I just want to come out and represent the fans who hate when the show goes more into single focus episodes instead of sketch-format. Single event episodes drag and drag and the funny parts would be better as short sketches.
I just want to come out and represent the fans who hate when the show goes more into single focus episodes instead of sketch-format. Single event episodes drag and drag and the funny parts would be better as short sketches.
Though I do wish writers had the balls to make the lead not being super amazing at her job and went to Harvard, etc. It's like on TV, there's stupid people and Harvard people, and no in between. Not to mention, more often than not, mental issues can interfere with the ability to focus on work. So you can easily…
I'm surprised the review had no comments about this episode's soundtrack. Aside from the obvious cocaine reference, also seems to be definitively older songs that would be favorites of someone Meg's age. It's very much 'her' soundtrack.
Hmm, that sounds less like a perspective on the human condition and more like a synopsis of the plot.
Because Lindeloff kept saying we would get no answers, I assumed the entire show really would just be about how people handle grief and experiencing something "seemingly" supernatural. All major religions and superstitions start out as a way to make sense of things in the world we don't understand or to give horrible…
I believe drinking the water was what got you to die all the way, instead of being in some "in-between" state. That's why he had to bring patti to the well and why he was warned not to drink it himself.
It was never confirmed that pillar man actually saw ghost Patti. He asked "who's your friend?" but that could have been because he saw Kevin talking out loud to someone.
Just in case people still don't get it, the scene you've described was also when Hobart told Cornelia (by strongly implying) that being his daughter in-law means he gets to fuck her whenever he wants. She's not paranoid or anything, he actually told her.
Because of the political ramifications for her own career! Are you not aware of the "family values" obsession in this country?
I think it's pretty obvious that Sheldon's deliberating over whether or not to watch "The Flash" was his own special Sheldon way (maybe unconscious, maybe not) of working out his potential desire to propose to Amy.
i like it too, it's so refreshing to see an atheist on TV that isn't supposed to be hated.
I also can't speak to the writer's intentions, and my own disgust with the AA treatment model may be influencing my perception, but I can't help but notice how Bill and his brother both refuse to acknowledge how their afflictions (impotence and alcohol abuse) are due to psychological problems.
AA and other programs with the same philosophy already give a bad name for themselves. They've been accused of being cult-like (possibly because it's religion-based, not science based) and sometimes dangerous by most of the psychiatric community because of their insistence on members declaring themselves "powerless"…
If zombies aren't being eaten by microbes, then what is making their flesh rot away?