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Jon O'Neal
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I don't think so. Even a character invoking his name or Daniel visiting his family was devastating to me.

This is what I think. When Trey's house was searched they found a scrunchie in a locked ammo box in his shed which was never brought up again. I figured Trey was obsessed with Hannah.

A lot of Daniel's growth in this season was about letting go of the past and looking for hope. It really didn't matter that it was Chloe but that it was some indicator that he wants to keep living and move on to something better. I think if Kerwin, for instance, was in that final scene people would believe that it

I don't know if I've ever been so obsessed or dedicated to a television show in my life to the point that when I read that the finale was titled "All I'm Sayin'" my chest got a little tight remembering Daniel's reunion with Kerwin in the pecan grove.

If only there was a white person one could easily reference as being the clear epitome of evil. Perhaps one whose name is routinely invoked during arguments on the internet.

Oh shit, you're right that Kerwin does say that during their reunion. In particular, he's telling Daniel how lucky he is to be alive and free and that he can go to that pecan grove any time he wishes.

I think you could say all of those things about Daniel.

I think it's him trying to put in practice what he learned from therapy to him lashing out when stressed. Like people who try and better themselves, his path is not a straight line as he'll relapse when he loses control. So him breaking into his former home, him personally repo'ing the rental rims, and him revealing

I don't see it completely that way. I read that him saying he's not going to corner her (and then he does, and the direction makes this clear) in the same way you did but Teddy sees that their marriage is on life support and pulls the plug because he (correctly?) believes that's the best thing for Tawney. I don't

Yeah, I read the joke the way shia labeouf interpreted initially but that article Jost linked leaves no wiggle room.

That's what I interpreted the joke to be as well. That being said, as soon as I heard the joke I knew there was going to a big backlash and was a little disappointed I didn't see any criticism of it in the review of that episode or the comments itself (when I checked, at least).

Yeah, I never bought the argument that Akira couldn't just be set in America because, aside from being heavily inspired by the nuclear bombings of Japan, the actual work isn't so uniquely Japanese that it couldn't be adapted as starring Americans in Neo New York (which is such a dumb name that I hope this live action

Right, that's what I assume when I see this argument elsewhere but I started to doubt myself when Editor Type claimed that this definition was the "entire definition of racism."

I feel like I'm opening myself up to abuse for sincerely asking this question but where are you getting that definition? I checked dictionary.com and Merriam-Webster and the first few definitions line up with how people in general perceive the definition (and don't mention how it's impossible to be racist against a

I think there's also a chainsaw duel in the middle of Phantasm II. Despite how implausible it is, chainsaw fights always make me giddy.

That's so very typical of the behavior I've come to expect of Yoko.

That song's okay.

Get people to vote for Hillary, apparently.

I think the dreamlike atmosphere will return eventually. It's hard to say because I haven't rewatched full episodes of the show but I think the ephemeral nature of some scenes sticks out more because those are often the really great scenes. So I think one can confuse that the show is predominantly like that when it

I think it's more around 3 or 4 months but you're right.