philipmarks--disqus
Philip Marks
philipmarks--disqus

Good question and while we are led to think he did I am not at all sure he did.

Yes I agree. He may also be a sociopath but I think it's possible he's just or maybe more accurately ALSO a teenager in over his head trying to prove his WORTH and his DEDICATION.

I think maybe; but you have to realize that his fanaticism and these responses are also the product of a teenage mind not an adult one. Teenagers are fanatical sometimes, they have no nuance, and the executive function of the brain is still developing. He was hoping he'd be praised for his new idea. But it isn't out

I think they have changed so much and this episode reinforced it. They are going to try to save Pasha and had no second thoughts about it. This is the exact opposite of how they ended the last episode. As Anna in the last episode was a parallel to Elizabeth and the Jennings, so too is their reaction to Tuan.

Whether he survives or not. First it is good to see P&E taking a moral stand for a change. And the threat of suicide is enough to get the kid back to Russia. But how do Tuan and his parents deal with say, a police investigation into Pasha's attempted suicide, or real one for that matter. I expect they will be on time

Of course there's a huge parallel and moral in the Tuan/Marazov family stories and the Paige/Henry/Philip/Elizabeth family. I see Paige working out in the Soviet Union but I don't see Henry as a fit at all…

Right you are. Pure fantasy. But it did show Paige taking charge of her life in several ways, taking off the crucifix, talking to Tim cagily, appreciating Henry, and doing her training all alone and with fervor.

Oh I'm sorry I missed your .1 when I read this. Yes I think if they would have been stoned if they didn't participate there is some basis to say they have at least diminished responsibility . In essence I don't know I think the judge would just give instructions to the jury about what law exactly applies. There is law

At the end of the day, the real point of this part of the episode is that Elizabeth is actually drawing a parallel between herself and Anna . And I don't think there's any reason to believe that Elizabeth isn't really struggling with whether or not she's different. She is in fact struggling very hard to keep a

Well there actually are books based on that aren't there ?

Well I think the most relevant thing here is that that's actually a very bad analogy altogether . But if are going to talk about this in terms of ethics giving her no defense and no opportunity for defense is certainly not morally or ethically appropriate . there is no moral justification for killing her at this point

I dont really see that as a timing issue. Your analogy is substantially different from the situation Anna faced.

My point exactly. You had to have a security clearance to get that job. Hard to get a Directorate S guy in there…

Bristol, Piper, Willow, Track, Trig (Onometry?) wow…I never put it all together.

BTW they had field engineers to fix those things, probably would not have taken it to a shop unless it had really severe damage… I know because they frequently advertised for a part timer in my city, and being a field engineer in my youth it sounded like a good part time job if you were into that. No longer listing

Could be worse. They cold offer a cassette recorder/player.

Review by someone else "I love Mail Robot, he's probably the best character on the show. When I saw I could buy a Mail Robot shirt, I was overjoyed, but boy was I disappointed with this shirt. The printing seems to be airbrushed on and the shirt is the thinnest, cheapest material I've ever seen. No scratch that, I

Let me just say the world changed since Cary Grant adopted his name. (born Archibald Leach). "Benedict Cumberbatch" for a leading man proves it.

I posted the same answer and then saw yours. I think it's probably his real name. You see a lot of kids with three names - Zachary Ty Brian — because of the unique name rule. Or I think that's why. And people are much more accepting of names that are not Anglicized white middle class names than they used to be.

One thing you see among young actors is using three names, like Jonathan Taylor Thomas, because the Screen Actors Guild requires every actor to have a unique name. If there's ever been a Jonathan Thomas you cannot use the same name. Keidrich is in good hands that way. Also Hollywood used to think people wouldn't