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My issue is not with her falling for him. My issue was why she chose to sleep with him initially, knowing that she was responsible for Luke's wife's death. And I wouldn't call Jessica's choice 'drunken lust.' Yes, she drinks like a sailor but when have we ever seen her genuinely intoxicated?

I'm glad I wasn't the only one who felt this way about some of my points. I know people are going crazy over this show but I just can't get with it.

I think why I was so bothered by my fourth point is that throughout the season, we've come to know Jessica as the type of person who doesn't set out to intentionally harm others. It's the last thing she wants to do. She, for the most part, always wants to help, especially when she feels personally responsible.

Although you make a good point, I don't agree. The whole reason he made Trish kiss him was to test if Jessica was fully under his control. He knew messing with Trish in any way would be upsetting to Jessica. If he wanted to permanently torture Jessica, he should have taken and Trish on the boat and left, not approach

I know I'm in the minority and I'm probably going to get dragged for this but I wasn't head over heels for this show. I'm most likely not going to be watching season 2. Here are some of the things I noticed while watching:

Do you happen to know why BBCA does edits in the first place? I was watching Turn Left during the Doctor Who marathon and realized they had edited out some pretty good scenes from the episode.

At first, I didn't understand either until I watched the third series of Sherlock. You can clearly see Moffat's heavy-handedness in comparison to the previous two series because Moffat was relying much more on Doyle's stories/direction for series one and two. Series three was more slapstick, was being clever just

I agree with your point about prolonging the inevitable. It seems the differences lie in how well the audience receives it and which characters get to delay the inevitable.

The same reason people hate or are indifferent toward Clara, Amy, Martha, Donna, or Rose. There will always be people who don't like a character for whatever reason.

But given the extraordinary lengths other players went to week by week, Tasha's game play, at best, seemed subdued and forgettable.

You're absolutely right. In fact, Jeremy openly called Fishbach out on his lack of confidence during a previous episode.

Not to mention the divorce and alimony he has to pay.

She didn't get married in Life as We Know It.

The Doctor stated in Listen that he travelled down Clara's timeline 100 years and found Orson Pink. Given the events of this episode, Clara could go find Danny Pink before he died, get pregnant, and raise a child.

So I have a question: did the Doctor put two and two together when the diner disappeared and he saw that the mural of Clara was identical to the waitress he saw?

Absolutely agree with you about the secondary characters. When Justin Ripley died, I felt nothing. When they forced that new love interest on Luther in Series 3, I cringed. But there was something about Ruth Wilson that made you pay attention, you know?

Sometimes, I suspect the showrunners were surprised about how popular Alice Morgan became with the audience, probably even more popular than Luther. But that's just my opinion.

Hmm. I don't know how to feel about this. Part of me is kind of excited about this because of nostalgia. But the other part of me is cringing a bit because generally speaking, I didn't think Luther was that great. Idris Elba and Ruth Wilson really carried this show for me. Their interactions were always electric, fun

Ah. Thanks!

When the Doctor first entered his mind to figure how to survive the fall, I remembered seeing the same concept used in Sherlock when he was *spoilers* shot and entered his mind palace to figure out how to survive. But this episode delivered on that concept so much better.