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Josh Williams
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Boss was excellent, I don't care what anybody says.

The info may or may not be true. But Sansa accepting it as fact without investigating further is a very bad move. It's the kind of naivete you'd expect from season one sansa.

If you refuse to compromise with a reasonable person, expect to tomorrow find an unreasonable person in power over you who is unwilling to compromise with you.

Technically, laws against murder only regulate the behavior of law-abiding citizens as well.

This is a deliberate tactic known in the polling community as "push polling." You ask a question out of left field to a respondent, with the intent being not to find out what the respondent thinks about the concept but to instead plant the idea in the respondent's head. If the idea has previously been planted,

I'm sure a brown guy singing a rap musical and John Oliver is exactly the kind of thing the Republicans will suddenly decide to listen to.

Norm has a take on what you just said

I agree. Also, the way the whole thing went down makes V seem really, really awful. Kev is against the idea from the start and his concerns obviously have merit. She browbeats him and forces the issue anyway, even telling him to sleep downstairs. When she does give in to Svetlana (without fighting it at all), she

If Louie Anderson's amazing performance as Mama Baskets has taught us anything, we should be able to suspend disbelief on stuff like this and let the actors take us away into Gilligan-land. As far as I'm concerned, one can never really spend enough time there.

This show loves to play on the idea of characters fighting valiantly, even righteously against a thing, and then doing that exact same thing behind closed doors or in a different situation.

"Maybe it's just me. Part of what I liked about earlier seasons was how we could still see most of the characters having some kind of heart amidst the chaos. Now, I have so much antipathy for most of the characters that I just have no patience for them anymore."

The kid was in solitary for years. I think it's totally understandable that he doesn't even speak, that shit is straight up torture and he obviously has mental issues as well, possibly was abused before he committed his crime too.

Maybe I'm looking into it WAY too deeply, but I saw it as an extension of the Wolf of Wall Street parody. Dane Cook treats the Workaholics like rock stars, and they therefore gain a new confidence and work harder than ever before, and actually do succeed. It's like a self-fulfilling prophecy or somesuch. The same

Because that was the Van Nuys' branch way of doing things. They offered a lot of perks to their workers but expected more out of them (staying late, hitting 400 sales instead of just 200) and that's how they were about to pay for such things. They were real life douchebags, hard working-winners, just for an episode.