spikedearheart
SpikeDearheart
spikedearheart

Do you think the Zygons have a dark web dating service?

I hated the status quo of 'The Woman Who Lived'. Ok, Doctor, you don't want to travel with Ashildir, at least give her a lift to a decade with cars and planes.

It was funny how the teenagers were bored by his transformation!

Season 5 gets my vote for sure. Hardly any off-episodes.

Did the murder of one Osgood by Missy cause some kind of imbalance leading to this point?

At least we got the guy who was turned back into Zygon against his will to create some sympathy.

That monologue elevated the episode.

The first episode left me cold but this one pulled through. My main problem, though, is: How were the Zygons oppressed and treated like cattle? They alluded to a Zygon child in Mexico murdered by the mob, but not much else. Did the Zygons feel the compromise of having to stay in human form unfair? Their thinking

Parts of this two-parter felt like a writer loved the phrase "truth or consequences" and then constructed a story around that.

The scene between Laurel and Thea in the hospital was unintentionally creepy. It's dark and Thea finds Laurel (lit in orange) watching her sleep. Thea says "I'm the one who killed her in the first place" and Laurel gets up and looks like it's the first time she's heard of this (cue ominous music) "I don't understand"

Maybe they don't want a Sarah situation again. Killing off Laurel won't anger a lot of fans.

Oh dear stupid Fitz, why do you insist on kicking Mellie when she's down? You know she bites back even harder.

Exactly. Your dad crying in front of you would be heartbreaking.

"I commented in the Flash thread last night that Ramsey, Jesse Martin, and Tom Cavanagh are so above the others they need an HBO show or something on the off season" Oh yes, that would be amazing.

It's not going to work out fine for Laurel, cause she's going to be the one in the grave. That's why Oliver was all "her death isn't my fault".

I got teary during the flashback to Donna and the 10th Doctor. Not sure why.

Lyla's practical and she won't put her daughter in danger. Plus, didn't Lyla and Diggle make a pact last season to have only one parent in peril at a time?

That song really reminded me of Amy Schumer.

Yes.

So… Anna still believes in Everlasting's premise?