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Sam Miller
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Holy diggity dang! That was a damn good episode that demanded your attention and kept me hooked.
The acting by everyone this episode was great, but special shout out to Chloe Bennet (Daisy) and Elizabeth Henstridge (Gemma). I can't lie though, Iain De Caestecker really stood out to me this episode in the scene between

Someone should write a summary of everything Iris has been through on this show and all of her plot points and storylines. It might take a whole 3 sentences.

So I'm like pretty clueless when it comes to special effects and what's going on there, just an FYI.
But what's the deal with effects budgets?
Like what costs so much exactly?
Like comparing this episode to say a big budget movie, where does the money go?
Is it just a matter of needing more people to do more work or maybe

"There’s an awkward scene of Rogelio and Petra exchanging comments about the other’s accent, and while it’s nice to see the pairing of Jaime Camil and Yael Grobglas, who rarely have reason to share scenes, the humor falls flat the longer the bit goes on."

"It’s always nice to have one-on-one scenes of Alba and Rogelio, largely because these they’re entirely in Spanish"
I don't speak Spanish, but this comment from the reviewer made me think a little more about these scenes. I've seen people talk about dialects and accents a bit before with this show, usually in regards

Seeing that conversation between Hannah and Marnie at the end when they actually talk like mature adults was so refreshing. It was such a contrast to the argument between Jessa and Shosh.

As someone who is very political and actually watches plenty of shows that go there, this episode just felt weird. Mostly for reasons the reviewer listed. It would be interesting to see the show get more political, although I'm a little hesitant of that.

I'm hoping that the point of James is that he dies and in somehow causes a major ripple effect that shakes things up. I'm so over his character!

I enjoyed this episode as an individual piece, but it also made me question where I think the show should go.
Like the reviewer I'm not the biggest fan of Ben. He's fine, just not great.

"I look forward to the near future, when people will go on about how they “just discovered” the show. Hopefully those same people will at least read these reviews. Goodnight"

I too briefly thought Connor actually was the bad guy. Maybe the one who killed Wes or maybe the informant. (Who said Annalise leaked the article) But that last scene is too much of a red herring. My guess is this:
Like the reviewer said: Connor showed up moments after someone else killed Wes. Connor tries to save him,

"And as many are pointing out: Grey owns the hospital, so why doesn’t she get a say as big as Bailey’s? Yes, I get that Bailey outranks her in staff, but who outranks who in ownership shares?"

I think the Trump comparisons were fair last week, especially with the wall storyline being such an obvious metaphor.
This week, I'm less inclined to agree.
I feel like this story arc about Weber & Co vs Bailey/Kepner/Catherine is gonna be around for a little while. I don't think it's a Trump analogy all the way

I wish Michael could somehow be relevant. Like I'm fine with his screen time remaining the same and being a secondary character. But I still would like to have him around. It'd be cool if they gave him something to do other than Cyrus related stuff. Like he was becoming a lawyer or something right? Make him like the

Listen I know the show isn't a procedural anymore, but it would be cool if like 4 times a season they really just did a normal procedural episode for a client. Let it be more of a character episode than a plot one and have its result somehow make things click in the larger plot to figure things out.

I really appreciated this episode and its role, as the reviewer says, as a "love letter" to fans. They were nice little call backs, in the same way Caleb showing up at the end of last season was.

I kept expecting a sight gag of Dennis' back to look grotesque and horrible. They kept mentioning it and we saw how awful Cricket's body looked. Surprised such a simple thing never showed up.

I need the show to do something to get rid of the idea that Nick and Jess are the endgame plan. Like it's chill if they are, but they need to do something to really convince us it's not.
Like an Epic fight where Nick and Jess don't talk all season or something.
I just feel like there will be more storylines available

Also, maybe I missed it in this review, but what were the issues with this episode?
Why the A- instead of an A? It seemed like the writer was very complimenting of this episode, so I'm wondering what faults they had with it.

It's crazy that this is the show we have now. Like Jane's crazy cousin what's-her-name was on the show like 3 episodes again. SO MUCH HAS HAPPENED!!!!
But the writers of JtV are incredible and this was a wonderful episode.