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Elle Carter Neal
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And Richard O'Brien as Riff Raff, the hunchback butler.

I wish I could upvote this comment ten times. Blair Underwood elevated that opening through sheer talent, and at the very first shot (pun intended) of his face I was thinking, "Blair Underwood!! Why, oh why, has he not had a major starring role in this show before now??!!??" What a tragic waste. Love your idea of

What was unnecessary was Morton's character. Completely pointless storyline.

Well, Liam was holding the tupilaq when Jason came calling… it could be construed that this had something to do with both characters gradually regaining some control over themselves.

This is the first thing I've ever seen Stanley Tucci in, and he's okay. Just 'okay'. The show hasn't gone out of its way to make his character endearing. He's clearly the outsider, and that works against him more than giving him something in common with the audience. Not sure if that was deliberate or not. I don't

"Creepy McStuffins" - Don't you mean Creepy Stuffinssen? He's not Irish.

It was the episode before Will died. It was actually the very first GW ep I watched and was a very useful introduction.

I loved that he ended up sitting in front of the judge's bench, like he was a spectator with a front row seat. It was a little unnerving when the first "Over-ruled" and then the camera shot came from right there in amongst it all. And he seemed to be sitting on the prosecution side, too, which was also unnerving (I

Not "snake". She said, "There's something outside."

And the audience-spoonfeeding! I rolled my eyes right out my head. That final "twist" would actually have been a twist if they didn't constantly show Jane's itty bitty memories suggesting she was a willing participant. Not necessary. And they just had to show a flashback memory to her getting out of the duffle bag in

Yes.

That scene with Nora perched on the cupboard was perfect. It was like she was supposed to be the angel-devil on Eli's shoulder.

I hope I'm wrong, but this storyline seemed very much like a strawman to me. The way it plays out, the audience is probably beginning to side with Diane by the end - "she did everything she could to talk the others into hiring Monica"; "Monica was not the best candidate"; "the taping of the interviews was weird and

Fringe is well worth watching.

I highly recommend Episode 14 of Season 5 ("A Few Words") as a starting point - it's a recap episode (done very well), and contains flashbacks to previous episodes. I was lucky enough to start with that one, and I have been hooked since and don't feel I've missed much on the backstory (although I do still intend to,

The writers want to potentially name her "SHAW"?!?!? Whoa. Those are big (little) shoes to fill. I don't think this show can pull that off. (Writing tip: check every name you want to use. Google is your friend.)

I think the hair chop was so there would be no hair covering the vitally important "Kurt Weller FBI" tattoo, which seems to have been positioned to be clearly seen when she's placed under arrest.

All the episode titles are supposed to be the final word said in that episode.

Yes, that's exactly what I've been thinking - linear time would've been better. And save the secrets until we're invested in the characters, rather than trying to create so many twists.

And then, with just one click of the fingers, Ruth snaps her own (white) assistant into line behind her after blowing Eli off. You could just see Eli processing that. :-D