ikma--disqus
ikma
ikma--disqus

I'm just giving you a warning this time, @avclub-c65a46c16b70bf886e62e791cd4a80b3:disqus .

wow.  the use of 'carcass' rather than corpse or body really lends that sentence… i dunno. weight, or something.

can't tell if @avclub-525f76574b3a2a5bcb4da793c92a16fb:disqus or @avclub-1e2184e9a38acddfb65b66905ad70f9a:disqus or both are joking.

Can they not, though?

Seeing him actually outrun people yanked the suspended disbelief right out from under me.

I couldn't stop giggling at the Very Stinky Queef.

I dunno, I get a much, much more ruthless feel from Tywin.  For example, he didn't stop the torture because it was evil; he stopped it because it was inefficient.

I got all excited, and starting describing my ideal Joffrey deaths.

@avclub-d7f43e1fb2d4977c86163d9b0cb07814:disqus  I agree - I feel like Arya freeing those prisoners and Shae-As-Handmaiden are probably relevant to next week's epidose, and maybe they just didn't want us to forget between weeks?

he said, cautiously.

he said that he was a big time spice trader though, isn't that close enough?

damnit, i just realized that i missed a perfectly good "upping the tension" pun.

I was careful not to include any spoilers at all, but a mention of how scenes from the show differ from their counterparts in the book follows the jump.  Just thought I should be upfront about that.  And if anything I say offends anyone, let me know and I'll cut it.
















I think that was a mix of "look how smart Tywin is"

That was Roose Bolton walking with Robb after the battle.

wait, what?

that's right!

every week this season i've been watching it with my girlfriend ad a couple of her friends, and i giggled at the smokey-queef and had a hard time stopping.

*imagines fried afterbirth*

Cersei would be interesting in getting Pycelle's release to demonstrate to Tyrion that she isn't powerless.

I put this over on the newbies thread too, but this is a reasonable place to mention it - the rat thing was very similar to a scene from Temple of the Winds by Terry Goodkind.