laurgaryen
Laurgaryen
laurgaryen

Famously the son of Woody Allen and Mia Farrow

He’s 29 now, but yes, he is Doogie Howser. He graduated from Bard College at the age of 15 then started at Yale law school at 16. He’s member of the New York Bar. He had already done a stint at the State Department before he started a career in journalism. His resume is pretty insane.

The closing credits (all Rebecca Bunch except where noted)

This episode may have devastated me more than any other, and it’s not like it’s CXG’s first devastating moment, or even its tenth. But while Rebecca’s desolate walk down the street after an ill-advised hookup was heartbreaking enough, I think the moment I related to most came at the beginning. I’ve been in that

Loved Nathanial and his stuffed alligator. He needs another trip to the zoo.

That’s really not relevant. At all. White Josh is an adult and he was an adult when he met Darryl.

If Tom Cruise’s romantic leads can consistently be in their 20s, then let’s not make simple gay male sexuality predatory because there is an age gap. At least CXG has acknowledged there is an age gap, unlike every Hollywood movie ever.

I believe it was “Butter can’t help you now” or words to that effect.

Not to mention how Beau Willomam quickly washed his hands and claimed he never saw anything suspect about Spacey. Surely the showrunner would have at least gotten word about employee complaints.

You’re the moron if you’re objecting to me asking why people who knew didn’t come out about this sooner.

According to a Penn dorm-mate of his, Don was drunk all the time in college and got the nickname “Diaper Don” due to his tendency to piss his pants after passing out.

This alone ought to drop Penn 100 spots in the rankings. If this clod can get a degree from there, it speaks ill of their academic rigor.

I swear, Claire gets more and more unlikable in each episode. I took the Hippocratic Oath, therefore I’ll screw over everyone around me that I care about? Nice!

But we’re also not getting emotional investment in anyone. It also makes the passage of time harder to understand. I watched parts of season 1 with a non-book reader and she was never sure how much time was passing. All the stuff with Jamie, if they didn’t explicitly say how many years it had been, it could just as

And that tactic of exclaiming things at each other tends to show some of the weaker acting issues this show can have.

I’ve read all the books. I know what’s coming. My biggest disappointment with every book is the same as with the show except now I’m like can I be bothered? And frankly, the move to Sunday nights to me makes that more of a debate because there’s a lot more I could be watching.

This might have been my least favorite episode of this show, ever. Tonally everything just seemed really weird and off. It wasn’t that there were changes from the books, exactly. It was as though these were entirely different characters.

Wall to wall cringe-o-rama. This is some Kevin Sorbo in Hecrules type of writing&directing... they’re basically just exclaiming things at each other for an hour, followed by a quick shocked-look reaction shot. That’s the only way that cast can convey things.

Though, I admit this was the weakest episode this season, the critique of this episode was terrible and very hard on this show. I prefer a passionate fan of a series reviewing it instead of a mindless viewers criticism. I think Jamie’s reaction wasn’t out of character and it actually made more sense to me after

This episode sums up a lot of my issues with both the shows and the books. The level of melodrama in the Jamie/Claire relationship in this episode just makes me roll my eyes. You’ve been separated for 20 years and are arguing within 2 minutes essentially? And I think it boils down to the lack of goals after a certain