hexqueen--disqus
hexqueen
hexqueen--disqus

My theory is that Saul does his Saul-like things out of a desperate need for money. I'm not sure what that need comes from, but Chuck institutionalized is a possibility.

Jimmy going into Los Pollos Hermanos for Mike and losing his watch in the garbage, I assumed. Really, these guys are at the point where they need to forget "fair and square" and acknowledge they're just going to keep owing each other.

Right. And Elizabeth was never able to seduce Don and had to resort to drugging him.

I had a different take on this. I thought Elizabeth was recalling how she nursed her mother when there was nobody else to help. How that made her feel strong and also useful. I felt kind of bad that Paige laughed at her, remembering what a good doctor Elizabeth was to her mother.

I'm going to miss this show. I was in tears at that scene between Norman and Dylan. There was so much there about dysfunctional families: Norman enabling his insanity, insisting everything will be great if they just deny reality, and Dylan crying out for what he wished his family could have been, mourning that it

After reading his interview with Alex, I believe it!

What a great interview. I could hear Highmore's voice in my head as I read it. He sounds like a very smart actor. I'll be looking forward to seeing him again.

There are still lots of rumors about what happened to Leon Czolgosz's body. Basically all of the bodies from that prison's executions were mishandled. They turn up in people's backyards:
http://buffalonews.com/2016…

Those facts were actually pretty fun.

Invention of Murder was a very good book. I also enjoyed it.

Oh hell yes. I would love to see that.

It might be time for a re-read of that!

I'll bet Varys already knew that, though. Still would be fun to watch.

I've seen The Seven Five like 4 times and it still always sucks me in. What a great documentary.

I'm with you. I realize this show needs long setups but this episode, I felt like we have officially gone overboard with setup. If I skipped it, I honestly wouldn't have missed much. I knew Paige as a spy was a bad idea, I knew she and Matthew were going to break up awkwardly, Gabriel said he was leaving last week,

I was thinking Israeli spy. Internal Affairs is awfully intriguing though!

I guess this is where I lose the argument. Jimmy failure at the Santa Fe law firm had nothing to do with Chuck. Jimmy wasn't going to be the kind of lawyer Chuck wanted him to be, ever, not with all the support in the world. I think Chuck was wrong because he never told Jimmy that and blamed HHM's failure to hire

I posted above but I'm super late to the party. I think the sheriff was lying to prompt Norman to prove her wrong by giving her the exact location of Sam's body.

I got the feeling the sheriff was making it up. Of course she didn't think Norman was lying but he was being vague and wouldn't say where the body was. We know he was being vague because he doesn't remember what happens when he's Norma. I thought she was goading him, expecting him to say, Nuh-uh, I'm telling the

My husband and I watch together every week, and we usually don't like the same shows. But we're both like, how could anyone not love the Americans?