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wildcolonialboy
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For what it's worth, star signs and astrology are superstitious nonsense. It's hard to see how any thinking adult could take that shit seriously.

Oh puh-leeze. Comparing Westworld to Lost is like comparing Botticelli to Tom of Finland. Just because they both have mysterious plots doesn't mean they're the same… if your mind can't judge them on their own merits, and if you're incapable of appreciating the magnificent artistry and aesthetic of Westworld, perhaps

This series is actually quite good. Sad to find out there will be no more reviews

It was interesting that in the conversation between Baz and Smurf in the kitchen, it looked for a split second like he was going to defend his wife but then said nothing

J's girlfriends father isn't a cop, I thought he was a Navy officer? She said in that car conversation with Pope and J that he had been promoted to Lieutenant-Commander, and he was wearing a tan uniform with campaign ribbons on the left breast.

Henry Jennings is turning into a little hottie. Damn, he's cute (that's not paedo, the actor is 22)

Whatever happened to the male associate coming onto Cary? Or is that yet another thing TGW will throw into the mix without bothering to develop?

I think I'll have to be the outlier. Frankly, I find the show boring now. The stilted dialogue, the perma-childhood of the main characters, the almost complete absence of any kind of arc or transformative experiences. It just feels like half an hour of the Josh Thomas Show.

The ploy to say "This will be good for both of our careers, I can give you information too" is the oldest one in the book. Or maybe the book I'm thinking of is the brilliant John le Carre novel A Perfect Spy (which Philip Roth called the greatest English novel since the war)

I think you're being unneccessarily harsh. Remember what the Sopranos was like in its first season? A bit clunky, a bit comic.

But he didn't reveal he was a Stasi spy, he was trying to sell her that he was a West German (BND) spy which provides some explanation for things he might ask her to do or that she might have noticed about him without meaning that he's an enemy that must be reported. Remember Phililp has done that twice in the

I'm gay and I didn't read the Tobias/Alexander relationship in that way. People have more than one motivation for the things they do, and it seems to me that Tobias was eyeing Alexander up even before he knew he was General Edel's son, in that first conversation.

You say the High Sparrow is committed to helping people. That is, of course, unless they happen to be gay

I've read a fair bit about Roman homosexuality, and nothing I've read would lead me to believe that it was ever a matter of censure for a Roman citizen to have penetrative sex with a male slave or prostitute, at least during the republican and imperial periods.