also what did Jimmy said exactly during this conversation that's incriminating of anything?
also what did Jimmy said exactly during this conversation that's incriminating of anything?
Let's not forget that what Jimmy did was pretty shitty in the first place.
how I saw it is Gus saw (on the CCTV probably) that Jimmy was (very obviously) spying on the other guy, he came out pretending to clean, while somehow signaling the bag guy to call off the deal (or even not needing to); and spy on Jimmy while he met with Mike outside, also beautifully turning the table again against…
the whole restaurant scene is very well shot, very naturalistic in a way, but very tense. You know they're onto him, yet nothing happens really.
the freaking brilliant idea of the show was to figure the belters with a strong cultural identity, with their own Creole. Besides giving the show's world so much depth, it is very relevant to actual situations today. "Creole" is essentially linked with the story of colonisation and slavery; and today is a language…
my theory is he's bland on purpose to make the rest of the cast shine (and they do).
oups. didn't bother scrolling down. in my defense 1252 comments as of now.
wait..I was pretty sure that Chuck asked Ernesto to change the batteries on purpose for him to hear the confession, for a scheme that will become clear later (like maybe propagating the rumor amongst lawyers). I thought the show was making this clear for us (He was grinning at the end). Did the writer totally missed…
isn't the whole media system already Trump-centric?
also for an intersting twist on the "embeded" concept:
https://twitter.com/RoguePO…
I think I was around 22 when I saw it first, because everybody kept pestering me about it. Should have kept the mystery, because I really didn't see what people see in those movies. As cheap entertainment goes, I prefer back to the future.
do that again and I'll tell what "rosebud" means in Citizen Ken.
that would make them very good actresses. The shows does paint them as being totally depressed since we saw them first.
I agree.
so when he has a chance to kill Negan, he blows it? I don't see how this plan wasn't pretty safe and pretty smooth.
carol:"so is everybody fine?" *mumbling to my screen yes everybody's fine*
Daryl: (long pause) "yes, everybody's fine"
I think the shows kind of makes the point there is no free will. only more convoluted interactions of causes and effects, and that the only meaning you can find in this world is understanding those causes and effects. At the end maeve chooses not to get away from the park but to act on what truly affects her, her…
the carpenter vibe is not only from the score, it's from the whole garbage people setup, which is totally goofy, and not consistant at all with the tone of the show. at this point who cares.
there was a very unusual, a bit surreal tone to this episode. not bad though.
of course it's mostly for laughs, but sometimes Jon Oliver stunts have a very modest impact, like the one about Snowden and dick pics that got americans a little interested in privacy. He also encouraged people to protest, to call congressmen, and those things hopefully have some impact on the situation, however small…
about this, and to anyone still reading, a very interesting
article that looks at how the US press perceived the rise of Hitler and
Mussolini in the 20s and 30s. From dismissing them as a joke, to being
half supportive.
(again not saying Trump = Nazi = Hitler. just saying look at the similarities between the past and…