noahblammo--disqus
noahblammo
noahblammo--disqus

It's quite tragic how alone Don has become even as everyone else is finding people to settle down with. And whereas gay men like Sal and Bob Benson had to remain closeted in public in earlier years, Don sees that, as the 70s approach, two gay men are now able to openly cohabitate. Maybe Don will join est in a search

“Five-O” is the first episode of Better Call Saul that would fall flat, I think, without the viewer’s prior experience of Breaking Bad."

I know, I know. The thing is, though, I like good media criticism, and despite my "failure as a media critic" line, I actually want Libby Hill and the others here to get better at it. Perhaps the problem is internet immediacy; the AV Club writers seem to be on deadline to get their stuff posted as quickly as possible

What I meant was that, when we watch a fictional program we need to consider that a writer creates a character—not necessarily as a mouthpiece for his opinions, but as a mouthpiece for opinions that the writer might have IF he was that kind of person. If Don Keefer says things to which we object, we can't just make

"In truth, I mourn the fact that the show that finale belonged to, a much better show than The Newsroom ever was, never existed."