joshuakaanaana--disqus
Joshua Kaanaana
joshuakaanaana--disqus

I hate seeing Linda (or any of the family) get so beat up in an episode but there was so much to learn about everyone. So much nuance. it was charming to say the least.

Grace symbolizes Alicia before she became privy to any affairs or scandals. She's Alicia's innocence since Alicia no longer has any claim to innocence. She's the idealism that Alicia wishes she could embrace again but can't because she's crossed the threshold of politics and corporate lawyering. I think Grace being

Perfect.

Here in T.v. land, at least with The Good Wife, we don't buck tropes, we transcend them.

As jarring as this emotional episode was, and as technical as an agreement I can make with the shallowness some plots delivered, I'm still stunned. I really felt like I was saying Goodbye to Kalinda. I really feel like Alicia has nowhere to go - no one to turn to. All her bridges are burned. So I'm just eagerly

Does anyone else feel a Florick, Agos, Lockhart job waiting for Andrew Wiley in the future? He's a great investigator and a damned thorn in their side forever. It's a wonder they haven't just hired him before (probably all those ethics he has).

So do you have an actual rebuttal or just utter outrage?

I think the e-mails are kept around for legal reasons. But it's just another example of bad writing and presentation.

Disagree.
It was a solid episode but had very little to believe in. For example, why do we keep such a loose grip on such important supporting characters like Cary and Kalinda? Their stories this season are not rewarding or multi-dimensional. When Cary was released from Prison, nothing changed. He just went back to