In many of her photos (smiling, well made up, not tense like Astrid), she resembles Hillary Swank quite a bit.
In many of her photos (smiling, well made up, not tense like Astrid), she resembles Hillary Swank quite a bit.
I think there's also an issue of Javadi not being clear on how Amir knew where he was, that he was being held, etc. Was he following him since he arrived in the US? If so, why? Who was he working for? Loose ends.
Carrie couldn't have brought a witness to talk about how she managed her bipolar disorder because until the case worker actually mentioned it to the judge, Carrie had no idea that she even knew about it, or would bring it up.
Because two dead-by-gunshot Saviors tips off Negan that somebody out there has guns they haven't turned over. Even if he thinks it was done by someone(s) not already on the Negan plan, it gives him a reason to go out looking for these new troublemakers. Better to let Negan think it's all business as usual.
Once I saw that there was a dumpster in the episode, I knew we'd have a major character death fakeout.
You always crack me up, Lt. Broccoli.
That's "11.22.63," not 11.12.63. It's a pretty infamous date, after all.
Thirded!
It was obvious! How could he miss how Eugene responded to the comment that they were made by "42"? Dr. Smarty-Pants is obviously uncomfortable with how the workforce is dehumanized there.
Culminating with a nun slapping Grant.
Even better, Expanse is SPACE-BASED sci fi. I really get tired of all the planet-that-looks-like-Vancouver shows. I want to be in space, dammit!
That would be fan service of the highest order! ABC, are you listening?
Thirding the comments about Grant, but I also have to confess to breathing a sigh of relief that I won't have to sit through any more scenes between Chloe Bennet and Luke Mitchell.
And sexy, sexy dancing Uhura.
It kind of didn't ring true for me, either. Sort of like someone on the writing staff wanted to remind us that they're a couple.
Yeah, that was great, but even better was imagining Andy Lincoln singing Kraftwerk at her every time she stepped out onto the set!
Yeah, but admit it: you'd be doing that for fun!
Granted, but again: in the Stanford prison experiments, or even the Milgram, their mode of expression didn't change substantively. Their grammar wasn't entirely upended.
"Junkers." I like that. Or "Domies," for Thunderdome.
I actually know quite a lot about cults from firsthand experience (family members). This goes beyond a common specialized lingo, or derogatory nicknames; this group's use of proper sentence structure has broken down in 2 or 3 years! It's just not believable.