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Sertan
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I just scared myself a little.

I thought the doll reminded her of her dad (wasn't it the doll he got her and she didn't want because she didn't think she was a child anymore?) and I was pretty grateful for that moment. TV Sansa is one of my favourite characters.

I thought the doll reminded her of her dad (wasn't it the doll he got her and she didn't want because she didn't think she was a child anymore?) and I was pretty grateful for that moment. TV Sansa is one of my favourite characters.

Yeah, I think that's why he pulled out the two glasses and Raylan as a result accepted where Limehouse stood.

Deadwood as the story of the seed of *a* civilisation is a pretty interesting choice by Milch. In "The Significance of the Frontier in American History", Frederick Jackson Turner likens westward expansion as analogous or microcosmic to the history of all humanity - he kind of glories in it. But his vision of westward

I love Dewey Crowe's rare moments of unconscious, almost disembodied, clarity. When Boyd entered prison, and Dewey says, "What the hell is he doing here…?" did his inflection sound to you less like surprise and more like he already knew the answer to his own question (but because he's Dewey Crowe he obviously hasn't a

Maybe one of the observers is a baddie.

Chuck sure did whine a lot in this one. "But the curse, but the curse, but the CURSE!" "It's going to be okay, Chuck." "But the curse!" "I won't let anything happen to your family." "But the curse…"

No, he's definitely a terrible therapist:

"I waited for 3 hours for you to post a review and you give it a *B*??"

What saved the Dana/Jessica/Mike stuff for me was this exchange between Dana and Mike:

SO agreed.

I think the scenes with the couple were just building up a picture of what their role is. Turns out the guy is an accomplished professor or something who lives in an apartment; but then he has this whole other thing with this woman, their house and their terrorist connection. We find out most of this information from

Hey, that's Tim Omundson!

The other issue with not much changing is it undermines the need to have Peter back. If not much has changed, what's bringing him back going to do? What's it going to fix? Perhaps this will be addressed in a future episode, the next one even…

I loved the last 5 minutes of this episode but I was very impatient with most of the writing. Not much has changed is right, but I was also annoyed with the level of exposition and the clunky way it was doled out. For somebody who's been living alone for such a long time, Cameron James was very quick to open up about

That initial scene with the victim holding a picture of his kid (which we find is connected to the victim's source of happiness) was book-ended very nicely with the final scene of Walter hearing Peter's voice. I love this show.

I used to obsess over this show. I constantly fought with my best friend at the time over who would get to play the Green Ranger on the playground. It got so absurd. One time, our school had an author of a popular book series visit and she signed my friend and I's cards with two differently toned green felt pens. We