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Blue Ox
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You could always just not toss in anything in front.

Hey, have you watched Seinfeld? Here's something you already knew. Hey, have you never seen it? Here's something you don't care about.

Look, I know this is an issue the commenters here have a clear stance on. But all you just said is, "in this particular industry it doesn't work like this." I believe you. As I said myself, it's often the lower-class workers who are held to a higher standard of responsiveness.

Nine books in the main series left to adapt after this season, hypothetically.

Several truths here. About the early books being repetitive, for starters, so I seriously wonder what that means for future seasons of this adaptation if we are so lucky.

You said it yourself, millionaire executives don't need to check their email 24/7. However a lot of low level workers are expected to in some industries (at least during the day). French workers just this week won the right to claim they haven't seen work emails while away. American workers can be fired for that, and

That's a lie, Noreen's children are only interested in Kierkegaard.

Two episodes per book and eight episode season (four books).

Correct. It was not by intention. Not only that but plans for a sequel existed as recently as 2009.

Oh god you're right, that's where I picked this up too. Screw You Lemony.

No offense, but that's nowhere near Snicket-esque wordplay, a phrase which here means, "Daniel Handler is a goddamn genius and I'm not even going to try to imitate his writing."

Young Pope has been out for Europeans a while, who's seen it? Top tier stuff or no?

Also returning after time away and not listed (I think this is just new shows): Review, The Leftovers, Fargo, Top of the Lake, Nathan for You, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Making a Murderer (we think)

I'm saying roughly 90% must watch and 10% chance it is a mix of philosophical mindtwistery that only appeals to six people, such as this part of his last show:

Not sure how much shit he'd get today. It's possible but also hard to imagine. And I'm not sure that makes it "wrong."

And two opposing roles no less. It sounds like he's playing the two main characters of the whole season.

Year 1 was described by Hawley as Fargo + No Country for Old Men + A Serious Man, which I think is extremely accurate. I don't see No Country in year 2. Hawley called year 2 Fargo + Miller's Crossing + The Man Who Wasn't There, but honestly that's clearly just a copout that it's actually Fargo + The Castle + Waiting

Kurt Cobain was championed as a LGBT ally for saying something essentially the same as this.

Hawley called S1 No Country for Old Fargo, actually. I'm thinking maybe Burn After Reading for this one because of the themes Hawley called out when the season was first teased. But I'm not sure I see it as a slapstick comedy.

Carrie Coon is the lead police character. Gaffigan is going to be her little helper from another jurisdiction (St. Cloud).