One perimortem drip of super-determined sperm.
One perimortem drip of super-determined sperm.
I will be visiting my mental fanfics about the moment all week!
I know. I miss Truble! And I liked Josh in his own, I'm completely inept and need to be saved by an almost-underaged girl way. I mean, it was hard to watch him with his dad, but if our aged parents started talking about monsters and grimms we'd think it was one extremely extended senior moment too.
To be fair, when you look at his mom and Aunt Marie—much as I love them—emotional constipation and poor communication skills do seem to be a family traits. I wonder if dead, non-Grimm dad was the talker in the family?
Agreed. Hooking up with Sean can't possibly end well either. I can't wait!
I don't remember the show ever establishing what magical powers royal blood has, aside from the ability to wake people from magically induced comas. Aside from snobbery and mustache twirling, none of them have displayed any talents until tonight. Some idle and probably incorrect speculation: maybe Kenneth's fight club…
Chinn/Quarlie is my only ship! Those crazy kids have got to make it work!
Charlie wanted the secretarial skills course, but they stuck him in the hole until he agreed to learn to fix flats and refrigerators.
To me, this actually feels like what a functional 20-odd-year marriage should look like. Committed partners who realistically know each others' weaknesses and flaws and do their imperfect best to support each other. And yeah, the sex vibe and romance is gone. That's hard to sustain for many people, never mind affairs…
Had to log in just to upvote. Cut that sentence off with the comma still on it, as Cromwell would say.
Juliard is perfect! I've never actively shipped them, but I find it an intriguing pairing. Especially because Renard/Adalind never made much sense to me. Adalind seems too shallow to genuinely hold Renard's attention, but Juliette could easily hold her own with him.
The Wesen Council's solution for almost everything seems to be
execution. I think Nick & Hank are telling themselves that it's more
humane to kill only "half" of Linus-Stacy than all of them. But you're totally
right—Stacy-Linus's sense of self is not separable in the way that Nick &
Co. assume it is. So it's really…
As if Elizabeth would ever waste her time watching such a decadent capitalist program as Dexter! Leisure time is for indoctrinating one's children and reading mail robot repair manuals!
That was my read too—that Elizabeth was taking the time to try to figure out how to make Betty's death look natural.
Yep. I'm thinking privileged, highly-educated family of origin, plus mild, constantly sub-manic bipolar-2.
To be fair to Simmons, which I'm usually not, Simmons has had to bear the brunt of acting out the (generally good) point that the Whedons are trying to make this season about disability. Which is that people with disabilities just want to be accepted as they are and accommodated, while many able-bodied people…
It seems to me that there are still a lot of white people on How to Get Away with Murder. There are three African-American regulars and a couple recurring characters of color, which is great, but it's a big cast, so it hardly seems overwhelming. I don't know, maybe because show is set in an affluent context, the air…
[Skipping over the contentious royals part…] That makes sense to me. The grimms and the hexenbiests seem like they started out as normal humans who were then altered by some sort of magic spell or ritual in way that became not just permanent, but hereditary. The other wesen seem more like weird evolutionary hiccups.
Hexengrimm has my vote.
We have. Han is in a band and lives next door to the Jennings on alternate weekends.