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Rub Lowe
rublowe--disqus

He is, but strictly on a one-on-one basis.

It's difficult to find a show that maintains its quality throughout its entire run, and above all Person of Interest stayed true to itself until the very end. I don't really have much to say about the finale that hasn't already been said, but John's final conversation with Finch was the right conclusion for the

Oh good. I've found the place where grown men (an assumption, sorry if inaccurate) come to cry about Person of Interest. Hold me!

I agree, and it plays very much on what The Machine said to Harold while they were on the road in the previous episode - she knows people almost better than they know themselves because she's capable of seeing countless possible iterations of them simultaneously - a holistic interpretation of someone which is both

It's interesting that most of Team Machine has been saved directly because of the existence of the Machine, except for Fusco who was coerced by John. With or without Jessica's rejection, John was a walking corpse without a purpose in life and would have had a very short life span.
I think while it is more and more

Choice. That's what it's all about. The biggest difference between Samaritan and the machine could not have been made any clearer in this episode. While events unfold at an whirlwind pace, the show still makes time for character development and most fundamentally, to point out the stark differences and ultimate

I was going to sing praise for this episode before I realized that a lot of people found it a little corny and cliched. I think it was mostly because of the big twist reveal at the end, leaving the logic of some of the earlier scenes questionable, and perhaps the way the actor had decided to portray his character's

I assumed he was talking about Samaritan. Will have to go back and rewatch.

Completely agree. When Root was pouring her heart out in the car, Finch dismissed her unwavering hope and optimism with something along the lines of "This isn't an underground resistance movement, this is an evolutionary burst." It just confirms that he had already given up, before Root's death jolts him into action,

That unwavering close-up of Emerson's face in the interrogation room was breathtaking.

Harold would seem like the kind of person who would just snap if he hit his breaking point, which is exactly what happened. His approval of Elias' car bombing was a little dubious for me, but Emerson really hit it home here.

I'm not Shaw about that.. Puns aside, I think Fusco and Shaw may make it out of this alive.

I think it fits in extremely well with her character. After all, she was the biggest believer in The Machine's morality, to the point of deifying it, defending it and speaking for it. It's was so fitting and I never saw it coming. If you want to put it another way, I think her character was far too transcendent to be

This is exactly what I was expecting for Harold. I don't see this ending well. I hope he still has a chance at redemption in some form before it's too late.

No one monologues for that long and lives to tell about it.. STOP MONOLOGUING!!!

No no no no no no no no no! Chills upon chills..

I, too thought an open system meant the ruse was over. But I guess the show is going to maintain its central premise till the end.

I enjoyed that scene for a number of reasons. If I was walking along and the phone that John threw hit me over the head, I would not be particularly happy.

I thought it fit in nicely with the theme of people not being who they're pretending to be.

To me this was the most overlooked part of the episode. Harold made a conscious decision to kill someone. I'm not sure I like where this might be headed.