scarletlettered--disqus
scarlet_lettered
scarletlettered--disqus

It would have been so easy for Adalind to encourage Diana to kill Bonaparte. I was actually a little impressed that Adalind tried to redirect Diana from focusing on her injury.

I get the worry about less Rosalee. That would not be acceptable. And the showrunners do seem to be weirdly fixated on making babies.

I loved her eye-rolling description of "daddy's bad friend."

I don't know that he sees a lot woges in the office from co-workers. And detectives may not interact with uniforms that much.

I think the frustrating thing about Adalind's pregnancies was that they were transparent plot devices. But Rosalee's pregnancy is natural character development. It makes sense that Monrosalee would start trying to have kids. And I'll bet they'll be adorable expectant parents. Monroe will be so geekily excited!

Not to mention an Adalind-Juliette-Nick love triangle.

It will be interesting how the new Mayor responds to the destruction of an entire precinct. I'm hoping Juliette still remembers Eve's crime-scene clean-up skills.

Good points! My fingers are crossed that Diana is picking up on daddy's douchiness.

I know. :-(

I am having trouble faulting Diana's choice of murder victims tonight. But mommy needs to make it clear that it's not okay to kill her other baby-daddy.

Nick's final stand at the fortress felt like an advertisement for a modular kitchen. I kept thinking how handy and practical the stove-on-wheels was. It can fry a burger and protect you from bullets!

This episode seemed to be telling two very different stories. One story was a darkly comedic, supernatural version of the 'Parent Trap.' The other was a Wild West/Sunnydalesque "bad guys take over the town" story, where the cops of the North Precinct were the evil gang of outlaws/monsters.

Fee and Krystal are excellent. I really miss Fee-Alison, though. They were my favorite madcap pairing. I wish the show would throw us a few Fee-Alison scenes just for old times sake.

In a way, that's a really nice summary of the show's dystopian view of corporate science.

One of Scot's Settlers of Catan buds was babysitting.

Ira is completely fine with holding Rachel prisoner and withholding medical treatment from Charlotte. He is aware of and on board with god knows what sorts of unethical human experimentation that Susan has been engaging in for years as a Neolution muckety-muck. Susan may now be the enemy of the clone club's enemy. But

Backing up data isn't thinking like a spy. It's thinking like an academic, which Cosima is. This did seem like a plot hole. But maybe the fact that their server was offline did make them overconfident. Having multiple backups can also be hard when your data is really big. When writers think about backups, we're

So a couple things. First, Evie Cho doesn't know she's the villain in her own story. In her mind, she's the scientific hero who makes hard choices to give humankind its best possible future. As other commenters have already pointed out, she doesn't need to kill all the clones (except possibly the fertile ones) to

Exactly! Evie thinks she's saving lives in the Big Picture by shutting down pointless research. In her mind, Evie only kills when absolutely necessary. And it's not as if Cosima can realistically go to the police and have Evie arrested. Who would believe her, besides Art?

Upvoted for explaining graciously. ;-)