Pretty good, but Wesley was never a healer, whether in his backstory or on screen.
Pretty good, but Wesley was never a healer, whether in his backstory or on screen.
Yeah, Choo Choo didn't make me laugh. It seems the show made fun of a mentally disabled character for being not smart, which is pretty fucking gross. I didn't find the scene where Raylan talks circles around him funny; I felt pity for the guy.
Depending on how the character is treated further, I may go from pity for…
Oh I wasn't being sarcastic or anything; I really think it's a beautiful little piece of writing to once in a while just have someone spill it all to the cops the first opportunity they get.
I love the prostitute just spilling all that backstory to Raylan. I mean the writers could have come up with some other creative way to give that info, but her just laying it all out, at length, to the first cop who walked in, was hilarious.
Holt wouldn't have to interact with Wuntch if it wasn't for his job.
If she has a limited supply, and realizes that being discovered would very likely lead to death by vampire? Then I can see her only using it in cases where she is pretty sure about how they would react to it, instead of trying to experiment with it. It's a call you can debate, sure, but it's not obviously the wrong…
Is there any discussion of The Originals around this site? Or some other lively community somewhere?
It's her mom, and she has the supercharged emotions of a vampire. There's no way Caroline, even with her obsessiveness, would have stood idle for 24 hours when she already had a "cure" for her dying mother.
It'd be funny if the crime that brings down Boiled Chowder, I mean Boyd Crowder, would be the nearly pointless murder of pathetic Dewey.
Man in the High Castle was pretty good, though a bit earnest. It does allow for moments like the truck driver realizing the origin of the ash that's been gently drifting down on his half-eaten sandwich, though.
We don't see Fara being aware of it, but the audience is absolutely shown that Max is crushing on her. The show didn't make a big thing out of it in previous episodes, that's all.
Can going off to war really be considered a mark of adulthood when 17-year-olds can do it (with parental consent)?
Roslyn wasn't a school teacher, she was something like a minister of education. Others just call her a glorified school teacher as a putdown.
As a member of an ethnic minority that's usually held to be stealing jobs and being secretly Muslim, I sure don't.
Yeah, the lack of video surveillance footage or other electronic surveillance on the part of the hotel was something I thought about during the scene with the manager.
Nora didn't alter the police, and in the huddle no one else saw it happen. How should the police have gotten involved in the situation?
All her interviews are filmed. If she had been checking the wrong box, it would have been discovered immediately by her supervisors.
Easy fix! Don't say racist things anymore.
Why would it be "patently ridiculous" for the reporter not to put the interview on the web? It's clear he was threatening to go to a paper so he could extort hush money from Gretchen's employer, which he notes has a big budget for that sort of thing.
A shapeshifter can always choose to look white* when being black exposes him to racism. A person of color doesn't have that option. This makes their daily life utterly, fundamentally, constantly different. Grouping them together like the reviewer does when addressing ethnic diversity in a show is utterly laughable in…