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Johnathan Williams
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So, here's a general question: Was that really Lena Headey in far shots of her fully nude, because to me, that looked like her face CGI'd onto someone elses body. I only ask because, in the closeups, you only see her from the shoulders up, and every full frontal view seems to hide her face or is shot from high up

Wow, I actually explained something coherently? I'm glad haha. I feel like I ramble at times and my point gets lost.

She would have been a good foil to him. A strong woman who had NO interest in him romantically would have been great. Even better once she got to the sausage party of the wall. Let's see someone try to force their way on to her the way they tried to do the other one (not interested enough to remember her name haha).

^ This. ALL of this.

I'm arguing the fact that I can't think of a time where these men were so overcome by their emotions they stopped all of the badass fighting they were doing to be completely overwhelmed and killed by something that should have gone down easier than what they were already killing.

LOL!! That's true, lord knows when someone does that well you can't help but want seconds.

EXACTLY haha. He must've been DAMN good in those furs for a first timer because she certainly was worshipping of him. Hell hath no fury than a poorly written woman kind of scorned by a pretty obvious plot development.

Haha, I actually had the thought at first too, like, "do you know them? Are they cousins, siblings?" And I do understand the logistics behind their decisions. Yes, most people, as ridiculous to me as it sounds, would never understand why a man would freeze at that. I guess for me it's hard to understand that very

I understand WHAT they were trying to do, I didn't like HOW they did it.
Why did it have to be her? Why couldn't it have been a man? Oh yeah, I
forgot, because strong men don't have feelings; they're not crippled by
those weakening things called "emotions". Only women do that, which is they they have to die. I'm

I LOVED the Dany and Tyrion scenes. I've loved their individual stories, but together it was the best of my worlds colliding. For two characters (and actors) who have never ONCE bounced off of each other before, it happened so naturally and gorgeously, I wished we had fast forwarded through most of the journey just

I actually suffer from this in games. I know that when I tried to played Skyrim, the enormity of the world threw me way off. There seemed like there was so much to do and I really had no idea if going after the main objective was the best thing to do or going after the side quests. Besides that, I also feel as

Here's the thing about having a shared universe: I never for one second thought that he would go through with saving his mother because if he had it would have HUGE repercussions for both this show and Arrow. More than that, it really did bother me, like others, that everyone was totally ok with Barry messing with

I knew the MOMENT Kennedy gave her horrendous speech she was gone. One, she kept using the word "condoned" completely wrong and she used it at LEAST three times. That, added on with her attack against Violet, I knew before they even lip synched that she was gone, so watching it was kind of a "meh" moment. It

It really didn't. Though it was always going to be a thing where her and Damon got together, the way they went about doing it was terrible. That stupid "sire" thing, Damon making her switch off her humanity, EVERYONE telling her what she should be doing and she wants. It became a tireless, endless cycle of everyone

Exactly my thoughts about the Heretic thing. It makes sense if you look at it from the perspective of this being a new revelation to the already established lore. As for the Elena thing, at the time I would've been upset by it because I think it did open up a lot of interesting storylines for her. Not only that, I

I think it's dumb when they say they can't tell someone because it will put them in "danger). Ummm, as opposed to the danger they're always in? At least if they were told, they'd have some idea of what might happen and protect themselves against it. Not only that, by having them out of the secret, they're basically

I was reminding of the Buffy quote from season six when Buffy said, "Dawn's in trouble. Must be Tuesday." I laughed out loud at both of these lines because they're spot on.

Wow, it amazes me how many people disliked this episode. I found it to be one of the best of the season. As someone who hated the idea of Elena becoming human in the fourth season because I felt it would make everything she had been through less relevant, I was surprised how much I cared for her character once she

Jesus, this made me bust out laughing. Good one.

Well, the problem for both Laurel and Iris is that for much of their run they were the ones conveniently left out of the loop of action. They had no idea, at least consciously, who the "heroes" were and because of that they were never part of the action. They were left on an island that rotated around the action