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Marnie has a major breakthrough, deciding to take a step back now so she can hopefully take two forward soon.

What was brilliant about the phone call is that I think the show set it up in a way that we were expecting Paul-Louis to surprise Hannah by wanting to be involved. At least, that's what I was anticipating, which resulted in my sharing Hannah's disappointment that Paul-Louis was relieved to be off the hook and wanted

I adored Smash, but even I wouldn't have called it a hit show, considering its ratings were so low in its second season, NBC had to burn off the remaining episodes on Saturday nights. But I love that, in Elijah's head, the show was every bit as popular with everyone else as it was with him.

Okay, that's it. I'm putting up fliers, because this is ridiculous.

Damn, good catch on the tooth! That went soaring right past me.

I think part of it is that teenage girls are a tough nut for some writers to crack, especially on shows that aren't really about teenage girls. It's the Dana Brody problem.

They can still use her. She can still snark from the sidelines, like Lafayette in True Blood (a character who went from a fan favorite to an overwritten bore once they decided to actually give him things to do). Conversely, they could have just written her to do almost anything other than this.

I imagine if it were Chloe, then Ziggy playing keep-away with the stuffed animal was a hint, although you'd think she'd lash out at him once he refused to give it back. By the same token, I was kind of anticipating Chloe telling her mother off once Madeline insisted she go to bed right this minute, sort of like how

I really don't see what's so wrong with giving Abigail nothing to do. It's not like we're hurting for interesting stories right now.

I don't know about age of consent laws, but even if the age of consent is 16, how the hell is selling your virginity online even supposed to work in a legal context?

I find it interesting that there were multiple instances of possible foreshadowing with characters implying they would kill another character. You had Ed joke about it at dinner that at least they weren't all killing each other, you had the therapist implying that Perry might take things too far one day, and then you

Agreed. The only reason I feel like it might not be is because of how obvious it is. But then, a mystery solution being obvious doesn't mean the payoff can't still be good.

Agreed on this being the weakest. I kept waiting for the episode to go somewhere, and then the credits were suddenly rolling. With that said, there were some good moments, such as Celeste's therapy session, the Jane/Renata talk, and Madeline revealing her affair. But it felt strangely meandering this week.

Vomit humor does nothing for me 9 times out of 10, but this was hilarious, especially with Bonnie's constant attempts to remain calm.

I don't know about anyone else, but I found it kind of absurd that everyone was expected to just be okay with Abigail's decision to sell her body to some rando on the internet. I get that it's her body and she was trying to make a point, but I really don't get how/why the parents were expected to be supportive of

Cool. I was wondering since it's been a while since seeing JJ.

Is it known in the news that JJ has superpowers?

Mike Holloway from the Blue Collar tribe. Ate a scorpion.

On the one hand, I don't buy for a second that Harold is staying dead. On the other hand, if he does, then it's Luke Cage all over again, in that they knock off one of the most compelling characters halfway through the season.</spoilers>

In fact, I believe Moonlight and Luke Cage have the exact same problem: They lose

"You know, you have more YouTube views than that Incredible Green Guy."