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I think that was about the town. Something has violated it, something has been ruptured. But they still come together in the emotion of the moment: the bystanders, and Carl Rodd taking charge of the scene in his own way. We already know Richard's shit, this was something bigger.

I think the Alzheimer's analogy is also bigger than some realize. Mark Frost's father Warren (Doc Hayward) died of it recently and is featured in the new show. I see a lot of parallels to Alzheimer's and the struggle for identity in the Dougie story. It's emotional stuff even when it's funny. You wouldn't think they'd

Have you ever studied your hand?

I thought the younger woman might have been Heidi's daughter.

Do you like The King and I?

It cracked me up that the audio was of a young woman attending to Cole's every need while Albert toiled in the rain. Lynch knew what he was doing.

Interesting that someone - whether it's Lynch or Frost - keeps returning to 'the war' and treatment of veterans. Linda is a veteran who struggled to get a new wheelchair; Frank and Doris' son is a veteran who killed himself.

The what now? What did I miss?

That's not how it came across, which actually just makes this a simple misunderstanding. Still, being labeled a troll by you probably means I'm doing something right I don't even know about.

Edgy

Some is from some rumors over the last year, others are straight from Lynch and others saying maybe they might do more depending on reaction - this is in recent interviews. Kyle MacLachlan and a few castmembers have also come out and said they think another season is likely. But I think a lot depends on Showtime, too.

No, I grasped it just fine. I simply felt the material and conclusion was not the sum of its parts. It's beautifully made but I felt it didn't coalesce.

Maybe John Justice Wheeler's kid. (Audrey being knocked up by him was a mooted Season 3 idea in '91 from the writers at the time)

I think it's more likely to be Coop's own innate instincts slowly reasserting themselves in sort of magical-realism ways, as he is still discombobulated by the Lodge. I doubt it was ever the way he saw the world when he was whole, but it is now in this formative state.

I am starting to hope it won't end.

I really really hope he is Audrey's, simply because the idea horrifies everyone.

It's supposed to.

That's because unlike Lost Twin Peaks doesn't approach it cynically or as a marketing calculation or a way to string along the network or its audience. It's just Lynch's imagination.

Every week is better than the last. It's just art. Blows everything else away for me. I knew it would be good but I did not expect this.

She did almost the exact same routine in the 1989 pilot. It's just Lucy.