loki1001
loki1001
loki1001

I think they just didn't have enough time to develop the Dennis is a stripper plotline.

That was my immediate thought about this episode, it reminded me so much of what they did to the Tafts, but with Dee instead of Charlie.

I was wondering that as well. I had stuff I wanted to say about it.

Well, Dee is routinely the butt of other people's horrible schemes (or adjacent to them). So, yeah, I totally buy that she would decide to utterly destroy someone like that. It's not like she hasn't hatched her own terrible plans over the years.

Well, Mac was clearly excited when Mike the Stripper was dancing on him (even giving the gang a thumbs up).

Why did you make a cheese lollipop?

I thought it was a great development. And, as I said, I liked how they showcased a lot of different reactions to it.

I honestly don't even know why they decided gun control was the hill they should die on for an episode.

No, it doesn't discount it. But it also doesn't change the fact that the show revealing a character is bisexual is still a revelation under those circumstances.

Oliver is sort of vaguely liberal-ish… as opposed to basically a hard core communist.

It does however mean the only knowledge about his sexuality anyone has at that point is that he is interested in the opposite sex.

And now we have a shows where people fight zombies during the civil war, robots in a theme park are becoming sentient and killing people, lesbian stones have metaphorical sex to save the planet, a talking horse deals with his depression, a psychic girl brings monsters from a parallel universe into our universe, a

"We used to talk about things as a society. We'd debate, and we'd argue and we'd still respect each other, after." - actual dialogue

Rapid serial monogamy is default storytelling on TV. The cycle of meeting/dating/committing/relationship/deterioration/breakup is such a rich vein of emotion and plot that most writers can't help themselves from going to that well over and over and over. So for most TV characters, breaking up is just restarting the

While I am always happy to have male bisexuality showcased. It was very much a revelation because his entire story for the previous nine episodes was his attempt to reconnect with the son he had from very heterosexual sex. It wasn't an example of someone with unknown sexuality up to that point, so it was a revelation

They're trying so hard to pull this off… and it is an exercise in futility.

This episode of Arrow is very special.

I thought they said that Rebecca and Jack lived in Pittsburgh.

I could see him do the British show I'm a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here.

Who here remembers Myspace?