lyndsay123--disqus
lyndsay123
lyndsay123--disqus

eh, I don't think he's that selfless. I think what he wants, and misses, is the hero worship Peggy and others gave him. His line in the first episode was very telling, and also indicative of what his relationships are going to be all season: "I'm just looking for some love". The point of the whole Sally thing on

Yeah, that was odd and ominous. I think taking the office that the guy who hanged himself in, that YOU helped hang, wiould be a dealbreaker. It does make for an apt analogy though: Don will be working in a dead man's office. When what they don't know is that he's ALREADY the dead man, 'cuz the real Don Draper died in

Bobby Draper and the kid from Homeland really need to start a club for Sons who's naivete prevents them from realizing when their stupidity is being used as a plot device.

I think HE sees it as "I told the truth, and they punished me for it" - a pretty self-righteous, self-centered way of skirting the blame. When what it was about was that he had F-ed up yet another account, in a string of f-ups. Let's not forget the Jaguar debacle right before they went public, the St. Josephs thing

I think she saw it as her one opportunity to stand over him, and kick him when he was down, as he had done to her by throwing money at her, and by being generally unappreciative of her work. She's getting tossed around by Lou, and constantly cut down by Ginsburg - it sort of calls back to the Playtex conversation in

Oh, and adding to that, Bobby giving away the sandwich to another kid was symbolic to Betty that her needs weren't important to him, that she wasn't important to him, because she wouldn't need to eat, as if she wasn't even there. We know of course that that wasn't true, because he shooed away a kid from her spot on

I thought the episode spoke to how some of the characters have dealt with their own unimportance and insignificance. Betty becoming more involved in school was a reaction to the realization that she didn't have a second career planned like her friend, for when her kids didn't need her anymore. Don's realizing that he

I don't know. Her reaction and still being angry and dramatic about the sandwich debacle at dinnertime was childish and annoying, but I didn't blame her in the moment for being pissed about the sandwich. That kid is as dumb as rocks.

"Are we negroes?"

Google translate, is that you?

I didn't hear anything about her mother dying. The plumber guy was her brother in law, so he might have mentioned something about her mother. I think she was crying out of frustration with her work situation, and loneliness, and regret at having bought that building.

the show could use a little more humor. Gallows humor, surely, but Breaking Bad did the balance of humorous moments even in the midst of grim, dark stuff really well. Doesn't anyone have any sarcasm or one-liners left in them?

So then she becomes a zombie left to potentially kill other humans. That's not in line with Carol's character or her plan at all. She's trying to protect groups of humans, not make more zombies.

That's really not an even comparison. If my nephews were in the Little League world series, maybe that would be a better comparison, and yes, if they were in the LLWS, I might expect a higher level of skill than say the average 10 year old's tee ball game. These kids were HIRED and PAID for their supposed acting

Favorite dialogue of the episode.

The flashback scene between Herschel and Rick at the beginning i think was there to specifically remind you that Herschel gave Glenn the watch.

OR be a yummy meal. They will have a feast on him.

Excuse you. Screwing!

and p.s. i would totally love a Walking Dead-Portlandia mashup. I feel like we need to see what a zombie apocalypse would be like in Portland.

Yeah. Were all those people at Terminus extras from Portlandia? I totally was like, ok, cool, i'ts not a cannibal colony, just a bunch of friendly hipsters doing the whole co-op farming thing.