I thought the same. Until right this minute.
I thought the same. Until right this minute.
Yeah, sounds like him.
25 to life. She's been up for parole several times but failed.
"Obummer" makes me feel so sad for them, and I prefer to stick to rage and disgust.
Wait, is it pronounced with a soft 'i' sound, or does it rhyme with pizza?
Why has Steve Carell always been the same age?
I assumed it was about creepy weirdos renting people's spare rooms and then killing them. I can see how that would get repetitive, though.
I think something must have been cut for time and/or not fitting in with the tone of the episode. It's a bit strange how that storyline just kind of fizzled out. Kev's new career is good stuff, but come on, it's the Alibi! Maybe next season?
He didn't, though—they absurdly played the issue as being about Caleb's bisexuality instead of his cheating.
Exactly. Trevor would look a fool for taking him back right away, but it's also hard to buy into the relationship as something Ian would fight hard for between seasons or in the next one. If they can't/won't bring Mickey back (ugh), I so wish they'd just focus on other aspects of Ian's life instead of romantic…
I feel like if the writers were confident that Trevor was the right way to go for Ian and the storyline was working, they would have left their chances less up in the air here? I don't know. I've said it before, as many others have, but they just don't quite seem to know what to do with him without Mickey. With good…
Exactly. Monica is certainly a bigger deal, but Frank's relationships with women HAVE more often than not involved death.
I'm desperately hoping this season will be the last. I love the characters and sometimes love this show, but the kids are growing up and getting their lives together, so they really need to think about bringing it to a solid finish instead of dragging it out to where it's no longer recognizable.
Aww.
There is no one in the world I am as close to as this, and I am comfortable in that loneliness.
Right, but my point wasn't that it didn't make sense for Ian to do it, just that it *could* have been more on Mickey's part (or more of a mutual decision) than having him be the one hurt again, and still work and make sense. If that makes sense. It's not the believability or resonance I question, but the writers'…
Frank can only dream of the drugs their social media marketing people are on. They know who they're speaking to with that stuff, and it's not the general audience/casual viewer. If it's not deliberate cruelty, it's incredible cluelessness.
Not even that he didn't want him; just that he wanted what was best for him. But nope.
All they had to do was have it be Mickey's choice not to take Ian along, and it would have made Ian more sympathetic and given Mickey more agency. Growth for both of them. Not everyone would be satisfied with it as an ending, but it wouldn't have been so insulting and repetitive. I'll never understand why they chose…