It would even explain why the First is suddenly trying to mess with the Slayer line, if its connection to the living Slayer gives it a power or an awareness it never had before
It would even explain why the First is suddenly trying to mess with the Slayer line, if its connection to the living Slayer gives it a power or an awareness it never had before
She was the only one I didn't want to punch by that point in Season 6.
Short for Buffina.
I laughed out loud a lot.
She cheated on him by making out with Xander a bunch of times; he cheated on her by sleeping with Veruca once. Your mileage may vary on what's "worse."
The mailbox was Haldeman.
There is also a shot in one episode that is directly modeled after The Craft:
He is a Flutie AT BEST
Only if you gender-swap them AND make them Disney princesses, but only every time Hamilton says "pen."
Clara really had two natural end points, though: trying to become the Doctor and succeeding, or trying to become the Doctor and dying.
Head usually does.
We got to see that in the next episode, though. Having him show up in "The Body" wouldn't have felt natural, IMO. It only takes place over the course of a few hours, and there's no reason for anyone to call Spike at this point in the series.
I have his autograph on the Buffy Season 5 DVDs, along with David Fury's. Marsters was in a play in LA a few years ago that was supposed to have Juliet Landau as his co-star, but she had to drop out. As a gift to "Buffy" fans who were naturally excited to see the two reunite, there were nights where other Whedonverse…
From what we know, Glory turns back into Ben when she's weakened—she turned back into him after she got hit by the truck, for instance. But that doesn't seem to be the only thing that turns her back, otherwise she would hardly ever be Ben. Also, towards the end of the season she was shifting back and forth more often,…
She's seemed more willing to engage with the fandom in recent years, and she gets along with the rest of the cast of Twitter and Instagram are to be believed.
But she wasn't sent back to her own universe, right? Her whole goal was to go back to her own universe. If she could do that by getting herself killed, she would have. The logic is that she's still inside Ben, defeated only momentarily, which is why Giles kills him.
No, Buffy knows Willow brought him back. They discuss it at length in "Faith, Hope, and Trick."
I've always been torn on this.
I'm Daisy Ridley somebody finally something something give my upvotes.
It's actually a technique that I use called "gadding," which involves asking women questions about Star Wars until they sleep with you.