I'd just love to see her try out her "but there was 4 doctors in the room!" defense in a wrongful death lawsuit; might not be quite as compelling as she thinks, after all.
I'd just love to see her try out her "but there was 4 doctors in the room!" defense in a wrongful death lawsuit; might not be quite as compelling as she thinks, after all.
At this point, Owen would be better off getting himself on a TV reality show, like, The Surgeon Wants A Baby, where after 12 weeks and many dates with willing hosts, he lands on a compatible uterus to impregnate. It would be at least a deep as his relationship with Amelia, AND he finally gets the kid he always…
Yes, I am aware. How she got there still doesn't excuse Bailey's behaviour once she was involved.
So true! I miss Laura San Giacomo. :(
It was more her continued attitude after she was involved that grated on me. Absolutely, in his current predicament, Karev shouldn't have suggested the whipple procedure right there in front of the patient—but him being relegated to the clinic also doesn't suddenly negate his medical competency (which the show seems…
If there was a spin-off that was JUST about Karev going around punching people in the face, I would want Bailey to get punched in every episode. For a start, how that clinic and any of its patients ever survive considering there's apparently never a surgeon willing to go over there is beyond me, but Bailey allowing…
But we got to see the Eeny Meeny close-up game twice; that's what matters, right?! ;)
"Worse, any moments of happiness are completely squashed by whatever happens next. It comes to a point where viewers come to dread any breath of joy or life, because they can expect it to be snatched away in a few episodes."
This is honestly the only reason I wish I'd DVD'd it, because I didn't recall him retrieving the axe before climbing up on the RV, though that must be what they intended to portray. I think the whole sequence was just poorly shot/edited.
We fundamentally disagree on what "straight to the point" means, I think.
I think it's a side effect, also, of having just so many characters. We can't possible be expected to give a shit about them all, and yet the writers do seem to want that to be the case, trying to force feed us poignancy where none has been earned. In diluting the pool so much, they also risk damaging established…
For me, it's more that Rick's character has been so erratic, while Daryl and Carol have both had more steady, sensible progression arcs (at least until the end of last season, where Daryl started doing some weird shit, like forgetting how to track). All Andrew Lincoln is good for lately is behaving like a raving…
I mean, I do get it. TBH I'm not a huge fan of a lot of Zach's reviews; I think the process he describes above, writing them in ad breaks in a rush to get them out, often leads to him overlooking obvious things. Generally I find the comments section to be way more enlightening/entertaining, even if they aren't…
Classic Rick.
Nothing is stopping you from making your comments. If people agree, or even if they don't, then suddenly you're having a discussion! It's just that easy!
But…so? They clearly continue to cover it because it generates huge numbers of clicks and comments, but no one here is owed a conforming opinion, either from the review or the comments. Frankly, petulant comments like this that add nothing to the discussion but "Wahhh, everyone hates the thing I love why don't they…
I especially liked the part where you upvoted yourself.
What you're looking for is a fan community, then, not a generalist pop culture website.
I think that's a bit of the problem, to be honest: what works in the comics doesn't necessarily work for TV. It's much easier to skim over a lot of written text quickly but still retain the message, whereas here, Negan's rambling worked to undermine the tension of the scene for many of us.
*Negan summarily tenderizes everyone who calls him Shirley*