Jennifer Lewis.
Jennifer Lewis.
1) The helicopter hairdo was a real thing, not something they made up for the show. Google can be your friend when writing a review and calling something into question.
2) The "Bomb" product name might've also been a nod to the "Bomb" malt liquor in 'Bamboozled'.
Yes, I was just about to say what BJK said. No more 77 course wedding feasts…
That's Grenn. Grenn the Builder.
MechaHodor FTW!
I'm going to agree that it's a failure. Sure, it's more plasusible, but to then have a character go on and on about how unassailable the Eyrie is kind of undermines the design choice (never mind that it then makes you wonder why they'd call it The Eyrie; and if it's that close to the ground, where exactly is the Moon…
He's a shrewd and cunning potential adversary, who happens to have zero allies of influence. He's a good target.
Am I the only one that couldn't look at Karl without seeing a poor man's Willem Dafoe?
Also, she lost her virginity to him and got pregnant by him before she married Jon Arryn. She's been in love with him a long time.
It's never directly mentioned, but given the ridiculous amounts of money they've spent on the wars, the inordinate sums they lent to Robert when he was king (which will never be repaid), etc etc, it definitely felt believable, even if it was never explicitly stated.
X-Men 2 (if you want to call it sci-fi)
I'd also throw out there that it aired right after 9/11. So, while I've *never* met anyone that has seen BoB and not loved it, I've met a tremendous amount of people who've just never seen it. (Even though I swear AMC replays the entire thing every Veteran's Day; which is usually how I end up rewatching it.)
It's grim. Really, really, really grim. Band of Brothers I can watch every time I come across it. The Pacific, I watched once (the whole miniseries), and felt "yeah, I don't need to see this again."
For the way they dropped when he shot them, it certainly appeared like he killed them at first, but you're right, they were definitely alive on the ground afterward.
Yes, that's pretty much exactly what I just said.
I also want to throw out there that nowhere in this show is it implied or stated that rape is a throwaway event that nobody bats an eye at. Half the guys on the Night's Watch are THERE because they're "rapers." Now, it's true that they have no concept of spousal rape, but neither did we even a hundred years ago, never…
True, but nobody in-story knows, or even expects, that.
"Why would Bran and co. happen to stumble across Craster's, a single longhouse in what is literally hundreds of miles of snow-covered forest?"
He's not hunting Jon; he was sent to find Bran and Rickon. With no leads, the smart place to start is with the one guy they'd be most likely to seek out - their brother.
I don't think it's so much of a twist than a further revealing. From the prologue of A Game of Thrones alone, it seemed like the White Walkers are pretty obviously sentient and organized, and the wights that they make out of their slain enemies are just mindless drones, and not the White Walkers themselves.