It is?
It is?
No, it was a straight reference to Omar. The character he plays had recently got out of prison and everything.
Honestly, I don't necessarily think it's his skin color so much as his scar that makes him typecast. Most actors or people who could afford it would have visited a plastic surgeon immediately after that happening. MKW was both, but chose to keep the scar, and it's gotten him a lot of work. It adds a lot a character to…
I figured it was just to identify the body as female. Come to think of it, there are probably plenty of women wearing pants in those herds, they're probably just harder to spot.
That was my first question, and I love that Rick didn't even ask it.
I think what so many women see in Daryl (and by extension Norman Reedus) is he's able to not let his sensitivity be much of a hindrance to him. Compare that to Rick. He's a sensitive guy, it shows, and he can't really control his emotional actions. He's volitile. Daryl's not like that.
Depends on the school. My public high school had a Latin class, but the only kids who took it were the ones who thought they were destined for medical school.
I'm familiar with Jordan Reid from Get Off My Internets, so finding out she was the legendary original Dee was like running into your American neighbors in China.
Look up Garfield with a real cat. It's even better.
Go back to the first season and look at the bar itself. It's much less gross than it is now.
Every time someone publishes an "honest, negative" obituary it becomes a human interest story and people act like this has never been done. Each and every one seems to be written in the same cadence, which leads me to believe each new writer googles previous examples with a thesaurus open in the next tab.
My youngest son is going to be so stoked next Christmas!
Are we finally past the point of believing James Franco is the Lawrence Olivier of our times? What did this guy's agent do for him to be lauded as such an auteur for so many years?
Holy shit, what an amazing show. And a very very poignant message for our times. I have to admit I cried like a baby during Lenny's last speech. I can't believe our absolutely perfect this show was.
Man, the room got dusty several times during this episode. The bedridden lady having Gutierrez breathe through the fan, her refusal to be a spectacle, Spencer's death and Lenny's sobbing… this show is hitting me right in the heart.
In retrospect, they probably should have made Lenny slightly more Marian in his theology. As packed with symbolism as this show is, more would only make it better.
So Kurtwell's big blackmail scheme was some letters he didn't even read? That was kind of anti-climatic.
Without the experience of Catholicism in some form (believer or not), I can imagine it becomes hard to divine meaning from this show at times.
Sorry, it's the Southeast Louisiana life for me. But thanks for the compliment!
I think he's just behaving like a petulant child. I don't think Lenny really doubts the existence of God, I think he's just self-pitying. It's his way of resenting the people he believes God helps, when God won't give him the one thing he wants. He doesn't have the emotional maturity to accept his lot in life.