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Rafa
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I prefered season 1 and the last strech of season 6, because I never really liked the formula of a bad guy that creates problems and ends up dead.

Janice's subplots in the last seasons were HORRIBLE.

I don't think so. Good journalism is fundamental for a democratic society, and nowadays all the things that Simon criticized in season 5 (lack of values, no contrasting of sources etc) have sharpened.

A bit too obvious/perfect? WTF

Dude, you can't really mean it. Yeah, Tony Soprano is one of the more complex characters in TV, but I can’t think of a cast with so much dimensions and refinements as in The Wire!

And people like me will say that both series were AWESOME in their own way :)

Dude, the pilot is awesome.

WTF? Season 1 is the most psychologically complex and climatic season of all the series. In fact, I think that is the series best season!

His panics attacks stops, but in the last episode he's the same bastard that we knew in the pilot. Not much of a change there.

Yeah, that's what I like the most about the character. Having
her go against his father’s would be kind of cliché, but the fact that she finally accepts what Tony does and enters in this self-delusion state is devastating on its own way.

The whole therapy scene of Christopher is fucking hilarious.

I love The Soprano, but I didn't like too much Chase’s approach about characters that can't change, circular storytelling and anticlimax. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve seen the series two times and I really think that is one of the best, is just that I’m not as compelled with the dynamics it had in the last seasons, where

The first truly great episode is the fucking pilot

The first season is my favorite, without any doubt.

You got me! Fucking temporal paradoxes

It really can be interpreted in both ways, because the cut from Don’s face to the Coke’s ad doesn’t explicitly tells us that he changes. But after reading Weiner and having a clearer sense of what this season did with Don, I’m more favorable to the theory that he finally grew.

We're talking about a person that talked to an empty chair making up
that he had contact with Jacob to impress Locke. He’s a manipulator; you can’t believe his words. He didn’t really know anything about the island, so he was probably lying about having to face the Smoke Monster as a way to redeem himself.

Man In Black manipulating Richard in to propping up Locke in the first place?? I don't think so. Richard didn't see MIB since he talked to Jacob and ended on his side

The Others motivations in the first two season aren't coherent with what happened later, because the writers still didn't have a real notion of what they were. But by the time of 'The Brig' I think that they already started to have a clearer sense of where they were heading.

The connection that always touches me is the one between Sawyer and
Jack's father. When Sawyer reveals it to Jack in Exodus is heartbreaking.