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RWGibson13
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If she did know she was carrying Boyd's child, that would say something about her not using that when Boyd was going to kill her, right before Raylan stepped into the barn.

Exactly. Even if it didn't resonate with Raylan (though I think his reaction said it did), it certainly did with me.

heh, other than he broke the law not turning her in for stealing a ton of money from the property office? :-)

Raylan mentioned the clip came from Seattle. And just before Raylan left Art's office for the last time, Art was answering a call from Seattle.

When the ending showed her alive, with a kid, and relatively healthy, I started thinking that if the producers knew she was going to end up alive, that might explain all the shit she (and the audience) went through in prison last season. Even when Boyd was in prison, he didn't go through crap and when he did, it was

It was also a great reminder that, no matter how deep he'd sunk, he wasn't suicidal. Which is what I was afraid was going to happen after Ava stung him with the whole "I was just thinking about what you would do?"

Don't forget part-time surfer. In Fuji!!!

Oh, they definitely worked too hard. I just can't help but think that the three main characters and the three marshals survived "just in case."

My absolute favorite scene among favorite scenes here was with Raylan in the back seat in cuffs, being treated exactly how he treats the people in the back seat of his vehicle. I almost have to believe that scene and Given's reaction to it had a hand in his decision not to gun down Boyd.

That was a great scene altogether.

He DID have a small part in the last GI Joe film, playing the prison warden that was holding Cobra Commander and Destro IIRC.

Best part of the entire episode wasn't even in the episode. It was in the previews. You know, the part showing the Ogre going after Barbara.

You missed "Bullock get the best lines."

I remember a lot of skepticism when it was first announced that D'Onofrio was going to play Kingpin. I've been rewatching a lot of reruns of L&O:CI, and I really loved the way Goren would Hulk out every fifth episode or so. And he was one of the GOOD guys.

I've liked him even in the goofier roles like Machete 2. Really interested to see what Tarantino does with him in The Hateful Eight.

I watched her first two season on the show and thought the whole Jessica/Hoyt relationship was the best thing during those episodes.

Marvel Comics have always been that way. Well, after the first few years, anyway. Before Spider-Man became super popular, he'd fight mainly street-level crime dudes, along with enemies that had one specific power he could figure out the counters to instead of just beating the crap out of them.

Yeh, Goggins would make a great Man in Black.

Could be, I just don't remember it being actually mentioned on the show. All I can remember was that first scene in S3 where Ben gives Ethan and Goodwin pretty much the same instructions - infiltrate and make lists.

Baredevil: The Man Without Clothes!!