ochospantalones
ochospantalones
ochospantalones

I liked that Kane and Jaha implicitly acknowledged that no one makes the hard decisions better than Clarke. If Clarke put someone on the list, they're there for rational reasons (with the possible exception of Bellamy).

Seems relevant to the "essential personnel" discussion. They have generally been pretty cavalier about Abby's safety. Seems that there should be more recognition that she is genuinely irreplaceable. And maybe she should start training someone in addition to Jackson.

I get why Abby would try to sacrifice herself, but personal feelings aside Kane couldn't possibly allow their chief doctor / medical scientist to die.

So shouldn't Clarke try to let Kane know they have at least three open spots in the bunker?

This seems reasonable, and I think is probably the show's explanation of what happened. But then why were there people coming to see Becca above ground immediately after she landed?

It certainly makes sense that nightbloods shouldn't be able to survive that, and yet the show had a multi-episode plot hinging on the idea that Luna's blood could save everyone in the absence of a shelter like alpha station or the bunker.

That makes complete sense to me. It is like the end of Terminator 3, where the shelter for VIPs is empty because the attack was so unexpected and sudden that they never got the call.

There is something I am unclear on regarding the history of the bunker: Did anyone actually use it to survive the original nuclear attack? If so, what happened to them? Or is the idea that no one who knew about it got there in time?

Eliza Taylor is definitely not leaving the series, but it would seem like plot-wise kicking Clarke and Jaha out of the bunker would make a lot of sense. Hard to make the other clans try to work with the leaders who just tried to betray them. And it's not like this series needs Isaiah Washington's name recognition as a

Any chance this season ends with Clarke outside the bunker, but surviving as a nightblood?

I don't understand how, at this late date, anyone ever listens to Jaha about anything.

The device also reads a QR code printed on the back of each produce pack and checks the source against an online database to ensure the contents haven’t expired or been recalled, the person said. The expiration date is also printed on the pack.

I saw the Tim Burton / Marky Mark Planet of the Apes in the theater. When it was over, the guy in front of me stood up and loudly declared "Man, that was one bullshit story". No one disagreed. That is a far worse film than 80% of those listed above.

Probably the movie I had the most hatred for while watching was 300. I wouldn't say it is objectively the "worst", I appreciate a lot of people really like that movie. But God did I hate that theater experience.

Chain Reaction. Keanu Reeves discovers the secret to clean renewable energy, and then people try to kill him for reasons I can't recall.

It was in the middle. In between the scene where Snyder makes his deal with the global authority and his meeting with Will and Broussard.

The episode that aired on USA was 64 minutes, so they probably did a 60 minute edit for re-runs (or syndication in the somewhat unlikely event this show lasts that long). The Burke scene was about a minute or two long, and while it was interesting it was hardly essential to the plot. So it makes sense as a cut. That

I don't think anyone would enjoy being roasted on national television by an extraordinarily calm 77 year old man with a great voice.

Ambassador King definitely signed up for a three year contract.

I was impressed with the efficiency of the fascist dystopia's tech support line.