theunclewillard--disqus
Uncle Willard
theunclewillard--disqus

Forever redefining hosed, hoser, and firehose.

I came to tears. That scene surprised the heck outta me.

So basically we've got:
Gravity (for those too cheap to rent the fucking movie)
CSI
CSI
CSI-Stalker
Shameless (for those too cheap for fucking premium cable)
Judging Amy goes to Washington?

I didn't think they were funny enough to be controversial. And where did she come from? Is that the best way to introduce a new cast member?

B-?! B for the season? I will paint the blood eagle on your back, sir.

Probably the one at the end of the universe.

I think it's hilarious that anyone would look at Johnny Depp and see anything other than success. The guy has done what he loves to do for most of his life, worked with some of the biggest acts (directors and actors) in Hollywood, and pretty much kept his feet on the ground. Not too mention making serious bank. To

So he was killing two birds with one stone? (I'm sorry…I had to).

There is still so much barbarism and atrocity in the world, it's hard for me to imagine that this did NOT happen. What's hard to imagine is the intimacy and ritual involved in something as it's portrayed in this episode. I can imagine a hated enemy being horribly tortured and executed by those he has wronged (Qaddafi

Well-said. I kept thinking of Braveheart, and the hardest thing for me wasn't the execution, but the jeering. That feeling of loneliness at being the object of such hate, understandable though it may be (Wallace did scare the shit out of the English). Borg, though the villain and sentenced to a gruesome death, was

Agreed. That nod that Borg gives him is almost worth redemption in my book. There is a mutual respect there that's sad to see end up like this, but if it has to, they're both Vikings about it. It was well-done all around. It wasn't about gore and pain, but rather about ritual.

Couldn't that be explained as "real to them?" I mean, in that era those things were so very real. If you saw a raven, that was Odin, baby. And while we're there in the seer's hut for the time he's right, we're not there for all the times he's wrong (like, yo, how about a heads up concerning the invasion of Earl Borg,

Thanks. Bad call if you ask me. While Darius wasn't a huge character, the exposure on GOT sure couldn't hurt a career.

This gave me crazy dreams and thankfully so. Things you can't unfeel. I too was touched by Rothgar putting Borg's hand back up and his little nod of gratitude…just…wow! This is an A episode in my opinion.

I noticed they replaced Ed Skrein with that douche from Treme, wtf? Okay, I didn't like Treme or his character so that's a bit unfair, but I thought Ed Skrein did a good job.

It does scream "I'm not doin shit today!"

Every time I see him without a hat I remember how bad Ninth Gate was.

I think there's some confusion going on between gender roles, sex, and fetishism. S&M is fetishism and gender is not necessarily the deciding factor with regard to dominance and submission. I'd wager there are more male doms than female, but it's not a gender role per se. I also thought K was empowered by sex. She

I was disappointed. Maybe I set the bar too high?

What do you expect from a white hair dresser who has dreads? On white people it basically screams "I quit everything!"