It means queen (wife of the khal) but it's still not obvious to me why he would call her that.
It means queen (wife of the khal) but it's still not obvious to me why he would call her that.
She did shoot Mr Burns though
Yeah, Wes really wasn't developed as a character. All he did was walk around with the same expression all the time. The flashbacks were nice and natural, but I guess it's too late.
It would be interesting though if she's the one who did it
In this episode they were desperately trying to make us care for Wes, but nope, doesn't do it for me.
I do think it works in-show, though. Provides characters with Useful Plot Grief.
I wonder if that was added last-minute, considered that the pussy-grabbing thing came out last October.
He wasn't proven wrong, as far as I remember. Sasha is 100% defined by her relationship with Bob, Tyreese and now Abraham. After Bob and Tyreese died, there was a whole season of Sasha being ptsd-ish because of their deaths.
Yeah that's moronic. You'd think they'd have a ballistic expert determine where the bullet came from, and they'd rule him out in no time.
This seems this show's answer to everything
Sasha represents all that's bad with character development in this show.
I remember reading an episode review here that nailed it. It begin with something like: how do you define Sasha? Try. You can't. You can only define her through her realationships with other characters (her brother Tyreese, Bob). The character has…
"His name is Robert Kirkson"
Because Sam banged a student, and he did it because he wasn't happy with her anymore, and that's because their baby died, and that's because Annalise got in trouble, and that's because Wes' mother wouldn't testify, and that's because of WES
affect its
Iraqi guy: "Laurel, I need to tell you something, turn off the recorder"
Later, Laurel storms through Annalise's class screaming "IT WASN'T HIS WEED, IT WAS HIS DAUGHTER'S!"
Is it watchable? I always took it as a stupid teenage crime story, because that's how my trusted friend - who watched it as a guilty pleasure - regards it.
I know it's not represented in this show, but it's still a common stereotype in american TV and films.
Maybe Americans don't notice it as much, but here in Europe everytime we see that in a movie, we go "Why do black characters always scream like that? Isn't this portrayal kinda racist?"
Philip is like Colin Hanks' character in Dexter Season 6. Lame, nobody finds him dangerous, but for some reason the show wants us to think he's a criminal mastermind.
Tell that to American screenwriters. There's always a fat, sassy black woman who wiggles her finger and talks with a strange accent.
He's also O-man, according to Asher.
Spanish definitely ("No manches, vete a la fregada"). The accent sounded Mexican to me