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FleetFoxOliver
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Yeah, I feel the need to say the same thing. I think her biggest mistake was publishing in print what was clearly a joke-y riff made in a private conversation between friends. Too easily came across as a legitimate accusation.

He also graduated with a First from Oxford. Actually had one of the same professors as me!

Oh, for sure. But you should have realised by now that this show is not paying attention to any real sense of rap history. That was pretty obvious from the first episode, when Ezekiel magically started spitting complex rhymes at a time when the vast majority of raps were party chants. What's more, "Set Free" doesn't

Ah, yes! Thank you so much.

Can any eagle-eared readers point out which Carter Burwell score was used in that final sequence? I'm 99.9% sure it was from Being John Malkovich.

I'm usually never the one to predict major plot twists in movies and television, but I was pretty certain he was in correctional facilities by the end of episode 2. I was actually starting to think that it was too obvious to be true, and looked forward to seeing what the creator had up his sleeve instead.

Cool parent.

Yeah, Television is one of those musicians/groups that I always wonder: Why aren't they ever used in TV or films? MF Doom is another one.

Don't forget there's an implied rape from one of those animatronic apes.

You're terrible. Never change.

Please do pay for Hulu. Someone - other than me - needs to be watching Casual. Jason Reitman needs to eat!

He's "Lifetime handsome".

Well, I don't know if he and the woman from his apartment are still a couple (or getting it on). But I'm sure some physical contact was involved in producing their child… He's not a leper.

It seemed weird that she didn't ask him to wear a condom. Or that he didn't insist, either. What is this? The 1970s?

In a weird sense, I kind of liked seeing that creepier, more unethical side to Stone's character. It's as if the writers are saying "He's not a good guy… but he might be THE good guy in the story of Nas".

That got a surprisingly big laugh from me. I don't think it was really intended to serve any purpose, other than provide a cruel joke in a story full of them.

Mhmm, I have spent a while thinking about this myself. Perhaps, if I were to actually find myself in this situation, the cold logical and survivalist instinct of my brain would kick in and I would take the plea deal. But right now another part of me says that I could never bear to confess to a crime I didn't commit

How can she be held accountable for that? I mean, really? She was, like, five years old and curious about the female anatomy. It's the kind of stuff Freud wrote about pretty frequently.

Man, Craig Robinson is taking me on an emotional rollercoaster. The Office (That's good!") Mr Robinson (That's bad.) Mr Robot (That's good!) Caraoke Showdown (Can I go now?)

Except I don't think the show is going to continue in a logically sound way. I predict she'll choose not to pull the trigger and some "agreement" will be made between Daya and Humphries (and the several hundred inmates watching) that he won't report her threat if she keeps it secret that he brought a gun into the