studiotodd--disqus
StudioTodd
studiotodd--disqus

Sadly, yes.

Oh great…does that mean we have mediocre musical numbers, characters whose motivations and backstories randomly change from week to week and pointless plot tangents to look forward to?

You people are nuts. Asylum was just as shitty and random and rudderless as every other season of this show.

It's teevee, though…you think Major will get to skate by after shooting a genuinely nice Dad in a cardigan whose kids hired a personal trainer because they loved their Dad and were concerned about his well-being?

Here's the thing with the Major storyline—Major is definitely a goner if he is really killing people (especially on a show that is partly a police procedural). And they start him out with a Dad character who seems perfectly lovely and who has a caring family? See ya, Major. No one on these shows gets away with murder,

Zach is officially the most ungrateful piece of shit on television.

If they give us any more ridiculously unbelievable scenes like the courtroom scenes with Analise on the stand, I think I'm ready to walk away from this show.

Please keep in mind that this is TV we're talking about—not real life.

No, at this point I don't. But this is the first time they've done a sudden switch to the sexuality of an established character, so pardon my skepticism.

No reason…except that the characters on HTGAWM have demonstrated over and over that they are not above conning, deceiving or using someone in order to get what they want from them.

Almost every example they give is a non-network show, though, and 5 of the examples are lesbians. And of the examples they used, I would argue that some of them are not even examples of the trope they are trying to claim exists.

Where? On what shows does that trope exist?

I hope you're right, but this is American network TV we're talking about—where no one is ever happily single, sex outside of a monogamous pairing is always "wrong" and always results in negative consequences and where many examples exist of interesting and intriguing characters become boring and irrelevant as soon as

"Less tokenized"??? What could be more "tokenized" than taking an outspoken, unapologetically sexually confident gay shark and turning him into a watered-down, clingy, monogamous relationship-oriented, needy feelzy-weelzy guppy because he finally met "the one"?

Well, it remains to be seen whether Annalise is actually bisexual or if it's just another tactic she employs to get what she wants.

We're not talking about true life—it's television. I'm annoyed that they've taken away everything that made the character of Connor interesting, sexy and edgy in order to make him more palatable to the straights.

Can you come up with a single gay character on TV (other than Mickey and Ian from Shameless) who isn't an almost perfect role model, in a nurturing and supportive serious relationship and the type of person one could only dream of having for a son/brother/best friend/neighbor/co-worker?

Yet you don't think that gay Connor meeting his true gay love in season 1 episode 1 is trite and cheap?

Some things I really need to get off my chest about this show: