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Lexa was an absolutely monumental character. I understand that the actress wasn't available to this show any longer, but we were lucky to have her while we did.

"Congratulations on your starter marriage."

So…we're all just watching this for Sara and Snart at this point, right?

Has it really been spelled "Skaikru" this whole time?

Monroe certainly deserved a better send-off. She was an original 100!

I agree with you - their relationship has been tepid at best - but I can see why she might accept. Kelsey was in a weird mindset after talking to the psychologist, trying to figure out where she should be at this point in her life. She's thrown herself so fully into work, would she even have time to start dating again

What an awesome episode. This is the kind of episode that elevates Younger from being just any other sitcom. All the underlying dramatic tension is starting to coalesce, and the cracks in Liza’s facade are growing. Sutton Foster, Hilary Duff, and Nico Tortorella all nailed it.

Exactly. The the paralysis wasn't a problem that needed resolving - Felicity could continue on in the wheelchair and it would've been fine. Instead, the show is moving away from realism by using magic and new technology to create plot.

Still a little annoyed about the deus ex machina to resolve Felicity's ridiculously temporary paralysis so that she could - quite literally - walk out on Oliver at the most plot-convenient moment.

I really enjoyed the Eddie/Evan plot, mostly because it's a character pairing that hasn't happened much. We don't see Evan without Emery too often, so this was a nice opportunity to explore a different brotherly bond.

Gotta give a nod to Mickey Milkovich on Shameless. I don't think there's an episode where he's NOT toting a gun.

“I just seduced the old lady upstairs, came down the fire escape, shimmied the window open, bing bang boom, I’m inside your living quarters.”

This episode had everything:

Considering next week's episode's promo:

To be fair, it seems like most characters on The 100 are either mass-murderers or lunatics, so she's in good company. She just happens to be a high-octane confluence of both.

Yeah, unfortunately, they can't all be badass lesbians like Admiral Cain and Lexa.

Came here to say exactly the same. The Pike situation feels so much like the BSG Pegasus arc. Lost part of the population appears, leader from the lost crew takes over command, things go brutally south. And there’s even a guy who sees an invisible woman in a red dress!

I think Cougar Town was on broadcast (ABC) for its first three seasons, so I don't know that TBS really had much to do with that early premise shift. Was Buffy ever really in trouble, at least until the end? I had always had the impression it pulled decent ratings for The WB, but I don't know that for sure since I

Plenty of shows in the past have been able to move on from their initial premise. Cougar Town stopped being about "cougars" in its first season. Buffy moved on from the "high school is hell" premise to four more seasons. I think it's possible.

As much as I enjoyed the more sitcom-y aspects of this episode, it seemed pretty clear it was just setting up more dominoes to be toppled later. It’s starting to feel like the show is just treading water until the inevitable Big Reveal of Liza’s facade.