Honest mistake.
Honest mistake.
Deleted: Error corrected.
Hey, neither did Craig Ferguson's finale.
Anything else would be a goddamn shame.
Yeah, I suppose it could be argued that an A.I. with massive
resources declaring war on the main cast and engineering a global market crash is somewhat broader stakes than Reese finally being pulled in by the FBI.
True to precedent, though; Lethe and Aletheia were split up by the winter break last year, and there was a huge cliffhanger on year before that, too.
I did like that last episode the Wesen mother Nick and Hank interviewed said "You're the Grimm" and kept relatively calm after she woged, instead of saying "You're a Grimm!" and freaking out. It's a relatively understated way of showing that the word about Nick has gotten around the Portland Wesen community over the…
With the benefit of hindsight, I think that teacher was going through some stuff at the time.
"Aunt T's realm is nothing more than a dying dream of suicidal children. The kids are drowning at the bottom of the swimming pool, and the voices they hear growing fainter are those of their parents searching the house for them, only to find them, too late."
I get what they're trying to do with this whole 'wesen purity hate group' thing, and it looks like they're going to get some good drama out of it it, but I have to admit to being a little confused about why Monrosalee's marriage is seen as such an abomination.
Assuming Juliette has gone full Hexenbiest, wasn't swallowing a bit of Nick's blood enough to strip Adelind's powers the first time? Having Juliette taste a little of Nick's lip-blood seems like a pretty straightforward, easy solution to the problem, so obviously it wouldn't work in the Grimm universe.
Y'know, for a long time I kind of thought that Rule 34 was kind of bunkum, or at least hyperbole, until the day I was shown erotic fanfic about the women of NPR.
And stoners, too! As Craig himself would remind you.
Exactly!
And a much more appropriate function for the internet than the average Great Job, Internet article these days, anyway.
The Crow 3 is a movie I'd like to see brought up in an interview with Dunst, some day. By direct-to-video standards it's not completely awful, but Dunst… well, she wasn't bringing her A-Game to that performance, even by her standards.
Braugher's reading of that line was amazing, and made me snort beer out of my nose.
Yeah, I would think basic protocol would be to handle it with gloves so that the skin oils don't cause the map harm. On the other hand, if she planned on destroying it, she might not have seen the point in trying to preserve it.
To be fair, I think I suppressed a grimace myself at how explicit the Sherlock & Watson / Kitty = Parent / Child dynamic was starting to get in that scene.
Why can't that be true?
Oh, Maybelline, why can't that be true?