gest11--disqus
Gest
gest11--disqus

Also to me, now.

If it's this bad here, I hate to think what's happening in Euro-Westworld

The way he was talking to William with actual concern in his voice was pretty humanising, I thought. He's genuinely worried about how his friend is going off the rails in the park and getting too invested, and it's a sharp bit of motivation to give him, as opposed to just "evil is fun."

The Walking Dead was one of the few places on TV you could see people more two-dimensional than Trump's political persona.

Is this as good as I think it is or do I just think it's really good because it's a new Prince song?

Yeah, but this study is probably bullshit.

No, no, it'll take far longer than that.

Actually, at Trump rallies that's the exact opposite of what gets overheard.

I've got a reason. It doesn't taste all that good. Kind of gamey.

If it follows the pattern of the books then the first season will be an engaging mystery with elements that you don't normally see in comedic writing, and the second will be rambling nonsense that was clearly written out of some contractual obligation.

Yeah, Trump supporters are more into some of the subtle mood stuff off Nebraska

Nah they run against each other. You know, someone who at least seems to take things seriously, who is known to have possibly damaging business interests in their past and an equally well known spouse, facing off against an unpredictable opponent who is known to speak off the top of his head and who's recorded gaffes

So few directors dare to even dream of brighter projection when they imagine the stories they might one day tell.

Yeah, but you'd want to avoid the Skittles.

Yeah, but making fun of Junkie Gary is considered to be poor taste by the rest of them.

It's part of the contract he signed when he bought it. It has to be stolen in a heist by Marie Curie and the members of the Wu Tang Clan, otherwise he's obligated to keep it to himself.

But we have got to do it from different angles. Again and again. And again and again and again.

I mean, I guess it was wrong for me to assume it was about the death of a cartoon bluebird from an old Disney movie, but dammit, it still seems right.

The real monster turning out to be man.

Is that going to become a plot point? It kind of has to, right? Seeing two guests come into conflict?