tennessee3501--disqus
Tennessee3501
tennessee3501--disqus

I am sorry if my comments in any way offended you, but I have always found Alicia to be very sexy and, despite her strengths and independent nature, very much in need of a strong man to protect her and comfort her. I am sure many men agree and most successful female actresses have made us all feel the same way.

I disagree with your evaluation that Alicia was a "horrible person"! Millions of men would have fallen for Alicia which was one of the show's strengths! She needed protection and comfort!

Diane knew something had gone on between them before she married him. We can only speculate as to whether or not it had continued!

There was no "proof" of infidelity just as there was no proof that Peter had engineered the Locke mistrial.

He can always do both. Many great lawyers teach and practice law at the same time.

He can always do both! I say reprise Florrick/Agos!

If you want realism, in the real world Diane and her firm would have a serious "conflict of interest" representing Peter and Eli in the same case!

Why not reprise "Florrick/Agos? Cary can still continue teaching part time.

There would not have been much "sexual tension" between them! :-) It should be noted, however, that Michal J. Fox emceed the ceremony when Julianna Margulies was presented with her own star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame!

An excellent review of "The Good Wife" which will forever be a classic television show! Like the "Sopranos'" and "Mad Men" which were also classic television shows, all issues were not resolved at the end and we are left to speculate on Alicia's future.

I was satisfied with the ending, because I never expected all issues to be resolved! The only thing that bordered on insanity was Eli trying to start promoting Alicia as a candidate for public office once she divorces Peter. Season 6 fell apart with Alicia running for State's Attorney and those episodes (the worst

You are probably right, but I think his big regret is that the murder did not take the suspicion off of Martha and cost him an agent. Philip is such a compelling character because we like him despite the fact that we do not condone what he does. In that sense he is supposed to make us feel the same way we used to

No. That is why the scene did not make any sense to me.

Very true. I was referring to people he has been forced to kill in the line of duty. The first person he killed was a Russian boy.

Russian spies? Are you serious? I must have missed that! :-)

He regrets that the killing of Gene did not prevent Martha from being exposed, but feeling guilty about killing him? I doubt it!

It would have been nice if David Copperfield could have made Communists disappear as easily as he did the Statue of Liberty!

Sorry, but I was being sarcastic;

Thank you; I am surprised, because I never knew Philip to feel guilty about anything;

Isn't Cuba the safest place in the world in 1983?