sallgoodman--disqus
sallgood_man
sallgoodman--disqus

The jury is still out on that. I am sure that it went beyond that one time as a child but I'm reserving judgment on that until we know more.

Chuck's vendetta against Jimmy seems to be ruling his life and he has never even shown a hint of guilt over his desire to ruin his brother's life. He lied to Jimmy about their mother calling out for him on her deathbed, which is just inexcusable to me.

Nope. He's far from perfect but he proved he has a conscience which is more than I can say for Chuck. I'm still #teamjimmy.

"You felt a little bit bad for me?"

When Jimmy talked about Chuck not hating him for ten minutes, my heart broke for him. What a bastard Chuck is.

I saw the Broadway version last week and it was really fun. Much more Willy Wonka than Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, fortunately.

I was glad Noah said he didn't get it because neither do I! I was thinking maybe June was confusing Lotus with locusts?

Better than a trip to Belize.

I don't think Claudia was saying Mischa was mentally unstable. She was just pointing out that him being put in a mental institution for speaking out against the war he fought in would not sit well with Philip who is already "shaky" in his loyalty to the Motherland.

I hadn't thought of it before but Noah has a point, Poor Stan!

I really hope not and I'll be surprised if Philip doesn't find out, it's just a matter of whether it's sooner or later.

I didn't expect to be so affected by a scene with a character we hardly know but that conversation between Gabriel and Mischa was devastating. He looked so hopeful and innocent and Gabriel just broke his heart.

You're right, he's never really wanted help before since he never had a clue that he really needed it. I always felt sad for him because of the tragedy of it all but seeing him fully realize what he has become takes it to a whole other level, for sure.

Also, Fargo, Handmaid's Tale, Better Call Saul and Veep. Talk about Peak TV.

I am a little worried that his next project is as a "socially awkward" doctor on network tv but I will definitely check it out because of him.

Just curious, do you mean you didn't expect to feel sympathy for the character from Psycho or that you haven't felt sympathy for Norman throughout the show?

I've always thought this show (and Vera Farmiga) straddle the camp line perfectly. I love Alex's description of the slap being the "psychological equivalent of Chekhov’s gun".

I will miss this show too but damn, there is some great tv starting/returning this month.

Fantastic episode and Freddie Highmore had a writing credit. He has just been killing it (pun intended) and the dinner scene was incredible to watch. I am really enjoying the unexpected twists like Norman confessing to Sam's murder and can't wait to see how this all plays out.

I know this is a 3 year old comment and will likely not be seen but I'm just watching the show now for the first time and was thinking the same thing about how a woman must have written this.