@idiotking A gold-digger with a heart of gold… digger.
Your brother-in-law doesn't own a plumbing business, does he?
I prefer my puns not watered down.
He looks like the hobo who plays Santa for alcohol cash. I got a picture with that Santa at a bar one December.
Svein brings the pain.
Or it could even be Siggy, short for Sigrid.
There were options with Jarl Byrne, but they needed to be done sooner. They needed to show him as somehow a sympathetic leader by doing what Norse chieftans did; he needed to be seen as a simultaneous arbiter and fair-minded steward of the clan's wealth. Ragnar's exploits would also have to aggravate more than just…
Fingertip push-ups. Not easy at first, but will build up hand/grip/wrist/forearm strength like little else. Or you'll collapse on your nose. Both are possibilities.
half-mourning? please to explain?
Four seasons, always fresh, yet so much from this season goes back to past seasons and pulls things together: Hunter's back, Limehouse is back, the Bennet money is back, Napier is back for the swinger's party, all kinds of things. One of the best-written shows on the tube.
I know this is way too late for any response now, but I'm watching this episode again, and noticed that a lot of characters are wearing purple. In the marshal's office, Vasquez has a light purple shirt on and a dark purple tie; Art has a darker purple shirt on; and Raylan has the darkest purple shirt. Rachel also…
Sheriff Romero is about the most suspicious, unsettling, and unnerving character in this show. Something about Nestor Carbonell's demeanor in this role just makes the character feel like he sees through everyone's personality straight to their inner guilt.
@Zack_Handlen I'm not in love with this show, but one of the things I am enjoying is watching for the little Hitchcock nods and how well Freddie Highmore can channel his inner Anthony Perkins.
No show can top Justified for veneers, necessary or unnecessary. I can think of five characters off the top of my head who've worn them (Raylan, Boyd, Limehouse, Quarles, and David Vasquez). It's like a trope with that show that's never actively acknowledged, similar to how nobody ever locks their house doors.
That's what Krieger's robot hands are for.
I kinda liked the little touch of glass shards sticking out of his shin and across his shoulders. The ones in his shin were big and visible, but just for that split second. Later, on the close-up when he's getting treated, those are gone but his shin's bandaged, and we see the glass in his shoulders and back.
Eh, Luther had-eh some valid complaints.
Durggical tocty talticaneck