judyhennessey--disqus
Mrs.Rittenhouse
judyhennessey--disqus

Come to think of it, "labor-worthy but otherwise weak" was Carol's late husband Ed's impression of her. And we know what became of Ed.

Doesn't mean that Carol didn't let herself be captured. Just means that Daryl wasn't happy about it. They probably argued over which one should be the decoy and Carol (and Noah) explain that it has to be someone perceived as labor-worthy but otherwise weak.

Rick's crew were on to Gareth's plan to divide them and lure the fighters to the school. Rick didn't take the bait; rather, he led his group away to lure Gareth's in, but never went to the school. It was much easier to handle Gareth's group in the confines of the church, than outside and in the dark. It was a

Possibly, but I hope that's not it. With Beth earlier, and with Lizzie and Mika more recently (and Clara and many others in between) I wouldn't see it as a fresh angle.

Bad Lip Readings … in print form!

Liked for the Sweeney reference.

Of course it was.

My first thought was (3) but later I thought of it more as a sign of Gareth's need to say, "I am in control here."

And Bob knew that Hershel's life had saved by a quick amputation. Either Bob would rather die than lose a limb, or Bob was bitten somewhere that doesn't lend itself to amputation. I think it's the latter, which is why the Terminus folk missed it.

This show featured a lot of scenes of people slowly walking into view as their heads appear over the crest of a hill. The opening scene was impressive but it became a sort of Wilhelm Scream after awhile.

I would like to see Raffalo from "The End of the World." She was a working-class alien from the future who had useful skills and a warm heart and died too soon.

Andrea was barefoot when she died. She kicked off her boots to be able to grab the pliers with her toes (prompting comments on her perfect pedicure).

It was an egg. There was no mother (or father) present; not until the hatchling itself laid a new egg. I am pro-choice but I think that you are going out of your way to find reasons to be offended. Yes, I "get" that the Earth is believed to be the mother of the moon, but the story line used an alternate origin.

After the football on the chessboard moment, the Doctor whistles the notes to "We don't need no education." Nice touch.

I was reminded of the "Cherokee Rose" episode of "The Walking Dead," in which Glenn agreed to be lowered into a well as bait for a walker, later asking himself how he could have mentally reduced the danger to a video game threat.

That's like saying that someone had to look up "Orc." If you read the book, you know the word. "Gulliver's Travels" is a classic that remains as readable as the Rings trilogy is (and, I think, is more relevant to today).

Good point. He not only was The Architect, he planted the thought. He called out _her_ guilt decisively.

Given the similarity of the ending to the ST:TNG pilot, "Encounter at Farpoint," perhaps Q was whispering in The Architect's ear.

@avclub-5824d6556d667e44db4870fcc6cbafa0:disqus did. (No pun intended.)

I think the only time we saw a boy actually eating a Popsicle was when Don took his kids on the road trip back to the former whore house.