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DrVanNostrand
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You've completely lost your mind. Thanks for playing, though.

That's why Woo really proved what an awful player he is when he chose Tony. The thought that "gaining the respect" of the jury could possibly get him more jury votes than taking a goat of rare quality shows that he doesn't even remotely understand the game.

No, it was really was the worst. Up there with Tyson voting himself out and Erik giving away his immunity idol.

If you want to play the game by some random rules you made up in your head, you're welcome to do so. The decision of the jury members to reward the person who actually played the game as it exists in reality is hardly "punishing" Woo.

I still would've voted for Tony.

It's North of King's Landing, but South of the Twins. It's also at high altitude.

I just Googled to make sure I'm not mixing in book info or spoilers, but it looks like Littlefinger was made Lord of Harrenhal and Lord of the Riverlands in Season 2. So the the Iron Throne technically views Littlefinger as Lord of the Riverlands, but the Freys have been given much (maybe most?) of the land, and Tully

The could spend a whole scene talking about their sigils and armor.

As far as I can tell, they only exist to give Daenerys a fleet to fight Volantis, and maybe help take her army to Westeros. I seriously doubt she'll marry one of them or they'll be able to steal a dragon. Maybe he's just lulling us into a false sense of boredom to shock us with a crazy twist!

OK, I'm familiar with that one. I agree it's interesting and plausible, but I'm still skeptical about all the theories I've read. The part I buy the least is that Jon is the trueborn heir. I get the impression that Westeros doesn't accept polygamy. Also, isn't Aegon still older? I suppose GRRM could always kill him

Which is the "main" fan theory of Jon's parentage? I'm aware of several theories, but don't know the one you're referring to.

Feast and Dance are roughly concurrent, so the show could certainly mix up the events. It would actually be better for continuity than the books.

The could just show the actual making of Stoneheart, except that might not fit well with the timeline.

In the show, I'm pretty sure it's unclear. Aren't there still Tullys in Riverrun? I think the Riverlands are in dispute, though it looks very bad for those still loyal to Tully.

The 7 are the kingdoms that existed when Aegon came over to conquer Westeros. He conquered all but Dorne, but Dorne is definitely one of the 7. For what it's worth, according to wikipedia, the one that isn't part of the 7 is the Iron Islands.

The Reach is Highgarden. Dorne is Sunspear (I think). The Stormlands are Storm's End (Dragonstone is a castle held by Stannis, but not the seat of the Stormlands). The Riverlands were originally Riverrun, but are kind of disputed now, and the show may be in a different spot than the books.

As a book reader I've never been clear on that. I don't think they explicitly state which of the eight major lordships are the 7 kingdoms. The Iron Islands do seem a bit separated from the mainland and rather small to be one. But the Riverlands is kind of in the middle of a bunch of others, so I could easily imagine

There is an in-world explanation, and the writers have left it out so far.

That's an interesting possibility.

What does the Hound have to do with Cersei's trial?