eloisepasteur--disqus
Eloise Pasteur
eloisepasteur--disqus

He did comment he was used to evading various traps and had seen all kinds of traps as well, which implied he might have been there. When he was visiting Riley for that later visit, he was hiding his location (as she and Will are) so if she's a BPO plant, she couldn't find his location. If he's physically at the

Certainly looked like it to me.

The Scottish guy in the Australian cork hat was in the crowd, then visited onto the stage. If you watch it he's clearly picked out in the crowd, then Riley sees him standing on stage with her.

Not analysed it that, but it makes sense, yes. I'm not 100% sure it's right but it certainly covers a lot of the situations I can think of without rewatching it all so it's a good basic rule of thumb to be going on with.

Despite the Rowan dismissing it, I enjoyed that scene too. I thought that because it was a family gathering the need to stay polite made it fun; despite the clearly incompatible world views they couldn't just say 'you're a wanker' and throw insults or cutlery at each other which kept it going and meant both sides got

Often I don't like the writers'canon pairing, and I'm always up for a lesbian pairing in a show, canon or subtext. I'm not quite sure why this one works, but I do ship Deckstar, although I'll very happily ship Chloe and Maze for the rest of my life, even if this is the only episode to feature it.

The season has an odd sense of time - it's almost like we're meant to binge watch it or something - and although he's currently off his heroin, he's replaced it with another drug plus a lot of support to help with the withdrawal and cut down on the cold turkey physical effects.

Fundamentally, yes. They have her name from when she was in hospital and their pet doctor identified her as mentally unstable, then as an escaped patient who might be a danger to herself or others. That puts the police on the lookout for you.

I enjoyed the movie but I wouldn't describe it as a must see. It does look at some similar themes about connectedness though, although in a different way, through reincarnation rather than clusters and telepathic linking.

Given how on edge Lito is about coming out still, Raoul's father's "Your my son's type" really should be more than a stray observation… just saying.

From a storyboarding perspective it didn't really take me by surprise, although the exact way they introduced it did. Wolfgang has kind of isolated himself from the rest of the group for various reasons - he's withdrawn from Kala because she wants to be prim and proper and married and believes that's the way to be

Skyr is heavily advertised here in the UK so I just looked at it and thought, "Nice touch, Skyr."

Everyone will be different. To my mind he doesn't have that sense of joy that Aml Ameen did, at least not in what I've seen so far, but he brings more of a sense of fitting in with the rest - even though his story, again as far as I've seen, is a bit fringe still.

IVF isn't 100% effective, the NHS in the U.K. typically offers two or three cycles of treatment to infertile couples but it's only about 60% effective. (I wouldn't like to guess in Gilead with their problems.) But not going for IVF gives the men another layer of control and degradation of women. Their wives have to

I live in a city with about 100,000 people in it. In the 20 years I've lived here there have been three professional Dommes in court that I know of, big enough stories to make the local TV news or local newspaper headlines and get talked about. My sister lives in a city about 1/3 of the size and briefly lived next

Men, in Gilead, are perfect, in God's image. Women are at fault if they can't get pregnant. Men in Gilead also killed all the scientists that might have told them anything different…

While it's a perfectly fair question for 2017, Henry VIII had a pretty good reason for not knowing… even the best medical advice couldn't tell him how it worked in the late 16th Century.

They believe, as many ideologues do, that if you tell people your ideas often enough, they'll believe them too, no matter how crackpot they are.

I'm not sure if I'd agree with the analysis that they're sidelining Liv overall but that might be down to personal differences in how we view it. Thinking back, I would agree that while I think the changes are more subtle, they're there for Liv too.

Speaking as someone who would call herself a nerd, I agree nerds can be, and generally are great people. But TV script writers rarely write all the roles as fully realised humans. Although as I've commented elsewhere in this episode's comments, I wonder if they've changed the writers' room, I'm not feeling the same