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Seabreeze
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I had an odd thought(?). When Lou was watching the Gehrhardt's motorcade go by, I flashed back to The Duke's motorcade in "Escape From New York". I was hearing that cool, memorable music in my head (and it would've gone great here), and all they needed was a chandelier on the hood of the lead car in that line of

Note to reviewer: The book shown was "The History of True Crime in the Midwest", not the Wild West. Wild West wouldn't make much sense, even though the characters act like it's the Wild West.

That would've been the best thing, for him and everyone else.
He's too damaged to fit in anywhere, or with anyone.

I'm still looking forward to seeing the remaining Kitchen brother get his.

But it didn't look inconspicuous. All the t-shirts looked crisp and brand-spanking new…or worse, ironed.
If anyone had been observing them they'd have stuck out like sore thumbs.

"From this point on we're radio silent."
In a long string of incredibly stupid mistakes, that one was monumental.

I agree. But at any time from about 18 on, Hanzee could've left and actually become his own man. He's a victim of his own bad choices as well as growing up with weasels and racism.

"Wranglers and white t-shirts."
For ALL of them???
It looked like the South Dakota cops just exchanged one uniform for another.

Unrelenting violence bothers me, but Betsy's weakness as she was preparing a meal for Molly bothered me even more.

As much as Peggy irks me, I loved the way she responded to the South Dakota cop when he asked Ed "Are ya stupid?"
"HEY!!!"
It said "I can manipulate him and take advantage of his stupidity but I'm not gonna let you!"
I guess that's love, in her own way.

Again, difference in perception. Season 4 was better because they didn't repeat the previous season. They gave it a different flavor. I found it tasty, you didn't. 'Nuff said.

My taste in stories varies. I love Shakespeare, Dickens and Twain. I also love Stephen King and Dean Koontz. I love well written, thoughtful shows like Rectify, and shows with verve and zingy dialogue like Fargo and Justified.
And sometimes I like to watch lighter fare that's just fun to watch, like Grimm. I just

The traffic on these post-episode discussions was more than healthy, and a lot of fun…with the general concensus being that the show was itself more fun and more interesting. Like I said, different strokes for different folks.

Funny how differently people can perceive things. I thought there were actual stories, enhanced more than usual by the characters.

It was more time spent on genuinely warm and funny camaraderie that did it for me.

I'm curious about Meisner, too. At the moment, I'm a little more intrigued by him than the whole secret war thing.

Same here. I'm a serious balletomane. "Rat King" only conjures one image (and music and feeling). And it's permanent.
Happily so.

I hate to say this, but I lost interest halfway through the last episode and started to during this one…even though a lot was happening. I think I just realized what's bothering me. Last season was such an improvement over the one before that I was delighted to become a fan all over again. It was better because they

I know so little about football that I'm not even sure who that is ("running with the ball" is the best I can do with a sports analogy), but I get the idea. And what I really like about it is that Evans looks like he's having all kinds of fun with the role. I do know what "MVP" means, and agree that's what he is right

I didn't realize that, but makes sense. There's a big difference. And it does say something.