erikaebatayz
ErikaeBatayz
erikaebatayz

I had never heard of dril before, and I’m going months back in his feed because everything is hilarious. Thank you for exposing me to this genius- I can’t remember the last time I laughed aloud so much and so quickly.

Blocked. Blocked. Blocked.

I tried viewing it from that perspective, too, but my problem with it in that context is that if you set it aside and say, “Eh, this is just a fun bonus for completionists,” you’re now leaning on the end of Act 3 to be some sort of proper conclusion to the story, which it very much isn’t. Delivered a little

It sadly seems like Twitter directs the flow of nations in this universe.

Sweet lord, yes. I’ve been dying to see this since I saw Doofus Snowman staring back at me on a poster in the multiplex.

Even Apple couldn’t invent an iphone in 1994, because there were too many pieces missing. Some of them probably dreamed of it, sure. But they had to go through the iterations, while also waiting for the infrastructure - broadband, GPS, 3G and 4G - to catch up, all of which were years away.

I think she’s thinking even bigger. It’s not just the jukebox, it’s the cash register. It’s not just the cash register, it’s the newspapers. It’s not just the newspapers, it’s Cameron’s map...

If any of the execs over at AMC happen to glance through these comments, I want to say thank you so much for sticking it out with this show. At the end of each season, you had every valid reason to give it the axe, yet you believed in it enough to allow it to continue and to become better as it continued.

The 1st Comdex episode is a great episode of television.

One more stray observation: Joe didn’t have a computer on his desk in the end.

Stray observation: Donna names her VC “Symphonic Ventures”... The name of the first big computer she and Gordon made together and tried to sell was “The Symphonic.”

I liked the time jumps. We didn’t need to see Gordon and Donna going through their divorce, Joe still laying on his couch and not starting anything new years after Ryan’s death showed how hard that hit him, and that phone call between Cameron and Joe wouldn’t have resonated as much without that 3 year gap in

This show deserved a better audience than a network full of Walking Dead fans, still AMC gave it a good run and I think H&CF proved it was worth that faith and turned into one of the finest Dramas on Television today.

Now playing

Man and those music choices were as always excellent

When the sign lit up, tears started shooting out of my eyes. It was such an unexpected flourish for this show, yet so perfect . And Joe’s smile at the end! To see him at peace with himself was so damn good to see. God, this finale. So many little unexpected moments, all borne of love. Just a fabulous, fabulous ending.

I had written something long and heartfelt, and then was logged out...and now it’s gone. So, in short -

No hyperbole, that was one of the most beautiful endings to a series that I’ve ever seen. It will stick with me for a long time.

Haley’s review of Star Trek: Generations was succinct, hilarious and spot-on.

“Novelistic” is a perfect description of the show not only for its writing but for its effect on viewers, and the stylistic flourishes, as our esteemed reviewer noted, rather than take us out of the moment, give the scenes greater poignancy, the artifice adding to the emotional authenticity.

I started sobbing when the imaginary Phoenix logo appeared over Cameron and Donna’s heads, and didn’t stop until Joe broke into a serene, finally-at-peace smile while surveying his classroom. I hope shows like Halt and Catch Fire become the rule, not the exception.