stompythehorse
The Beekless Timeline
stompythehorse

It’s like how I’m not a fan of Dexter because Dexter doesn’t end with Dexter dying. The Dexter TV Show should’ve ended with Dexter dying because Dexter is a mass murderer.

I stopped watching this show after S1, but after hearing about this ending I watched it on YouTube and... wow. Tropes aside, that just seems... bad. I might be missing some important context but in terms of structure it just seems like such a terrible idea to have the central antagonists’ be killed (off screen and in

Batista is by far the worst main character in the entire series, written like he’s a detective starring in really shitty Latin telenovela.

I found this almost as unsatisfying as the Lumberjack finale tbh. As mentioned in the comments, the whole “Dexter saves Harrison from the trauma of a life of killing” is answered by Harrison having to kill his father? Like that isn’t just as traumatic? Bizarre.

I hated it. The only way to have Harrison not become a person like Dexter who murders the irredeemable is for him to...murder his father (an irredeemable murderer) in cold blood? And then wander the country as a homeless youth without money or family or a safety net? WHAT?

Too high: Succession, 10. Too soon.

I’m with on Rectify. For me, I’d put it in the top 10. But I’m willing to bet <50 of those experts have even heard of it.

I’ve got:

Going further back, Community was spot on with its finale.

Wow, that was the lamest key party ever. I agree with your take on how Cheryl said everything had to be consensual yet then played it off as anything goes. Confusing.

(Man, I apologize for what a mess my post, which of course I can’t edit now, is now that I re-read it... I didn’t even get LGBTQ down without a typo, oh well.)

Exactly! I actually meant to say that—that it especially seemed weird for someone like Salim. I don’t really buy that he would suddenly be so into the idea of

Punning aside, it’s a real issue when catering to the straight, white cis gaze to dramatize this aspect of queer culture and why it is essential. It’s rare for any media to appropriately capture how the experience shocks a person out of their assumptions of sexuality and morality, and why something that goes

Fuller’s show running for three seasons would have worked, I think.

Nothing. No accusations of anything has been reported.

It kind of makes me wonder why they are recapping this dreck, and not Fear.

So we should always believe women in every possible situation because of their biology and/or the fact that they identify as such?

a believable mix-up”

I was living in Jordan at the time, and was sick to my stomach when I saw pictures of people (I thought) I knew back home in New York celebrating death, without a shred of self-reflection or pause.

I'll be the first—and hopefully not the last—to say that I was majorly disappointed (disgusted?) that Sorkin not once bothered to examine the ethics of actually celebrating bin Laden's death in this episode (asides from Kaylee's lamentation, which garnered a whopping minute of screentime).

I'll be the first—and hopefully not the last—to say that I was majorly disappointed (disgusted?) that Sorkin not once bothered to examine the ethics of actually celebrating bin Laden's death in this episode (asides from Kaylee's lamentation, which garnered a whopping minute of screentime).