sundaynightaddict--disqus
sundaynightaddict
sundaynightaddict--disqus

I would upvote this a million times if I could. First, as a fat woman, I can tell you that I have NEVER had a problem in the sexual attraction department. For every body, there is another body that wants to get with it. My husband is "conventionally attractive" and he *prefers* bigger women. It's just the way he's

I was confused about that, too. I didn't remember him spilling the beans between then and now. That being said, it irritates me when people make a big, weird deal out of what they do. Like, who gives a shit if he's a cop? Who cares that Jeremiah is a model? The only way it makes sense is if you are already rich and

I thought it was hilarious that Tony is so easily rattled that he just blurts out random crap like that. Even though it doesn't hurt him, he definitely wasn't intending on telling people like that. A little poking from Kass and he goes bonkers.

I agree - I think they will stay together. They are enough of an odd couple that there will be room for conflict and comedy.

The hand is freaking me out so badly, I can't stand it. It pretty much consumes my thoughts every time he's in a scene now. They throw him in the trunk and all I can think about is him landing on that hand. The cop starts to cuff him and I'm screaming in my head before Freeman even starts wincing. He starts touching

Tony Hale killed it the entire episode, even when he wasn't speaking. His facial expressions are the stuff that dreams are made of.

I was having trouble with that, too. Yes, Don shit the bed. Bad. But, for somebody who has brought in so much business, he evokes very little goodwill from those who have been there through the whole thing.

Jared's the BEST. When I saw him standing there in Richard's short, wet jeans, I almost died.

I loved how, even though Lou had the upper hand (he's in Don's office, he controls Don's people, etc, etc.), Don's mere presence puts Lou into an utter tailspin. Even as Don is put in his place, seated at the kiddie table (almost literally), he has a presence that sends everybody into a tizzy.

Oh. My. God. I just read it. Now I hate him even more.

I agree - that's the aspect of his character that I enjoy. I am less enamored of his paranoia. I did like the preview for next week where he's making peeper eyes with his hands. I like it when he's really dopey like that.

I think the LJ/Tasha thing was an unintentional alienation. I think LJ was legitimately concerned that if he was caught pow-wowing with Tasha, he would have raised Tony's paranoia (little did he know the writing was already on the wall on that count). He should have just told her that, though, instead of being Mr.

There's something about Spencer that rubs me in all the wrong ways. He sees himself as a Cochran, but he has none of the wit or self-effacing charm that Cochran has. I'm so sick of him looking smug all the time that I want to smack his stupid face.

touches like that in shows actually make me sort of happy - i go nuts watching shows like Vikings and screaming the whole time: "How do they know who they're KILLING?!?!"

I still watch this show, mainly because my husband enjoys it, but what drives me crazy is what this show COULD have/should have been. I think the whole idea of cultism is fascinating and if they had just ended the Joe Carroll storyline at the end of S1 (prompting the team to work together on other cult-related stuff)

I thought she looked great. Whereas Cardellini's hair and m/u really aged her, I thought the styling looked appropriate on Campbell. She did make me pine for a Maggie Siff cameo before the show ends, though.

I thought this episode did a good job at balancing the melodramatic with the funny. There were some true laugh out loud moments for me: Julia awkwardly squeezing Teach's arm as a goodbye, Crosby trying to fix shit and Joel's reaction to that, Hank being Hank, Sarah commenting on the Braverman pattern of inappropriate

I had to laugh when Spencer came back and tattled that Woo threw his pants in the water. It's an impression that I often get with Spencer - a little boy playing grown-up.

Well, he lasted longer than I would, but I guess that's not the best baseline lol. In all seriousness, though, like @acdc392333:disqus I would argue that his decision to leave was based more on the fact that Fiona was essentially treating him as a glorified nanny at that point and he wanted something for himself, for

Argh - I hate that I'm coming here defending JJS, buuuuuut… I think calling him spoiled, stupid and bratty is sort of unfair. I think he really tried to do his best to support Fiona and help take care of her family, before stupid plotlines conspired to screw up what could have been interesting. I thought his