Hodor?
Hodor?
You seem fun.
*Sam defeats the maesters of the Citadel at golfe, Bronn shouts: hey, everbody, we're all going to get laid *
[ cue Loggins "I'm All Right" ]
Nah, he knows which side his bread is buttered on.
It seemed to trade insight for crabbiness after a certain point and lacked a certain joie de vivre.
At least they kept Bronn on the payroll.
Sam: Let's see those maesters try to keep me from getting some action.
*cue music from Animal House*
Meh, I started reading the newbies comments after a certain point because they were making interesting analyses of the show and cracking jokes while the experts spent most of their time complaining.
Did anyone ask if he stays dead?
I can't believe after all that incest, she didn't come out looking like Olive Oyl.
I was waiting for them to start making out.
Ha ha. Keep talking. Enlighten us with more of your wisdom.
Really, she is supposed to be an archetype of the princess who ends up married to the hero after being the damsel in distress. People get upset because they think this trope needs to be subverted in a series already chock full of strong female characters. If you look at GOT like a game of chess where all of the pieces…
Ok, keep babbling. It is kind of you to admit you were successfully trolled. Just remember, you can't win until you get the last comment.
Eh, his story arc had some good parts and he played a vital role at many critical times, ie killing Renly, saving the Night's Watches' asses. Now, the Boltons are weakened and Sansa is on the loose. I think it's time for Littlefinger to shine.
When you start shooting smoke babies out of your hoohah to commit fratricide, and your slogan is "The night is dark and full of terrors, allow me to demonstrate", I think everybody knows which side you're on. Having said that, isn't fire usually seen as an agent of change? Not necessarily good or evil, it just depends…
These questions…and many more…will be answered in the next episode of Soap.
I thought Dillane was an excellent actor portraying a tragically flawed man who maintained a stoic countenance even as he became more and more unhinged. I think I said it somewhere else, but he played a man who lived by a code of honor that eventually did him in. He's like a foil to Ned Stark's Lawful Good, but is…