thesearenotmypants
Thesearenotmypants
thesearenotmypants

Asking about how far you’ve gotten while also insinuating loudly proclaiming that you’re going to die before finishing the series.

Scripts can be rewritten or tweaked.

Five years.

I’m not exactly a Kree expert, but I figured that they thought they would’ve greater problems controling her. Or maybe their 1990's brainwashing technique was not as good as Hydra’s because they spent their ressources elsewhere (space ships, intergalactic travel,...). But really, that’s just guessing.

I don’t know, that sounded pretty much like normal military for me (in the first part of the movie, I mean). She’s a soldier and supposed to follow orders. She’s not supposed to attack in anger or fury or whatever emotion fuels her.

To me at least it first looked as if they wanted to present the Kree as multi-faceted, like Ronan not being the stereotypical Kree but just one militant extremist. Yon Rogg seemed to be a good person just doing his job, for example, just like the rest of Carol’s squad. I was actually a bit disappointed when it turned

This. Plus she’s the only American in the Royal family, which is why they asked him about her in the first place, I suppose. And she’s openly critical of Trump, which makes her evil in his eyes, I guess.

I would’ve found Tyrion’s claim that Bran had “the best story” more believable if the showrunners hadn’t decided to skip his story for a whole season. How can it be the best story if it’s not worth telling?

You mean, HBO would’ve been willing to pay for a proper goodbye scene between Ghost and Jon (I heard CGI is more expensive on furry animals like wolves than scaly animals like dragons), but D&D refused them? Shame on them.

That’s a good question. In-universe, First-season-Arya was 11 years old. If every season covered a year (including the time between seasons), she’d be 18 by now. However, the show has been quite creative with how much time has passed at all. Baby Sam is apparently still a toddler, even though he should be at least

I’ve heard that interpretation as well.

I didn’t say everything was. I just said this one example out of eight was.

Maybe? Has that been established?

That’s of course possible. For now we only know what’s actually visible on screen and draw our conclusions from there.

I thought Jon Connington already has greyscale and was just hiding it beneath his clothes?

No.

I’m not saying she shouldn’t listen to them at all. They know the land, they know the people, they know Cersei. My point is, the writers have dumbed her down in order to either make her advisors sound smarter or to make Cersei a bigger threat by not getting her killed so easily through a precision strike via

I’m sure they could’ve done that. But they didn’t, and instead they completely ignored it (unless she’ll develop the scales in the last two episodes, but I’m not exactly holding my breath).

What I mean is it doesn’t matter which hand she touches, she shouldn’t have touched him at all, and that’s on the writers. Then again, since last season they’ve forgotten that Daeny had conquered three cities already but somehow needs to defer to the wisdom Tyrion, Jon and Varys who’ve never conquered any city before.

While I agree that the other examples in the article are actual goofs, I disagree that this one is just that. Instead, it’s an example of poor writing. Because with greyscale, it’s not a matter of touching the infected area, it’s more of a “touch any part of the body and you’ll get infected” kind of disease.