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Actually I thought they overcooked that line where he tells her they wouldn't ask her to tell them anything about HHM's strategy. That's like saying we won't ask you to kill anybody: it goes without saying.

We're gonna build a Chinese wall! The biggest you've ever seen! And we're gonna make China Hamlin, Hamlin, & McGill pay for it!

Me too, and nobody ever gets it.

I heard that too, but I thought she meant chard, the vegetable, like that's what Todd was cooking with or something. "Chartres" makes more sense.

He flatlined at the end of the episode. It would have been pretty cheap to miracle him back from that.

Great article, Noel. Always enjoyed Game Theory, but never was deeply familiar with their history, and I was curious. I have a handful of their tracks I know I enjoy; I think you've inspired me to give Lolita Nation a full spin soon.

Poor you, people are asking you to be so "politically correctional boy" by not insulting people with different opinions than yours!

Remember when I said you act like a condescending ass in these discussions?

I wonder if he treated Jaime Naughright as she was, or as he believed she could be.

Kaylee and her mother (whose name I can't remember) were just in a hotel, right?

Whoa, I didn't notice these when watching. "Everybody's Got a Tushy" is also the title of a Dr. Katz episode.

I don't know whether to be relieved or unnerved that my first guess at what they were referencing turned out to be correct.

Yeah, believe me, the last thing I want is to sound like a domestic violence apologist. Just that I used to frequent sports forums and have seen people there talking about "Hope Solo beat up her scumbag husband, so what?" the same way people said "R. Kelly peed on some chick, isn't that hilarious?"

I didn't say it was right, just that perception plays into the public reaction to those things (and a lot of people I knew didn't realize the full story, or thought "Well she's a woman, how bad can it be if she was the abuser?", etc.).

"Look, this is exactly why I always tell you, just throw me in the trash! The way I live, I'm gonna look like I'm dead a lot."

Every impression or character we've seen Dee do is a horrifying stereotype of that quality.

The Seinfeld thing could work for me. Say, Frank dies, the gang are each forced to confront their own mortality and vow to change their lives… and in the end, they all end up sitting around the bar drinking and arguing.

I'm of the former thought as well with Walt. With Jimmy, I think both things are true: He really wants to help people, really most sincerely, but he loves the thrill of a good con and can't resist playing by his own rules.

I knew I recognized her! *pours one out for Enlisted*

I do believe in something! It's just that I believe in the writers to avoid cheap fakeouts and reversals.