sundaynightaddict--disqus
sundaynightaddict
sundaynightaddict--disqus

I thought Nicole and Lauren's bakes were more on par with the British bakers, whereas Grace and Eddie would be horribly outmatched, I think.

It was such a great moment, particularly since Lou is such a taciturn character. His small moments are so brilliant. I think it's easy to overlook Patrick Wilson's performance among such meaty characters, but I think he's fantastic.

I think they tried to skirt the implausibility by having Bea Wilson (was that her name? I already forgot) recognize the Florrick name as a reason for hiring her, but Grace never would have gotten her call past the receptionist.

This is how I feel after every episode of this show. So many questions! I always feel like I am not watching closely enough (or perhaps I just watch too many shows and can't remember important details from the previous episode(s)).

I was laughing so hard when they started walking down those stairs and saw all the magazines. The fucking magazines.

I also think Eli has become so accustomed to the Florricks' marriage of convenience that he just wasn't sure how to process what he was seeing.

The clock inside the diner said something like 7:08 and his watch, when he looked at it, said 9:08 (guessing at the minutes part of it). I had to rewind to be sure.

I also get the feeling that he thinks he married up and never feels quite comfortable laying down the law with Peggy for fear that she'll leave.

I wish they would share their casting people with The Amazing Race.

I was like noooooooo, that's old Spencer that I hate. It better not stick.

King of the Tossers

The editing in of Tasha's fainting face (even though it probably wasn't even filmed at that moment) was hilarious. I love this show.

Count me in on Slither. It's one of those movies that just gets better upon repeated wstchings. And I thought it did a great job of updating the 70s movies it pays homage to.

It's so weird how they somehow managed to go from having the youngest/hippest new law firm in Chicago to the meeting of the old fogies without ever mentioning where all of those fourth years went.

I'm probably just thinking of one of those tropes where the lawyer always asks for a dollar to bind attorney/client privilege. Either way, I thought it was odd to fall back on that for somebody she really had no intention of representing, while (sort of) breaking a/c priv with Eli.

The kooky thing about the attorney/client privilege thing with Howard is that I'm pretty sure he never paid her and he really wasn't her client. I thought maybe she pulled that out of the bag just to piss off Diane who came banging at her door with accusations.

Exactly! I enjoyed everything about this episode except for that. I'm over the "Three's Company"-style misunderstandings between Diane and Alicia every couple of episodes. Blech. And I was disappointed when the start to DIane's apparent re-mending of the relationship really just turned out to be a way to make sure

Rewatching old Roseanne episodes after all these years, it's always a pleasure to come across the Halloween eps b/c they did them with such gusto and gore. Really fun.

There was also a few episodes during Peter's post-prison SA campaign where he hired a guy who was sucking up to Jackie and trying to usurp Eli.

I recently binge watched TGW in a successful effort to get my husband watching the show and I found that last season was far more tolerable watched that way than week-to-week, for whatever reason.