msfjordstone
MsFjordstone
msfjordstone

Huh, that's right! Nice catch!

Which makes the Rolex all the more suspicious.

Andy's the one wearing the unexplained Rolex, though.

When Hastings signed the photo after circling Major Briggs' face, it *looked* like he wrote "9/20," but I thought that had to be wrong because of the two days from 10/1 information (which is 9/29, not 9/28). I'll have to check it again upon rewatch.

There was thus fantastic scene where Beth was arriving at the café to meet with Trish, and looming behind her was the cliff where her son was killed. It was such a stark and moving symbol of how she can never escape that, not as long as she's living there, that there is literally this insurmountable *thing* in that

Gwen: Ian, the husband (they are only separated, not divorced), appeared to be washing off muddy boots in a episode where Miller suggested that the,rapist would have had to have gotten quite muddy. I'm sure it's a red herring, though. So far, I think Cath's husband has gotten the most guilty glares from the camera.

I see you edited after I was notified about your comment. You originally ended with "As I said — if you can 't get that it can't be explained." It's not that I can't get it; it's that I think you are parsing elements of the episode by the micron in order to back up your claim, as well as cherry-picking things from

Except that the White Lodge was very clearly on top of a sea stack in the middle of a vast ocean.

Why are you assuming most of us *haven't* seen "The Prisoner"?

And honestly, I don't disagree with *everything* you said on this subject, but the idea that the living, crawling bug-frog thing was a phallic symbol is just…stretching the concept so far that it breaks. You compared it to the Woodsman bringing a banana into the girl's bedroom and inserting it into her sleeping mouth.

Pedophilia? Why, it's not even *hebephilia*. Neither with Laura, nor the girl in episode 8 of The Return.

That's "Cossacks"; cassocks are something priests wear.

Cool! Frankly, I'm surprised they can even get Carrie Coon; you'd think her dance card would be WELL filled these days.

Take a look at this book from 1917, page 629, paragraph 3 (link below). Convenience stores most definitely existed by the 1940s-50s. Incidentally, I got a jolt when I scrolled up to the front of the book to verify the pub date. The second page of the Google document has the library identification sticker on it. The

Yeah, there's a full season overview / review elsewhere on this site, and that comment is more appropriate for there. Don't spoil US viewers, most of us have only seen one episode from season 3 at this point!

Ah, that's right!

It is the greatest thing ever that we have a tv show that engenders that sentence.

Leland was a small child when he let BOB in. He didn't 'want the power BOB offered'; like many small children versus abusive monsters, he was *tricked* in some way.

Right, I believe she didn't know until then, because just before his face switches to Leland's, she's seeing BOB and asking "Who are you?! Who are you?!"

Streaming a new phenomenon? Hey Buzzfeed, that gum you like is going to come back in style.