I think Carol/Cheryl actually just said it during the argument in the elevator last episode, didn't she? She straight up accused him of being a Krieger clone.
I think Carol/Cheryl actually just said it during the argument in the elevator last episode, didn't she? She straight up accused him of being a Krieger clone.
I can't call this show an F because we still need some sub-level somewhere to be able to sink farther down the line. And I acknowledge that I'm mostly just hate-watching at this point, but this episode made me question whether I even want to do that anymore.
I'm so glad you said this.
And if you don't mind a little incest (as the Supernatural folks clearly don't) there's also Simon and Simon.
No, just seven. D.R. Darke misspoke.
Well, let's not quite say that…
Despite everything though, I was sad and disappointed that they had Diane come back in the finale just for them to not get together. (That is what happened right? I'm not misremembering am I?)
Along those same lines (and I don't know if it's corny to admit) but I grew up on and have a special affinity for Jonathan and Jennifer Hart.
Just off the dome…Gunsmoke, with Dillon and Miss Kitty? That's beginning in 1955. I suspect a real tv-connoisseur could do better. Probably something in the early-fifties or on radio? So, I don't think I agree with you there.
"Transfer to Washington. Transfer to Jefferson. No one at Westerberg is going to let you play their reindeer games."
That's Damien?!? I totally didn't make the connection. Thank you so much!
What's Tofu about? Is it from the same showrunner?
I haven't but I once had a heavy daily flirtation with a guy who I only discovered was married with a kid many months into it. I had casually inquired into where he was planning to spend his Christmas holiday. And his equally casual reply? "Oh, on Staten Island with the in-laws!" Afterward, he had the nerve to be…
I think it's more about the nature of secrets. Like with Edith and the Drewes. Mr. Drewe could have saved his wife a bit of agony if he'd confided in her from the start (or at least once Edith started to become a nuisance) that Marigold was hers. But he couldn't because it wasn't his secret to tell. Same happened with…
I'm not saying I think this but you make Mary sound like a sociopath. That's rough.
Interesting assertion…I did wonder why Rosamond was so invested in helping. Makes sense actually.
It wasn't her responsibility to tell Mrs. Drewe, it was Mr. Drewe's and technically it wasn't really his secret to tell (which doesn't make a ton of sense to us in this day and age but did to them then). I believe he should have confided in his wife and possibly averted the heartache that ensued but again, he needed…
I kept wondering who the hell Madge was, until I realized she's a relative of Vera, Maris and Louis Litt's assistant Norma on Suits.
It's like you don't remember the dead Turk in her bed in Season one! Mary was able to learn her lesson aided and abetted by, like, half the staff of the house. Unfortunately, as is the case with the put-upon "middle-child", Edith has to learn things the really hard way.
I think you have really valid points about how his death will (or more likely won't) affect the group and impact the narrative. They didn't make as compelling a case for Tyreese as moral compass as they did for Dale or Hershel. He also didn't have as much time as the others to make an impression. At one point or…