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I enjoyed the conversation itself. Loved that she was being so upfront about her need to have him go down on her. if I knew ASL I would probably assume that any conversations I had in public were unintelligible to others, but of course there's always the risk of getting burned. It was a fairly predictable gag, but

Everyone's storyline was so freaking rushed at the end, but Mylene in particular just seemed so half-baked at the end. She goes through the trauma of losing her dad to suicide, and is partying by the end of the same episode?

I agree that Dunham is a great actress—her emotions just pour out of her, like she's trying to hold back, but can't do it. But I will never understand the supposed connection between Hannah and Adam.

That's probably why I prefer Jessa. At least she owns what she's doing. Marnie acts like someone else is driving the car that is her life. But it doesn't really matter, I like watching both of them do horrible things. It's fun to hate on them.

I wonder if they showed Adam's willingness to take responsibility for a child when his sister abandoned hers as a way to show us that he could take care of Hannah's child. He was really good with that baby, and Jessa was really bad with it, especially considering that she used to be a nanny. A bad nanny, but a nanny

I enjoyed seeing Williams' character in Get Out be so different from Marnie. In Get Out she knew exactly what she was doing, which was satisfying, even if it was…not good. Marnie is almost worse in some ways (although not in the literal sense), in that she can never take responsibility for her own actions. Everything

I just watched this, so I am way behind, but for me it seemed obvious that there is a strong genetic component to her depression. Her dad left because he couldn't handle being a father at that point in his life, and her son also struggled with anxiety. She even points out to a school therapist that her son's

Seriously, Ali is terrible. Besides Josh, whose job to me is barely a job, these kids don't know anything about hard work. I thought after Ali threw her money at Maura that she would buckle down, find a job and start supporting herself. Instead she congratulates herself for finally finishing undergrad at 33 and fucks

I got the impression that the naked lady in the hammock was the store owner, Anjelica Huston was just another customer. I could be wrong though.

I think in order to help their case (that the justice system is fucked) they did try to paint Avery as an innocent victim.

I think they did too, as long as you didn't ask questions. That's easy to do with the internet these days. As with season 1 of Serial, I think the real culprit is the justice system, which in both cases was proven to be immensely fucked up. If the aim of this doc was to prove Avery's innocence I think the internet has

There is Christian everything. I live in Alabama, and I walked into a store in the mall called Altar'd State. It's basically Anthropologie, but also everything is Christian-themed. Like, they put a bird on it, but then they also put a cross on it.

Do you mean how blatant they were? Or do you think they were being deliberately deceptive? I never questioned that they filmmakers were on Avery's side. They didn't really hide that from the audience. I don't think they were any more skilled than most at presenting a biased position.

Keep watching, you've got some news coming.

I don't know why people are surprised that this documentary was manipulative. ALL documentarians have a perspective, and I would say that they also have an agenda. I go into every documentary with that in mind. I enjoy the follow up, learning more about the other side of the case, but I don't understand the hate-on

I live in Wisconsin about half the year, and I spend a good chunk of the year in Alabama. Poor, rural areas of the country are pretty much the same, just the accents change.

I felt so bad for Dassey, he had so little understanding of what was happening and he had no one to help him. A lawyer who was actively working against him. I couldn't believe his attorney was letting him be interrogated alone, I figured I was misunderstanding what I was seeing. The moment Kachinsky stepped into my

Her character also wasn't looking for much other than "someone to fuck me", and Dev certainly qualified.

That's exactly what I thought. Welp, that ended quickly. It also put a nice touch on the episode, as mentioned above. Girlfriend left, people died, I killed a person…I'm hungry, time to eat.

My fav is Childish Gambino's term: "daycare".