lironmiron--disqus
lironmiron
lironmiron--disqus

He's his brother. He could have talked privately to him after the meeting. There's really no reason to expose someone publicly like that when he's just starting on a new job, if you have a close relationship with him and can try to get the facts privately first.

I wouldn't say "loving" wife. I'm pretty sure she had stopped loving him quite a while ago. But she was indeed a good decent person living a good, decent life.

The Jimmy we met last season was not a schemer con-artist attorney. He was a former schemer con-artist who was struggling to rise above that and become a person his brother could be proud of. And the person who should have been the most supportive… his own family… the one with the knowledge and power to help him rise,

And we can add Heidi to that list. The review says that she has her own set of issues. Of course she does! She's a person. Having our own set of issues is not a problem, or something negative. It's to be expected. The fact that Gus would be put off because he discovered that she has issues of her own shows how much he

It is the safest course of action, if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, to still do a DNA test to see if it's really a duck.

I don't know if I can argue against that, since a "level of attractiveness" is something so subjective, but I'd say it does happen, if they create and produce the story, like Rust did here; like Nia Vardalos in My Big Fat Greek Wedding. Also when they are stunningly beautiful, but in a very unconventional way, like

And I don't even think the complaints were motivated by Mickey's looks. That Gus got to date out of his league because Mickey was in that low place could have worked. It seemed to be working when she dumped him on her friend and then ran after his car. What got everyone riled up was Heidi because that whole theme of

I thought Mickey's actions were mostly motivated by insecurity. She had not liked the Magic Castle and she was afraid that if she didn't manage to like the theme song party either, Gus would see her for the nasty person that she feels she is.

Not in Under the Dome :)

In the comics it's pretty consistently shown that he's the leader because he's the only one who really cares at all about his teammates and he teaches them to see each other that way. So I think this is just a case of "he's the leader because, in the original story, he was the leader, even if we haven't justified it

Is this the official explanation of what is happening to the royal
family during the MCU era? That's why they don't seem to exist in the AoS world? Seems a very big piece of worldbuilding to dump on such a minor show as this one.

I didn't think Mickey was being awful at all, in this particular date. She was being sincere. She was trying to show her new romantic interest and possible future partner who she really is. I can't think of anything more wonderful that could possibly happen on a first date than having someone so willing to open up her

As all languages should always be!

I don't think they understand how time works anyway. They guided all their actions by the premise that the future is still in flux. But the one who used the time machine is Rip, so that's not the future. That is still the past. 2016 is not supposed to be the present!

Oh my goodness, a few posts down, those headspins! If she's not a real-life superhero, then she's pretty freaking close.

Rip said that he only chose people who would have close to zero effect of the timeline, if removed. That would definitely not be the case for the Green Arrow.

It seems like it would have to be on purpose, but Heatwave has always been called Rory in the comics, afaik.

I don't look too deeply into the possible meanings of CW casting decisions, because, whatever else they may seem to suggest, they usually boil down to, "that was the prettiest person among the applicants."

Although Brandon Routh used to be Superman, so in a way he was there…

Curiously enough, the community grade seems to have settled on a pretty solid A/F…