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Evan
esquared86--disqus

They might do it for some Emmy bait though…

I love the priority shift when that scene happens. They have the mutants locked up for interrogation… and then all of a sudden nobody gives a damn because shit goes sideways.

He's on Skagos in the books. AND… the fleet from Night's Watch gets stranded there because 'there are dead things in the water' to quote the book. And Davos is sent there by Manderly to get back his liegelord.

But he also ran the risk of kick-starting the civil war earlier, which is a huge boon to the south because northern rail capacity, industry and population was nowhere near what it would become in 1860.

Season 2 told one of the best murder mysteries put to TV in the last decade so I was enthralled with it regardless. But I'm still baffled by the choice to have FIVE protagonists in a 10 episode run. If you remove Woodrugh the plot stays literally exactly the same (unless more people die in the shootout) and you're

Sadly, I posted above the same sentiment and read yours. We're in agreement! House of Cards is so mediocre and I don't really understand Frank's motivations anymore. He doesn't even look like he wants to be president…

Boss is what House of Cards should have been.

It was pretty great until the last fifteen minutes. If you left the movie before the climax I think I'd call it pretty fun.

That fact always blows me away because last time he was in town he was so hammered he could barely walk. Anyone not a full fledged alcoholic would have passed out with the amount he consumed.

100,000 wildlings, many who fled back to the north and the vast majority of whom aren't soldiers. Then there's the battle itself and the Hardhome. The wildlings are pretty much done as a society at this point.

My dad always said that the biggest German atrocity committed was letting that Austrian family escape over the mountains.

He nailed his role in Up in the Air, I kind of felt the same way about him before i saw that one.

As a straight up murder mystery there were not better on TV last year. But yes, there were problems.

I wasn't around in the 19th century, but I still think the era is cool and own a few odds and ends from it. You don't have to have been alive to think something is cool or different.

In Dorne I kind of assumed that he was so bent on keeping the peace he completely missed the fact that everyone loathed him for it and the guards were either in on it or welcomed it. In the TV world at any rate, book Dorne is much better fleshed out.

Yara let her brother feel her up, awesome indeed (if you're into that sort of thing).

The Middle does a pretty decent job of a family more-or-less struggling to stay afloat.

My theory is that Clarke hams up how bumbling and his cowardice so the people who know him couldn't even envision a world where Clarke could be Superman. Any day now Lois is going to realize what a goof he is and dump his ass.

There was a massive influx of well educated men who wound up as officers as the army exploded in size. Many of those were lawyers, teachers and others from the liberal arts discipline as well as the aristocracy. Hence all the poetry,

Not so. Haig knew about the insanity, he was the one who absolutely begged for tanks when they were initially used, he was against many of the monstrous battles in 1916 but the politicians in London were worried about the French collapse.