Edited to remove stupidity. Which, unfortunately in this case, was the entire comment.
Edited to remove stupidity. Which, unfortunately in this case, was the entire comment.
"'Scuse me while I dis the Skye!" *air guitars*
The transformation of Slippin' Jimmy to Saul Goodman took a brief side turn through Better Spill McGill territory this episode.
He basically just made a cameo as Better Spill McGill.
I believe Petra's now the majority owner, as Luisa gave her 33% over to Petra in addition to Petra's one-third. That said, I have no idea how the hotel business or any of this is supposed to work.
Indeed. The "hoorah!" to "hey…" ratio was a little lacking in Chapter Fifteen. Still, much as I found Jane to be somewhat annoying in this installment, I appreciate that the character as written has many traits and facets that compete against themselves for daily dominance. Like many of us, she's awash in…
I actually don't want Xo to move out of Abuela's house, because I love them so much together. I think I'm more of a proponent of the Villanueva women sticking together than I am of Jane ending up with either Michael or Rafael.
I'd watch this.
Why are you guys so grouchy about Oscar?
That sounds like just the kind of thing Mr. Porn J. Rat-Beard Poopy-Pool III would try to do.
While I enjoyed her attempt at a substitute, I have to say: there would be no toilet pool big enough to handle my needs were I to eat four raisin balls of that size.
Agreed. I would totally watch House of Dunbards.
I think this was the best acting I've yet seen from Raymond J. Barry. I felt his portrayal of Arlo was rarely three-dimensional and thus I was never too impressed by his work on Justified. But his scene with Cage this episode was staggering stuff.
Maybe Echo (the name my closed-captioning gave for the Grounder Bellamy released and put in charge) will remember Bellamy's heroics and lead a charge to help the 45 remaining Sky People.
What I'm wondering is: how much of Lexa's decision was really an emotional heart-not-head reaction to Clarke's refusal to include Lexa in her vision of what she wants for the future ("Nothing. I want my people back. I can't think past today.")?
This show. This fucking show right here. A bevy of betrayals. (Plus: Monroe!) Gripping stuff, I tells ya. I have been thoroughly gripped.
American Gun blows those away.
Yes. This is my preferred portmanteau.
On this episode of Agents of B.L.A.M.E., everyone eats up episodic airtime with blame assignments instead of actual assignments. Which ultimately makes me grade it as more of a B (LAME) effort. Everybody b Trippin', though. And I don't want them all to be laughing a lot less, that's for sure.
Probably left his passport at home.