msfjordstone
MsFjordstone
msfjordstone

Oh, that's great — I guess all swarthy actors over a certain age have had this happen to them! And yeah, it's cool to have not one, but two major characters on a US tv show who are Maori.

I thought two or three months, yeah. Anyone else bothered to do a timeline?

The actress playing Luciana is Cuban. But yeah, it is kind of hilarious, the mix of accents and nationalities. That's Hollywood, though. Up until maybe the late 90s, any actor who looked at all swarthy could be tapped to play middle eastern terrorists one week, mafiosos the following week, and probably a few generic

I think they're just digging having cold drinks again. You don't need to get your ice machine up and running to have access to that water. You can just disconnect the water supply hose from the back of the ice machine and get the water directly.

I assumed they were pretend-surfing on the sand because they didn't want to go into the walker-infested waters. Or is this sand-surfing deal a known precursor to real surfing?

I can forgive the bit about knowing which switch controlled which lights: in a business like a hotel, there is frequent employee turnover, plus lots of different shifts on different days of the week; so why wouldn't a hotel be as smart as I am in my own home, and clearly label all of the switches and circuits and

That suddenly made me think of the Caritas karaoke bar from Angel, which would improve this show tremendously. If only Andy Hallett were still alive to play Lorne!

I really appreciate your post-apocalyptic environmental consciousness in making it a pump spray rather than an aerosol can!

Would vote this up twice if I could. At least The Strain and Z Nation have the grace to be in on their own jokes. And they're *fun*. This piece of crap is plodding, repetitive, enraging, and worst of all, dull.

You know, that bite looks awfully well-healed for so early into the zombie apocalypse. How long is all this supposed to have been going on by this point? Alejandro supposedly was in a community that had time to form after the initial panic and chaos period; got to know this young druggie; got bitten trying to save

Er…he was speaking as Ofelia in that comment. Remember that she was involved with that army guy at the beginning of the zombie apocalypse? And now suddenly we're presented with some guy who was her fiancé and the love of her life, with absolutely no hint of that in her behavior or dialogue up to this point. Oh, and

Ditto, nice to find you here!

You know, we haven't seen any of the interviewees below the waist. Maybe we'll eventually find out that one was crippled by the events in the house, one was amputated completely in half, and one was turned into a satyr or something. This *is* AHS, after all!

That show was pure cheeseball manna from heaven. Wish it had lasted for more than a few episodes! By the way, was I dreaming, or was Cuba Gooding Jr.'s character watching the OJ chase on tv at some point? I'm assuming the events aren't supposed to be taking place in the 90s, though, so what he was watching had to

He was definitely speaking in a voice that was deeper than Martin Wallstrom's usual Tyrell voice. I almost couldn't concentrate on the scene, I found that voice so disconcertingly *off*.

It's funny, but I thought of matryoshka dolls when Whitrose started talking about Elliot's Dad and Angela's Mom. I thought it was interesting that they'd both lost their matched-gender parent, and I thought about how they both have difficulties with the remaining parent (and Elliot's mother's affliction is really

Oh, thank goodness I'm not the only one who saw her as a mini-Angela. That, more than anything else, made the scene Lynchian to me.

Didn't the little interviewer come across like a mini-Angela, or was that just me?

I caught it, but assumed it was indeed placeholder text, albeit a super-interesting choice of placeholder text.

No, that was Tovah Feldshuh, but I can understand mistaking one for the other. They're not that dissimilar, facially. They both came out of the New York theater scene and are very close in age; I wonder if one of them ever understudied for the other?