It also didn't air this year?
It also didn't air this year?
He's not been able to do that since Gordon shot his watch.
Come on, that ending was totally setting up a second season. They just murdered a guy and stuffed his dead body in a cupboard. There's more story to tell there.
They have?
It's been said before, but the most authentic UK evocation of It's Always Sunny is Siblings. Which is also terribly, horribly, wonderful.
She's got a new show coming out next year as well — something to do with assassins? Whatever sounds like a blast.
Chewing Gum is fabulous — I love that Netflix is investing in so much Channel Four material right now. Scrotal Recall, Chewing Gum, probably Crashing as well — none of them would be seeing second seasons without Netflix money. Plus there's Crazyhead and the new seasons of Black Mirror.
This show takes place in an alternate reality, because "Corporal" Friedkin is wearing captain shoulder boards, and a ribbon that was only given out in the First Gulf War.
Edit: I'm too tired to have this conversation.
I love how almost every piece I've seen — even HBO's own press releases — have downplayed the fact that one of the kids on this show will have actual godamn psychic powers (,,,maybe)
They already have.
To jump in here, yes, that's true. Her presence has been alluded to in the future time period (Stubbs, the secuity guy, mentions that she's gone walkabout) but according to this theory, we've not actually seen her since about episode 2.
She was Bab's ex, and an internal affairs officer who was looking into Gordon and Harvey's ties to the mob.
I thought that was great. Not as great as last week's episode, but still super enjoyable.
I was thinking of Montoya and Penguin, tbh, though I probably should have said "queer" instead of "gay".
They spelt her name wrong.
That makes a lot of sense, thanks : )
AHS: Roanoke has alluded to horrors haunting black Americans, conjuring up images of longstanding injustices that increasing access to video technology has made ever more visible to the wider populace.
Fuller's known for pushing back against the Networks. This feels like a tacit dismissal, tbh.
I never saw it that way, Campy, yes, but otherwise usually hyperviolent shows wouldn't be characterized as gay.