tanten
Tanten
tanten

I feel like I watched a different show here. Issa and Molly were both in the wrong here - one thing to say it’s too soon to bring Andrew to Thanksgiving, another to bring up “Molly shit” and Issa’s conversation with her brother regarding Lawrence proves some proof that Molly wasn’t wrong to see the Condola connection

I actually hope Issa and Lawrence DON’T get back together. Friends, yes. Lovers, NO! They’re lazy with each other and too comfortable. That’s why he wasn’t working or being the man of the house, and she was busting her ass, making excuses to pay for all the dates (hence she pointed that out to her brother).

My hardest laugh of the episode was when they stopped running after they realized it was Stanley on the stretcher.

I didn’t see the play, but as a Ravens fan I can pretty much picture it. 

As a Ravens fan maybe they ran the ball because Flacco would just throw the ball to his last check down player and not get the 5 yards. There’s a reason the Ravens let him go. He just hasn’t been good the last couple of years.

Joe, you ever stop to think it’s because they have little confidence in you?

You forgot about Joe Flacco’s bread and butter - heaving the ball 50 yards on as high of an arc as possible so the receiver and defensive back have to stop and wait for it, praying for a 50 yard pass interference call.

As a Ravens fan, it is astounding how many of my Autumn Facebook Memories are of single-line status updates bitching about Flacco throwing into triple coverage or getting sacked after holding the ball for 8 seconds during a three man rush.

Piper going from someone whose name begins with A to one whose name begins with Z is not the most subtle.

Oh, Joe. I knew his reaction to the MeToo post would be a disaster and he still somehow managed to exceed my expectations.

I realise it’s a huge cast but the fact that Danielle Brooks or Adrienne C Moore have never been singled out for individual awards attention is a bigger crime than anyone’s committed in Litchfield [well, maybe not the murdery ones].

Well, the show’s wonky timeline explains the first objection: it was 201X when the show started, and so it’s very possible that in the current wonky timeline version of the show Maritza would have qualified before committing a felony. (I didn’t know about the felony distinction, so I appreciate that clarification).

I agree.

The original article stuck with me, and this one will too. Again, you brought tears to my eyes. Thank you for this - even though I am a white woman myself, I can perhaps relate to your experience a bit. I was partnered with a white, working class man for four years right through December 2016. I loved him as dearly as

I was thinking about you and that article the other day and wondered how things were getting along. I am sorry to see that this is still tearing you up. I hope at the end of it all you finally find some peace with all of this.

I’ve never understood people’s willingness to be hurt over and over again by family members.

1. The criticism of the suicide inclusion is no more or less valid if it’s based on true events. That’s a bad way to think about art.

I’d say bipolar, too. For me it was kind of a note on how young people might not have been receiving the care they needed a decade or two ago like they are now.

I’d love to know more about Danisha. Did she really just have a bad headache that day? In any case, that was quite a dramatic turnaround.

Among the many reasons I loathe Negan is that Jeffrey Dean Morgan looks sickly thin. He looks like he can barely lift a baseball bat. Yet everyone cowers around him.