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It matters that he did it, because now he's a huge albatross hanging around their necks.

Quinn's romance was really mishandled. I can even kind of see her being the kind of person who, when she finds someone who feels right, she ignores all the bullshit about taking her time and charges full speed ahead in a few weeks time. But if that's the way it's being played, *that* needs to be a story point that

The show needs *someone* with a moral center, just for everyone else to play off of. Messed up though she was, in Season 1, that was normally Rachel, and it drove the conflict with Quinn. But with Rachel completely off the rails this season, Jay was the only one really positioned to do it. And having a Black suitor

This.

I think it's more that Quinn thinks Madison is in way over her head as a producer, and that Madison would never have even been considered for it if Chet's behavior hadn't, er, thrust it upon her. So Quinn takes that out on Madison by being snide, and the slut shaming is just low-hanging fruit.

We saw early on from the scene where Rachel "produces" him that Coleman is a creeper when you get him talking about his ex and push him a little, so I can believe that he's a nice-seeming guy while they're together and then a complete monster after his ego's taken the hit of getting his ass dumped.

In fairness, still a better President than Trump.

In the end, the consequences of her getting a Black man shot at a police stop turned out to be 100% about how they affected Rachel. She had a breakdown. And she burned bridges so people were mean to her. Justifiably, even.

Setting aside the absurd parts, I think we're absolutely *not* supposed to forgive Jeremy. He's creepier than ever, and yet they're stuck with him because they can't afford to let him talk. That's a potentially interesting setup for Season 3.

I honestly couldn't care less about the specifics of the car chase or whatever the hell it was that Jeremy did — this isn't an action movie.

Ok, you don't like shows about antiheroes. Sure.

If someone doing something horrible and unforgivable makes her so monstrous in your eyes that it doesn't bother you to see her physically assaulted by an ex-boyfriend, that's your right, I suppose. But honestly, I'm a little fuzzy on how this is so much worse than Walt going around actually murdering Latinx people to

But it already covered the fact that he'd rather hold onto that instead of becoming an activist when he horrified us all and cut Ruby earlier in the season. But I think where the show is going with Darius is to dramatize how people with previously comfortable, successful lives end up becoming activists.

All her "romances" are trainwrecks. The same empathy that she uses to connect with people that makes her good at her job makes her interesting to guys. She connects with people. But her dysfunction and mental illness make her a disaster of a girlfriend.

Even Divergent was better than Twilight.

He was terrible. I feel like the movies could have been improved if he'd been replaced by a cardboard box.

Will it be a live-action YA post-apocalyptic movie too?

Is Baltimore still around *now*?

After possession comes exorcism.

Of course she's horrible. Lots of TV shows revolve around antiheroes as leads, and yeah, they're horrible — we're just used to them being men. Which is why the PR for UnREAL makes such a point of comparing it to Breaking Bad.