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I thought I was the only person who remembered Season 1 of Big Brother!

Chuck is a Walter White level manipulator. I love it.

Great point. I think Aubry was genuinely so frustrated with Debbie's gameplay that she based her decision entirely on that, and it did make sense, but it probably would have been better to get them to play the idol. I don't know if they trusted Julia enough to get definitive intel on who the guys were voting for,

Aubry describing the fire going out as being like when they serve fajitas….fucking perfect.

It seemed to me that was the best move they could make. If they had voted for one of the guys, Cydney would have gone home. They actually flummoxed the guys' plan, and now know that they have the idols/super idol. There was no way for them to get them to play it, that I can think of. I was pretty impressed with

Idk, in my experience the bartender just gives you a nod and goes up to people one by one and says "guy over there's buying a round for the house. what do you want?" Happened nearly every time at a bar I used to go to - maybe that's why the reaction seemed odd to me.

I wonder what kind of bar this was, that when Mike bought drinks for the house, they acted like it was the first time it had ever happened in the history of bars.

I'll never forget walking by my friend's house, in '88, and she yelled at me from her second floor window that I had to hear this song. She put her little boom box up to the window and played it for me.

I loved the little smile that crossed Tony's face when he looked at the body.

I remember Randy Johnson talking to the press afterwards and some reporters were laughing about it. Johnson told them off, asked them what was so fucking funny about it. He felt bad.

I am not ashamed to say I laughed my ass off at this movie and watched it twice.

At least MLB doesn't fine players for celebrating, like the NFL does.

This series was absolutely incredible. I'm kind of sorry it's over. The final moment, displaying photos of Ron Goldman and Nicole Brown, was absolutely perfect. In the end, as incredible of a story as it was, it was all about the two of them.

The Innocence Project is highly selective in the cases they take on. The people they represent are actually innocent. Not "could be innocent." There is actual proof that they are innocent. And there was nothing sneaky or insincere about his work on the OJ case.

We only see him in lawyer mode, and with Kim, boss mode. He is a workaholic partner, and the firm is everything to him. With Chuck, he is respectful, perhaps in awe a bit, but every move he makes is for the benefit of the firm. As a boss, he is a bit of a dick. Well, pretty much a dick. I believed him when he said

That's actually the guy who does the voice for Trevor Phillips.

Now that I've slept on it, I actually think this was a good finale. Frustrating but good. All flaws aside (Carol storyline, etc.) the way Rick went from "I've got a DEAL for them" to kneeling on the ground, surrounded and his whole group COMPLETELY fucked, was pretty great.

Negan: You're going to regret crossing me in about…nineteen minutes.

Trust me it's more fun to watch people melt down over it than it was to watch the episode.

I know. I would have preferred maybe another episode or two, with a finale where Rick and them get payback.