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Gussie Fink-Nottle
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I really hope that was the case and the fact they used Bron in that scene suggests so (Jaime is sort of sympathetic too but it's murky). This show has an odd track record with whether they intended complexity and shades of grey in scenes or just wanted to go for a fist pump "fuck yeah" moment

Think Davos was just kinda doing that "charming older man flirts harmlessly with young beautiful lady" thing rather than explicitly hitting on her.

Yes sir I apologise for in anyway suggesting you are at all invested in this minor discussion.

Yeah but the show's premise isn't just that it's supernatural , admittedly I was being a little facetious using those as examples. The show's premise seems to include the fact that it's over the top, stylised and a "comic book/cartoon world" where things like a bullet stopping in Jesse's yoghurt then making little

It stretches the viewer's suspension of disbelief that there is heaven, it stretches the viewer's suspension of disbelief that there is hell, it stretches the viewer's suspension of disbelief that there is an angel/demon child, it stretches the viewer's suspension of…. you know what I mean

No, these discussion have been about book reading and that's it. Just edit your post, no need to be bolshie about it.

It was too standard cliffhanger for that. Also if he's to die there why not go with him being killed by the dragon, it's a far more iconic image.
I think at this point certain arcs are fairly easy to guess (although I'd love to be proved wrong). Jaime doesn't die til they wrap up his story with Cercei - either (most

Same, especially as he's entirely likely to die. I'm invested in how Jon and Dany are moving the plot along but have no interest in their survival (they're standard heroes now). Somehow Davos is basically the main character I care about. Which is a bit odd.

Given they've never referenced it again and this show isn't exactly a tightly written one I'd go for the latter explanation

She was kinda an asshole in the original series. It's just a much less endearing look on adults. Sometimes people don't grow up as well as they could.

But wouldn't it have been so much better if it were a 50 year old woman acting like a 16 year old girl! She could of danced and said "dreamy" and smoked and this would have been amazing! Instead it's about the passage of time which I don't want to think about because pop culture isn't supposed to be like the real

I kinda just took the jerky thing to reference something we didn't know. We knew she was likely thinking about the awful stuff that happened re Leland & Laura - there would have been a thousand things we never saw on screen that might remind her of them, we knew what she was thinking about so we didn't need to know

He was running bowlegged which gave the appearance of a dwarf

Yeah I feel like this scene gave us a big insight into where Audrey's at in life. The sort of people and worlds she's involved in, how the years have changed her demeanor and so on.
We're conditioned to expect everything mentioned in a TV show / film to be relevant to plot but yet bang on about "show don't tell". This

Yeah I feel like at least some of the Roadhouse scenes are almost like tiny moments from another show (or another season of TP). There's no way they all link in to the main narrative, I think they're just commenting on the ways stories work and reminding us that this sort of soapy drama is rife in the town

I assumed she'd got the information out before coma-ing up (not an uncommon storytelling trope) but the letter thing it possible too - I'd have thought they'd have spelled it out though as cross referencing a written name with credits is not something too many viewers will do.
Alternatively it doesn't really matter,

The old style TP music was more noticeable again this episode (fair play to the people who suggested they'd used Baldametti's score more as the season went on)

Yeah I kinda thought that was perfect. You knew what the joke was going to be, they did exactly that and then cut… Sometimes expectation and release is exactly what you want to do.
Plus there's kinda a neat sadness overshadowing the scene - catch is the quintessential father son bonding thing in Americana, it's what

Alas the one downside of the way they're doing crossovers this year is I'm guessing Sara stays over on the LoT/Flash.
Her history with Oliver and chemistry with Team Flash was a fun part of the last crossover stuff. Plus she's generally a really interesting character to mix up with people…

Cos it's indicative of the lazy writing this supposedly great show has