hollywont--disqus
Hollywont
hollywont--disqus

The conversation I think was about whether she wanted to keep the child, and she waved Qyburn off. He's given her abortion drugs before (like when Lancel knocked her up in Season 2).

She already had a fourth, with Robert Baratheon, who died in infancy. Her "black-haired son."

She'd be 39 in the show's timeline. Clam down, people get pregnant that age and older all the time without intervention.

Without breathing

"the roof of the palace has a gaping hole letting all of the Snow in to cover the Throne."

How has Jorah not noticed that Jon is swinging his father's Valyrian steel sword? Even moreso than the jealousy over Dany, that's a priceless Mormont family heirloom, and he doesn't even want to ask Jon about how he came to have it?

Lyanna wasn't from Dorne

Obviously Cersei will be the one to find this out

Sam mansplained his way over the most crucial reveal of the season

"Little brother" could be the fetus…

They turn into a wight, not a WW, and only if the Night King summons it

She's not that old. She was 16 when she had Joffrey.

When she's meeting with Qyburn just before Jamie comes in, he offers to "give her something for it," and she shoos him away. Qyburn gave her abortion drugs in season 2 or thereabouts too, when Lancel knocked her up. If she's lying, she's got Qyburn fooled as well. I think she's really pregnant.

I think you're correct, but she at least left the castle to walk the castle gardens or visit the Sept of Baelor periodically (before she blew it up).

I keep thinking back to what Robert Baratheon mused to Cersei way back in S1:

Same goes for us, really. We the viewers have seen the dragons decimate Slaver's Bay and the House of the Undying, but they were baby dragons then. This is Drogon, fully grown and on his own, laying waste to an entire army. His brothers didn't even need to get out of bed for it.

The casual misogyny in that line in the review made my eyes pop.

Tyrion has never been this inept a military strategist before. Never.

We didn't ever know what happened to that sword after Joffrey died, and it looks like in "next week on GOT" that we will see the whereabouts of the catspaw dagger from S1 (last in Ned Stark's possession). The show runners are doing an inventory of all the available Valyrian steel in Westeros as it's going to become

Yes, it definitely feels like we are getting set up for Chekhov's direwolf