loki1001
loki1001
loki1001

I think the season is more powerful if you have seen some of the previous episodes (or all of them, or all of them multiple times like I have). Then the grief over Edward Herrmann's death really is a complete gut punch. But it isn't like the show fails in any way to convey how devastating his death is to the central

I watched and rewatched Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life. And I can't really think of anything else.

I don't think you would be too lost. And I actually think these four episodes are a good introduction to the world and the characters. But there is a lot of stuff in them that exists to either revisit or resolve old plotlines, and some not very delicate mechanations to explain the absence of certain characters.

My interpretation is that the park is essentially a highly advanced video game, designed by some crazy people. Essentially Ford and Arnold really wanted to make an immersive Old West theme park, and that's what they did (even though the technology could be used for more obvious and profitable uses). And within the

The most interesting thing in this episode is the revelation that Ford is perfectly aware there are sentient hosts, and even seemingly aware of the process they become sentient. Not merely that some hosts are glitchy or that some are better at replicating consciousness, but really sentient. And yet is choosing to

Maeve is both the serpent in the garden and the tree of knowledge. Ford is a very old testament God.

Who wants to Westworld? (I have a feeling I will dislike Westworld by season three, but for now I love it).

It's just weird. I think it might be because the show spends so much time ensconced in white privilege and the minority characters (with the exception of the Kims) are so not tokens that people somehow just gloss over how many non-white people are on the show. Off the top of my head Michel, the entire Kim family,

I can't even articulate how much I hate Avengers vs. X-Men.

Yes. Skip it. And Civil War. And Secret Invasion. And Avengers vs. X-Men.

Hey-oh. I decided to take a look at the pile of garbage that was House of M.

Yeah. The Independence Inn. That was how high she rose before she got reunited with her parents.

"Mom…"

Okay! I finished my Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life review!

Seriously, why has Netflix not released Sutton Foster's song? Apparently I am going to have to keep having to rewatch that scene whenever I want to hear it.

Just keep some tissues nearby for when Sutton Foster starts singing.

I've decided that I am going to be the Britta Perry of Trump's America.

I'm attempting to write a review of Gilmore Girls… but I am stuck on the final sentence.

I rather disagree. The whole point of the sexual orientations is that they cover everyone, and they are non-judgmental. One of the major points of the gay rights movement is that any kind of person leading any kind of life can be LGBT. Creating a completely redundant and artificial distinction of "sexually fluid" is

Shouldn't you be watching Gilmore Girls?