially use.

It still lets them pick and choose who dies. Lots of explosions going off, anybody who wants too much money can get hit by a falling tree.

So… how long into next season before Ollie actually tells everybody else that Chase shot himself?

I don't know about everybody else, but I tend to assume most zombies are friendly, neighbourly, types who just want to live and let live. But these Bloodlust Zombies? I suspect they may have some antisocial tendencies.

Number 4 is nine places too high.