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I think Gabriel's story about Philip's son being a soldier in Afghanistan did have a huge effect on him. He doesn't want to believe Gabriel, but he's afraid not to believe him at the same time. Protecting his son makes the Kimmy mission personal in a way that simply fighting for the Motherland didn't.

She'd be on the phone to Pastor Tim. I think she'd feel a need to protect Henry, and that might not allow turning her parents in to the feds.

I don't necessarily think Aderholt is on some secret Internal Affairs type mission, but he's new to the office and looks at everything with fresh eyes. People get very used to "the way we've always done things", no matter how poor the results, and a new person clearly sees the glaring inefficiencies and lapses that

I think Holly Taylor does a great job. Paige turned to the church because she has largely absent parents and needs something that consistently offers the community, support and guidance Philip and Elizabeth aren't there to give her.

And don't forget David Slade, who directed several episodes and set the color coding of the two timelines.

Marshall Finkman, the gadget guy who was not-so-secretly in love with Sydney!

And I think it continues to this day under the "Landmark" moniker.

They did make it very obvious!

I'd at least like to see a scene between Nina and Vasilli back in Russia!

In the interview the showrunners did with Alan Sepinwall, they pointed out that it was supposed to be obvious to us, though not to Stan. Seems as though Martha's sticky fingers will become an issue in S3.

And he made a pass at Pete last season.

Me three!

That was my reaction as well!

In case anyone wondered, that would be around $8,400 today.

It's been heavily implied that Betty's relationship with her father was at the very least emotionally incestuous. I can't recall the specific episode, but Don and Betty spend a good portion of it at her parents' house and the scenes between Betty and her father were disturbing.

There were certainly hints that her father was at least emotionally incestuous with her. I can't recall the specific episode, but Don and Betty spend a good bit of it at her parents' house and the scenes between Betty and her father were very disturbing,

I'm not convinced it actually is human meat.

I've seen some tweets today from critics indicating that there was a hoax that "Let It Go" from Disney's Frozen was based on Prince. Guess everyone is pulling the story.

I think they were working very hard to have the Will/Freddie scene parallel the Hannibal/Beverly scene. Perhaps a bit too had.

And then maced him!