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Solomon Grundy
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Previous episode sucked balls too though.

Objection, your honor!

It didn't take long for the show to turn into a conventional sitcom.

Deliberate of course. Whigham is the man (wonderful in everything I've seen him in…even a pissy Justified role not worthy of him).

Chief Whigam's Ray is great in this (as he is in everything). Very understated, good natured and supportive despite all the hostility directed at him. I originally thought it was Ray's guilt at stealing another man's wife that made him so amicable, but 'goodness' just seems to be his nature (the complete opposite of

What a shit and incredibly labored episode.

I think we're splitting hairs here. I'm not sure if the concept of masculinity is inherently toxic - just that (like the concept of femininity) it lends itself to toxicity. Although its obviously true that many men feel the need to dominate to 'be a real man', its also true that this need stems from a feeling (or

Stone's eczema is obviously psychosomatic - he's been nursing it like a grudge . It's no coincidence that it clears up when he finally gets the trial of a lifetime (the Chinese herbalist is the coincidence,)

I don't think the show is about the 'toxic side of masculinity' as such. If anything, we're bearing witness to two emasculated men overcompensating in their professional lives.

Kyle is a conduit, right? So if he were (say) dead, the demons would not be able to cross over to the other side.

She visibly lusts after the obnoxious fat fuck as soon as he appears in the shorts walking towards the group (she appears to mistake the tub of lard for a chiselled brad pitt). The show also seems to want its cake and eat it too - it judges her for being such a flake or party animal (the complete antithesis to his

Well, that was just deeply unpleasant - no one wants to socialize with an asshole slash stalker.

The way the show disposes of most of its characters with casual glee is worthy of the cruel god its supposed to be railing against.

I think you're being a little unfair on Kyle - his review conveys many of these points during the episode's description. So it matter of emphasis rather than a sin of omission.

Return to your dogmatic slumbers.

I think people who compile 'best of' lists should acquaint themselves with the problem of the criterion (or at least, Meno's paradox) to drive home the sheer futility and/or hubris of it all.

Say, what? How could Alasdair not comment on the overstated analogy between the kitten in the dog pound and Naz in prison amongst other rabid dogs?

So Emily broke bad because the mayor overstepped his bounds by trying to get serious? Although I expected him to end up being killed by Cassidy, I assumed it was because things would have gotten out of hand.

They'll end up in bed together, and then blackmail one another about their sexual proclivities.