kirstencorby--disqus
Kirsten Corby
kirstencorby--disqus

No, I've been wondering about that too. "Night's King" is a legendary figure from Northern mythology, a Lord Commander of the Night's Watch who fell in love with a lady White Walker (ugh) and went over the wall to raise an army and make war on the world of men. And thsi was thousands of years ago. No one has any

A nobleman can demand a trial by combat, yes, but the person they ask to be their champion has a right to refuse. Remember, Bron refused to be Tyrion's champion at his trial.

It would be interesting to see her and the Dowager Countess Violet in an old lady put-down contest.

That's why he's called The Blackfish — he's the "black sheep" of the family, and the Tully sigil is a fish, so someone called him Blackfish as a joke once and it stuck.

Weren't the Ottoman Janissaries eunuchs? I think that's who the Unsullied were based on. They were indeed feared, fanatical warriors

In the books, Berric Dondarrion certainly did. It was much clearer in the books that he was undead, not miraculously healed. We'll see how it goes with Jon.

Good point.

He (Jon) did discuss it with Dolorous Edd and then he bugged out and left Edd in charge. Who could blame him?

And is a lot less stupid.

What? he has great chemistry with Varys. They were made for each other.

It's what he wanted. He wanted to be on the show but not commit to a whole season.

Pretty sure she was writing to Robin Arryn or Littlefinger at Moat Cailin. She needs an army. They have an army.

Well no, if he's a true Faceless Man, he wouldn't. They are supposed to have no personality, no desires. Be No One.

But Sam's going to need it to fight at the Wall. He's earned it.

Yes, it certainly does.

Thank god they took care of it in one scene. In earlier seasons they could have dragged that out for five episodes, Walking-Dead style.

That's what i thought too. She just didn't want to get tangled up in explaining that whole Littlefinger mess.

In the books it says amputation at the first sign of greyscale can sometimes cure it, but not always. I can't imagine how you "cure" someone with dragonfire without killing them in the process.

I think she is probably a better priestess than Melisandre, and was able to correctly divine Varys's past from her fire visions. Man, the look on his face. She scared the crap out of him.

Didn't she ask him at one point, where are you going to go? Or, what are you going to do? Which implied to me that he had told her what had happened. Because if she didn't know things had changed, why would she even ask that question? Otherwise, wouldn't she just assume he would continue being the Lord Commander of