lofishman--disqus
lofishman
lofishman--disqus

This episode felt like a wasted opportunity and way too safe. What about the kids not trusting an Asian coach? What about the kids not passing to Eddie because he's probably perceived as non-athletic? In 2015, I spoke to some Asian kids in my neighborhood who quit a basketball program because the other kids weren't

Maybe the vampire Aidan Waite could make an appearance. He could sure add a different dimension to the show's title "Turn".

Fun episode and I had a feeling that the battle would unfold the way it did because it seemed to me that they were working with incomplete information. Besides, the Vikings' resume seemed a bit thin on "raiding walled cities". Back then it would seem to be a good idea to delegate the planning to Floki, but in the

I enjoyed Charlie Cox in Stardust, so now I know why he looked familiar. It's not perfect, but I like it. That scene with the villains talking together felt like it was on the verge of falling apart. It doesn't (yet) seem to have the cheesy silliness that I see in Arrow and thank God Cox can effing act!

Kim's hug before Jimmy left for Cicero seemed to promise something more than friendship(she let her fun parts touch him). Jimmy's drive to be his own (con)man would seem to be stronger than the prospect of a deeper relationship with Kim. When he made that U-turn at the parking garage, I sensed that he was losing

I thought it was terribly slimey of Chuck to appear genuinely surprised when Hamlin refused to offer Jimmy a job at the firm. It was as though on some level he knew that it was a total dipshit move, yet at the same time he was behind it all along!

Yeah, that's how I originally thought about it too. But consider this, that other guy is selling pills that will go into drugs that people are going to get addicted to and wreck their lives over. Criminal or not, I think being in the illicit drug business is inherently evil.

Yep, case in point the character Crashdown. The "Fragged" episode seems to be the one that has continued to endure in my mind, while the rest have faded considerably. I'm still pulling for Sam Witwer to get back on my TV sometime, somewhere soon since Being Human ended.

I can understand Jimmy's predicament. Sometimes your own family can be your kryponite. That metaphor is the truth! Like for Superman, it's always something from home that can bring a person down. I smell a lot of jealousy from Chuck's behalf, he can appreciate what Jimmy had done after graduating from a "crap"

Do you have any brothers? I think I can understand that Chuck might draw the line at car borrowing.

I always thought he took advantage of his brother's sickness and slept on his couch.

I don't know how long you have been watching this show, but the Merle character is a redneck racist. I'm simply employing dark humor to convey what he would say about the current situation.

I thing bongo drums would have been a nice touch.

Well, I echo some of what people have said earlier, this show zigged when we expected it to zag. We expected more death from Team Rick, but instead we lost poor gentle Reg(but also psycho-Pete). I think Michonne's sword is beginning to gain a reputation for being a Sword of Doom. I was beginning to see shades of

Yep, and the next scene is of quinjets desperately avoiding flying into each other, while flying into each other.

I'm probably a bit older than you. But after the show Kung Fu came out in the '70s, it seemed for a while that most white people thought that all Asian people spoke English very slowly. Kung Fu was a great show in some ways, but David Carradine's slow talking monk left some lasting impressions, not all good.

Overall, I think this is a cute show. The only thing that feels a bit awkward is the pace and unevenness(?) that the actors deliver their dialogue. I'm wondering are they trying too hard to avoid reinforcing the stereotype that Asian people talk really slow(BTW, I'm Asian too)? Or is it a strange byproduct of a show

Yep, but in the reboot, the Admiral embodied the darker aspects of the Colonial military which employed torture, the abandonment of the civilian fleet, and total ruthlessness. It seemed like a veiled stab at what showrunner Ron Moore viewed as the dark side of American military culture during the early '00s.

Edward James Olmos is the head of the "other/real" S.H.I.E.L.D, eh? So in the coming episodes does Coulson get Admiral Cained by Olmos's character? I think many old BSG fanboys like myself are grinning at the irony.

The scenes with Sasha hunting walkers was a calm before the storm. I didn't think that Rick and Pete would mix it up until the finale, but as silly as it played out, it was fun! Rick was so desperate to be on Jessie's good side I had to laugh when he said her son wanted a gun for his mother's protection.