Explore our other sites
  • jalopnik
  • kotaku
  • quartz
  • theroot
  • theinventory
    esmeraldabeatricekodak--disqus
    ebk
    esmeraldabeatricekodak--disqus

    I think Tina and Zeke are a better pairing.

    A doctor who played by the rules would probably save just as many lives, maybe more. He or she just wouldn't save people quite as doomed as the kinds of patients your rule-breakin', high-risk-takin', maverick-bein' types like best (many of which patients would almost certainly die).

    Yeah, that was for her half of the house.

    Very USA.

    Those were so plainly NOT lilies.

    I get it. His accent doesn't bother me, but sometimes I come across an actor whose natural accent has been influenced by another, and the fact that it's neither fish nor fowl nor good red meat throws me.

    It's just a New Zealand accent flattened/distorted by years of living in the United States. He's not trying for an American accent.

    And off key? 'Cause she sure couldn't sing in college.

    But whom is she going to strangle?

    That last is a really good idea. Of course, though it has a core cast, Z NATION more or less already does that.

    Sure would. During a stretch when I was trying not to smoke, I once found an unopened pack of cigarettes—harsh generics, no less—that had been forgotten on a shelf for ten years and more or less chain-smoked 'em up forthwith. They were delicious.

    I was thinking how lucky I am to have had cataract surgery recently, so in a zombie/roamer /walker/biter apocalypse I could just lay in a cache of readers instead of being dependent on a lone pair of prescription glasses that would inevitably break.

    Thank you from me, too. I just came here to complain about this; now I don't have to.

    Saying that the scene between Jimmy and Chuck "was as brutal as anything George RR Martin could conceive" in no way suggests that "Martin doesn't know shit about emotional violence." In fact, it says that GRRM sets a standard that, impressively, Gilligan & Co. met.

    Sure.

    The thing is, by all accounts, in real life she didn't cry, and making the character "Marcia Clarke" do so was a cliché.

    Suggesting a diet of white foods for a digestive disorder isn't particularly old timey.

    Oh, I'm familiar with the cliche. I was just making a very wee joke.

    Snacks were on sale in your church? I had no idea this went on.

    Even if it wasn't a crime scene, it seems insane that the defense was permitted to dress it to cast their client in the best light.