johnmora--disqus
John Mora
johnmora--disqus

At first I was surprised and thought that it meant that he had somehow left his phone at home or something but then I asked myself, "Then who's been texting her?!!" A part of me honestly wonders if they'll try to say he's been hiding out somehow in that apartment the whole time…

We shouldn't really be surprised; any show that can produce and keep around a character like Morgan is showing us its true face.

According to that quote, it sounds like he was trying to get out ahead of the people trying to claim that he infected them or didn't disclose his condition to them.

Not to mention Scranton.

Our DM always says, "I'm not trying to kill you! Remember, I control the ceilings. If I was trying to kill you, I'd just have the ceilings fall on you."

But imagine if they didn't!

I really think Mary Elizabeth Ellis is a secret ingredient that makes the show work as well as it does. If she's not there, or if she's not played at the right tone, the show would seem too horribly callous and cruel toward Stewart. Instead she's able to be supportive, loving and, when needed, a reality check without

I hadn't stopped to think that they're trying to make a trilogy with each movie's team not really knowing where the previous team was trying to head with their story. It should be, uh, interesting!

I actually went out with a guy who had a crush on Doug growing up.

From the use of the word "it" I don't think that's a GAY sex tape…

I don't know if the show isn't sure about its own message; I think a lot of it is purposefully ambiguous to allow the audience to draw its own meaning. When done skillfully, it's the method of storytelling I prefer the most, since it gets me to confront my own interpretations and presumptions of how the world works.

Well, she has faith in Miracle, it seems.

I don't think it's giving an answer one way or the other. I think it's very good at being an ink blot and people can read it as either being in support of religion or being an indictment of it. Both reads have their validity, in my opinion.

I like the fact that she's someone who is presented as struggling between self-interest and selflessness. I suppose I can relate. She's not a character who's making fantastic choices, but she's trying to put the pieces of her own life together and doesn't know how to effectively do so. That kind of describes the

PREACH

I love that whenever he comes back, they cut to a black and white clip of him hauling out his massive handgun. Nathan warping the minds of the young will never not make me laugh in public.

He couldn't even find his way out of the franchise if he had a golden compass!

Finally, an explanation!

I want to commend the cleverness/accuracy of this statement, but feel that "liking" the comment would be… in poor taste?

I was wanting to give it a shot, but never saw it on streaming sites…