lironmiron--disqus
lironmiron
lironmiron--disqus

The problem with needing someone who is 7 feet tall is that "you can't teach that"

I wouldn't go as far as saying that Rolling proved himself the best (in keyfabe). I think he proved himself absolutely identically matched to Reigns in an "a butterfly fluttering in Africa could change the outcome of the match" kind of way. (They both achieved a 3 second cover) Which is kind of glorious because Seth

I don't think anyone will disagree; Seth is magical in the ring. But if Dean continues to improve at the rate he has during the last year, he'll give him a run for his money in a couple of years. When watching old Shield fights, it's hard to recognize him as the same wrestler who feuded Jericho.

Meagan didn't tell Rebecca that they had to change the system because they had lost so many people; she said they had that system because those were Pilcher's teachings.

Not only that, but it's totally different from what we saw in season 1. Meagan was even worried about whether or not Ben was pressuring his pair before she was ready. Yes, they were still too young, but they weren't 11, and it seemed like they were letting indoctrination take its course rather than using compulsory

I think it was more than tempting her with love with someone who accepts her. He tempted her with not having to struggle anymore. The ferocious war that she's been fighting with her dark impulses every moment of every day must have been the worst possible torture. Someone telling her to stop holding the boulder that

It helps when you unequivocally look like a corpse.

"You fought so hard but still he's ours"
Why would a mother fight so hard to keep her son from something good?
…and we know what she was fighting.

…uhmhm… ye..s. I mean, it was indeed super creepy for almost anywhere else. But in this specific show, where the forces of evil have always been shown as so primal and overwhelming… I don't know. It was kind of anticlimactic for me to see any of the evils being calm and collected and rational, and in control. For me,

And also, when the review says, "If a TV show in any way deals with Catholicism,there’s sure to be some time given to the exploration of guilt," it's more accurate to say, "If an American TV show in any way deals with Catholicism, there’s sure to be some time given to the exploration of guilt."

It was probably escalating over the months, since she was fighting so hard, and that day was when the demon finally fully took over. And also the most traumatic day that got stuck in his memories.

There were so many comments on the Resurrection Ship review that said, "bail out now. You'll regret it if you continue watching. Keep the memory of a great series by stopping here," that I actually did stop… for a while. But the curiosity (and the A grades [that's why grades do matter]) were stronger and I binged

I think she's the one who designed the wall.

But they said that she was in an incubation period and couldn't infect others yet.

Yes, that's why I got intrigued. I kept picturing how the series could work if he really allowed himself to be reformed.

It is not specifically a Catholic thing. The rules can vary from Church to Church, but there are many that do it. Some only do public, community confessions during service, the Church of Christ does confessions through a personal guide assigned to each member, etc.

I was more confused in the first episode. For example, when Cassidy started fighting the guys on the plane, I had no idea he was a separate character. I thought he was a host for the Force-thing and they were showing how it came to America all the way from Africa hopping from host to host. Even at the end of the

I was greatly intrigued by how Killgrave could work as a hero. He could be awesome at it, but his power is kind of evil and overpowered at its core, so I wasn't sure how it could work. I'm glad to find out that someone has actually tackled it already.

But if they had regenerated, wouldn't they still be trapped in the box?

So, also the prequel of "The Road."