phodreaw
phodreaw
phodreaw

The Joes all trained at the same special ops school the A-Team trained at.

Thought I was pretty clear, as was the reviewer, that Stacey's "scam" had less to do with putting one over on Mike than her taking advantage of him since she knows he will comply out of love, obligation, etc., and despite her outward reluctance, she will eventually accept his help.

As our excellent reviewer noted, Emma Decody brings the light in what would otherwise be a very dark show, especially as Norman descends further into madness, so her hesitation at asking Dylan to move to Seattle with her was especially adorable since we already know his answer.

Stacey is not stupid; she suspected what happened to her husband and Mike's involvement in it, and what actions he took afterward.

Stacey wants what's best for her daughter, but considering it's just the two of them, they could easily make do with a smaller house or even an apartment.

Jimmy's partnership proposal to Kim was a marriage proposal in all but name, and his reaction when she refused him drove that home even more, so Kim's side-by-side solo practices solution felt very much like a moving-in-together situation, which the both of them knew was probably the best they could do considering

Considering how much business Sandpiper stood to generate (don't recall exactly but it seemed to be at least in the tens of millions), a six figure bonus wouldn't have been unreasonable.

Jimmy will screw people over, but so far we've seen that he usually targets marks who appear to deserve it, i.e. those who are loud, full of themselves, or otherwise a little too fat and happy, and Clifford was not only none of those things but a genuinely nice guy who gave Jimmy several chances when others wouldn't.

Jeopardy! is a fascinating example of loss- and risk-aversion at play, where we see the same wagering mistakes over and over again to the extent that when we do see appropriate wagers it feels like the contestant has done something extraordinary.

Not surprising that Doug turned out to be a one-time champ when he couldn't seal the deal despite getting all three DDs, which then makes, as @EureExclamationPointKa:disqus noted, Erin's DD-less win all the more impressive.

He's probably all too aware of Rand's fawning admiration for a serial killer who kidnapped, murdered and dismembered a twelve-year-old girl.

From your and other comments I've come to see that I may have interpreted our reviewer's comments as "either or" when it was probably a more nuanced "more of this", especially when it did more of exactly that in the first season.

Hopefully that poor child didn't inherit her mother's lazy brain.

Not gonna deny that I mostly just ogle the female cast members who, without the grime and sweat of the show, are thrillingly beautiful like that one hippie chick who got dolled up for that one formal and everyone realized what a babe she was.

Flash boy knows it too, submitting to her superior grip with the upturned hand.

Don't be so modest!

Also literal ball-busting, if you're into that sort of thing.

Not to mention that having a Metropolis gives "metropolitan" a very specific meaning it wouldn't otherwise have.

Didn't realize watching a German World Cup soccer game with Diane Kruger and Franka Potente was on my bucket list until just now.

The AV Club turned into a German porn site so gradually I hardly noticed, but it does explain why my fingers are so sticky.