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M_as_in_Mancy
masinmancy--disqus

I could have sworn it had shown up on Hulu too. I bought it on iTunes, though. Now I feel a little better about paying for it.

It wasn't made super-clear; the impression I got is that word of Jaime's disappearance/escape from Robb's camp had made its way back to Harrenhal, and thus the Mountain decided that if they didn't have Jaime there was no reason to keep feeding all these northmen prisoners when he could be out pillaging the

Right- Tywin had literally no other suitable Lannister choice- *someone* needed to go keep Joffrey in line, after all. Cersei was failing miserably, Jaime was a captive, his brother Kevan was needed as a general in the field (same as Tywin himself), and so what else was he going to do? Despite his limited success with

I think that despite Sallador Saan's predictions of doom, Davos has known Stannis long enough to believe that if Davos can just TALK to him, he'll be able to make him see reason. He wasn't willing to believe that the man he'd sworn to follow could have fallen so far as to just be a puppet for the red witch. The knife,

As mentioned by a few other people, his army is basically his bannermen- you've got probably more than a few religious fanatics among them, but the larger issue is that by and large the nobles take their own hierarchy VERY seriously. I get the impression that most of the folks following Stannis aren't that powerful or

And just sitting there in silence was a total power move on Tywin's part, too, especially since he had an activity he could be doing (writing a letter) at the time. He could have sat there with his mouth shut all day, which meant Tyrion had to be the one to awkwardly break the silence.

I dug that she pointed out that the relief food was going to be coming in via Tyrell wagons. Guaran-damn-tee that they're making sure every poor soul that they're feeding knows where their bread is coming from, and where it's not.

@avclub-d00f448c26753a69f75336c46e974848:disqus - too far, man

mawp
mawp

Linda had her own version of Tina's panicked gasp/bark as well. Yet another nice touch for the show :)

@avclub-cb0e59b8f769a8698b9f7154dd8809b5:disqus - right, I had almost forgotten about the tranny prostitutes. It takes a very delicate balancing act to be able to mine for the comedy of a situation without at the same time mocking the people IN that situation, and I'm always impressed when Bob's Burgers pulls it off.

I just completed a watchthrough of the whole series on Netflix (the last time I watched most of these episodes was when they originally aired) and I was surprised to find Walter and Perry severely grating beyond their first couple of appearances.
It's doubly strange because I enjoy Andy and Ollie so much on Bob's

Between this and the nude beach episode, I think we're seeing that Bob is actually pretty hard to faze when it comes to sex stuff that would make many people uncomfortable. He has a nice "live and let live" attitude that's rare to see on sitcoms. Even Linda's disgust seemed to be stemming more from her sudden

Particularly great for all these people to realize it in an episode that featured the return of Adult Melissa (Miss Jacobson)

Season 1 established that someone, somewhere in the Walking Dead universe is manufacturing large volumes of blue crystal meth. Daryl had a huge bag of it in his saddlebags, which has never been seen or mentioned since.

People keep saying this, but what evidence do we have that this guy survived for a year on his own? Did we see him by himself in some earlier episode? For all we know he could have been the last survivor of a group, someone who got separated from his group inadvertently or deliberately left behind, or a Morgan whose

Or a toilet delivery guy named Max Flush.

I thought it was a particular stroke of genius to switch "Ray Gillette" to "Gille de Rais". Calling him a child murderer (or child-murderer) just was the icing on the cake, particularly since the fact that Ray got angry at the name meant he got the joke.

I just finished the TellTale Walking Dead game this weekend, and couldn't agree more. By the end of the first episode I knew more about (and had stronger positive or negative feelings about) any of eight characters than I did about pretty much anyone in three seasons of this show, aside from maybe Rick or Daryl. It's

I'm just waiting for the big reveal- T-Dog actually died back at the beginning of Season 2 when he punctured his arm, and Carol is the only one who's been able to see him since then. Would go a long way toward explaining everyone's reactions when she brings him up- awkward silence on Daryl's part, and Andrea's sad