Yeah, it's possible. But I'd be surprised if Roose isn't constantly expecting Ramsay to kill him. It's not like he doesn't know Ramsay's a psycho.
Yeah, it's possible. But I'd be surprised if Roose isn't constantly expecting Ramsay to kill him. It's not like he doesn't know Ramsay's a psycho.
It's so weird that cartoons are better at this. Like Bob's Burgers.
My husband was a professional chef. TV never seems to realize that's a 60 to 80 hour a week job. And you smell bad at the end of a shift. And you work with crazy people. And it doesn't even pay very well. How did it become a TV glamour job? Like Monica on Friends. She worked like 5 hours a week and made more money…
Littlefinger has the army of the Vale, the only army that hasn't been involved in the war yet. He has control of Jon Arryn's heir. And he has Cersei's permission to take Winterfell. Plus he's supposedly aligned with the Tyrells, who I think will be asking him for favors soon.
Ramsay's not that important. I say Littlefinger!
Possible, possible, but I think Ramsay still needs Roose to lead the army. But as someone else noted in the thread, I wouldn't want to be Walda Bolton. Ramsay will probably take her out first.
Ramsay dies this season. It's just a question of how. I think he's going North to look for Sansa, and I don't think he knows he's going to run into wildings, direwolves, Bran powers, Melisandre powers, and resurrected Jon. He thinks he knows the North? Ha ha ha, I can't wait.
I can't even imagine what could take Roose out. I'm not sure an asteroid could do it. He probably sleeps in an underground bunker.
Is Podrick's father the guy who cut off Ned's head, I think it's Ilyn Payne?
I'd bet against that, but it does seem more probable than Davos or Ellaria.
I'm Doug, and for the last decade, I've had mesothelioma.
I respectfully disagree that pandering is only used as a term for black voters. In this very thread, we discussed pandering to young voters. Pandering to women voters is alive and well. And I'm sure there are many panders I missed.
Another incredibly awesome awkward conversation between Norma and Dylan. I love her taunt for Dylan to say what he's going to say and hear how stupid it sounds. Then he says he thinks Norman has a violent side and doesn't remember everything he does. Sound stupid, Norma? Not really, huh?
So many "Oh, Norma, No!" moments in this episode.
Wait, Littlefinger arranged a good marriage. It's not his fault Ramsey screwed it up, and Roose knows Ramsey's the one who screwed up. The Boltons chose to cut ties with the Lannisters after Tywin died. Of course, if Littlefinger marches north with the army of the Vale, then they might want to kill him. But right now,…
I'm waiting for Ramsey to go north to find Sansa and run into the wildlings and die a horrible death.
Most of Jaime's dissatisfaction with Cersei happened when he was in the field, and I think they're going to do that storyline this season.
He doesn't have any connection to Brienne by this point in the books, but otherwise, yes. He's busy subduing the Tullys and is alienated from Cersei.
I think Littlefinger expected more from Stannis. He really thought Stannis was the greatest general in Westeros, and I think he expected the Baratheon and Bolton armies to decimate each other.
Yes, it did. Roose said that with Tywin dead, the Lannisters were never going to help the Boltons again. And he noted that the Lannisters never tried to bring an army to the North. So he didn't feel he was losing much by using Sansa to consolidate his position.