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    mrnin
    Nin
    mrnin

    Come on, Catastrophe? OITNB? The Walking Dead? Inside Amy Schumer? Last Man On Earth? Humans? Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell? Initially I thought this was a fairly good list but scratch the surface, there are some glaring omissions.

    I like that it boiled down to "I have no power, therefore I have no responsibility" as if she's just a leaf in the wind at the mercy of all the terrible men around her. In a moment of utter hypocrisy, she basically sells out her own empowerment and yet still manages to use it as a shield.

    I could agree that we're making excuses for it if these themes didn't exist throughout the entire Coen universe. This is not a world that has ever done traditional 3-act arcs and neatly tied up endings and this episode was entirely consistent with that. Regarding Camus, it's quite intentional.

    Game of Thrones barely deserves to be top 40. Take Hardhome away and I'm fairly sure it wouldn't be.

    Not quite. Lou leaves the police some time later after being shot during a traffic stop.
    I don't think Peggy convinces Lou of anything, if anything she makes him more resolute in accepting his role because he sees what stretching gets you.
    That wasn't my point anyway. The discussion in the car is a perfect

    Shooting in the head/Not being appreciative, same difference.

    Season 2. The first half of Season 1 dragged a bit too much with seemingly inconsequential plots

    Just don't use that emoji around Mike, he didn't appreciate it.

    And if you discount Otto (who was already dead really) not one of them was killed by Kansas City.

    It was flawless. As much as he tries to be, Mike is not a businessman. He was on the wrong side all along and he gets suitably punished by getting exactly what he was fighting for.

    Absolutely, but the fact that she didn't was telling. Lou had broken her illusion, she was done.

    "Its a deliberate choice that the writers had Lou use the word "Privilege" to describe the protector role he applies to men"

    It was a challenging but ultimately logical finale.
    As a TV show, the lack of clarity, theme and closure feels awkward and unsatisfactory. There was no big ending, for the story or those involved. Even the terminally ill survive. As a story though, it was fitting and perfectly in sync with this absurdist world and the

    Absolutely no-one should be surprised this is a multi-part release given the size of the game. It would have been a squeeze to fit an upgrade on one disc without even considering what else they're going to add. Personally I don't care, I've been waiting 15 years for this, it was the reason I bought a PS4.

    He was controlled by Reeve of Shinra and used as a spy

    I don't get it. Not only was it a stuffed toy, he was a traitorous keystone stealing bastard.

    Indeed I am but it's deserved here. This is poorly written clickbait and it needs to be banished from this site.

    I'd rather have watched Garden State than waste my time reading this. At least Garden State had some decent moments.

    This episode suffered a little for being so focused on Dodd Vs Peggedy but it's easily the funniest episode in either season. The sheer bewilderment and fear on Dodd's face when confronted with Crazy Peggy was hilarious and the way he reverts back to a child (his reaction tothe pillow on his head made me laugh out

    I'm English and even I know that Maggie's accent is horrendous. She can't decide if she's from Georgia or she's Dolly Parton.