ohayayay--disqus
ohayayay
ohayayay--disqus

I'm reading comments here and am bit incredulous that people might read "unreliable narrator" to mean that Prairie intentionally lied, or that anyone might be watching the show the whole time and *not* pick up on the fact that it's insane to believe what she's saying. She obviously has mental illness and psychosis,

Hap very clearly tells the nurse to go rescue people in the old morgue who "need help."

Yeah, in real life, someone with a Yale degree who cut their teeth covering Obama in 2008 and recently spent lots of time in London post-Brexit would have a lot of ideas to pitch to even a fluffy e-magazine. I find it more likely that ASP wanted to forget the political aspect of Rory's career given the nasty political

He killed it. Best character in the reboot. Needed more Nat.

The payoff to the thirtysomething gang having a thirtysomething parents' meetup at Luke's later in the episode was definitely not worth the build up.

Before he ate the whole chicken he was Kraft eating shredded Mexican cheese out of the bag.

And during all 3 of those episodes, Kate is moping around wondering where Walt went.

I guess I have a bitter taste from watching a guy admit to raping my friend, to her face, in a written statement and in person, and still no consequences. The whole thing was a farce.

That was exactly my point. I said he had been given little depth. Not "a" little. He was introduced strictly to do something horrible and go back to prison.

Dude, whatever you think of Fiona, Gus is clearly not a "nice guy" here. One bad turn does not deserve that kind of prolonged, insane level of butthurt victimhood.

I think it's unfortunate to introduce that character, give him little depth, and basically make him a catalyst for Carl's development.

Having been a witness in a sexual assault hearing at a university - they actually did make the perpetrator and the victim face each other in the same room. It was horrible. They claimed that the accused had a right to face their accuser like it was an actual court of law.

If there is one ongoing theme in this season, it's characters being placed in compromising, problematic sexual relationships. Perhaps that has been a theme throughout the series (especially with Ian) but it's really ramped up this year with Lip and Debbie, and also with Ian realizing that maybe his past relationships

This is another area in which the show is really messing up the details. I'm applying for an FHA loan and it's nothing like the process depicted on screen. Yes, there are random, maddening demands for information that can really place major roadblocks, but the roadblocks they have shown in the show are not realistic.

hahah. oh. sorry.

"Mean/sadistic" to show him the baby's nursery? Not sure about that. Most people make a space for their baby before it comes out. And she is quite far along. I'm unclear from the timelines whether he moved into that apartment right before or right after he knew she was pregnant, but seriously, if he moved there after

Allison's POV actually shows him as quite a douche too, although often for different reasons than the one he remembers.

Noah's continued reluctance to make space for the baby in their new home is just super heavy-handed to the point of me yelling at the screen. This was discussed last week in Allison's Thanksgiving drama, and today it was "did you move my desk? where did you put my desk?" Just wow.

"Tony B., who’s spent much of the day running small errands for Carmela (who always shouts out his name like she’s talking to hired help), finally snaps…"

" the father [Tony] spends most of the episode shambling around and just generally wreaking havoc wherever he goes, whether it’s taking an impromptu swim for no real reason…"