saramis--disqus
Saramis
saramis--disqus

Once he unlinks from the Framework he'll have access to his Real World memories again. He'd remember both worlds.

"If Aida can bring digital Fitz over, can we please get a real-life good guy Ward at the same time? I’m really enjoying rebooted Grant Ward."

Just because he wouldn't die doesn't mean it isn't dangerous. Passing out from oxygen deprivation = your brain is getting fucked.
Also he is BREATHING to make the bag go in and out, so he's not holding his breath, he's breating in a ton of carbon dioxide.

"whatever character growth Jemma brought out in him never happened"
IT IS NOT ABOUT JEMMA.

They have to do that so that the congressman won't take away their funding. :\

Well, he WAS in this week's Brooklyn Nine Nine, so everyone can watch that to soothe the pain.

I am in agreement with you, and my statement is in argument with OP. Being raised by his father = a lot of things, and I feel like a lot of viewers think it's not enough to change someone even though it definitely is. Sorry if that wasn't clear.

It is one thing that triggered subsequent years of things.

Danaerys already is the monarch of Westeros, as far as she is concerned. She's just trying to convince everyone else.

It has, but its salience in the current political and pop culture collective awareness is very much increased.

Yeah, that's not one thing, that's YEARS OF THINGS.

Fitz isn't "just evil" in this reality and I think this episode did a good job of showing that he is struggling somewhat with the morality of his actions.

The show hasn't dwelled on it much but enough others have to indicate that the wives of aristocracy are really just playing a slightly different game of survival than the harlots are. She knows Lord Repton's cruelty and has been subjected to it before. She's well trained and we witnessed one slight misstep from her

Is there anything to the speculation I see in The 100 comments about Lindsay Morgan?

Even if it's speculative fiction, a period depicts contextual clues like what the politics and cultural norms the characters live in are. It suggests certain things about how psychological conditions are understood and medically treated, and whether what we're observing is normal for the time or aberrant and

Her?

That's incredibly stupid and dangerous.

Jarden?

I agree, I think both are fantastic but don't really feel like I can compare them against each other.

Erika had been thinking of leaving John before Evie's disappearance.