This would be a great opportunity to prove my theory that the rest of the United States has completely recovered from the outbreak, and only in Georgia is it a post apocalyptic anarchic wasteland.
This would be a great opportunity to prove my theory that the rest of the United States has completely recovered from the outbreak, and only in Georgia is it a post apocalyptic anarchic wasteland.
If so, did it work for scales?
Arya literally asked Lady Crane the question “What’s west of Westeros?” in season six. When Lady Crane says she doesn’t know, it’s the edge of the world, Arya notes that it’s where the maps stop. She then says, “I’d like to see that.”
Bran bends the knee to nobody.
People keep saying that, but people largely underestimate how bad Americans are with computers. They are far more likely to accidentally pay twice than steal anything.
I have a feeling that pretty soon I’m going to be getting a bill from Disney for breathing their oxygen.
Anyone who didn’t think Dany was going to use her nukes to torch innocents eventually is kidding themselves. If dragons are metaphors for weapons of mass destruction—specifically, Nuclear Weapons—then they had to be used this way eventually. I thought it was a spectacular (good and bad) episode in a lot of ways—but I…
I’d be fine with this exact ending if it had been written better. It’s not WHAT happens that rankles, but WHY. The journey to these conclusions seems contrived.
The problem with seeing Drogon so easily obliterate the Iron Fleet & all the ballistas on the walls is it just highlights the pointlessness of not having Dany do it right off the bat. I mean, in the moment, when she just lost another of her babies, doesn’t THEN seem like the time she’d go apeshit on them? And it…
Okay, see, what I thought they were building to with Dany was “Her desire to retake the throne ultimately overshadows her noble ideals and brings out her tyrannical side.”
I don’t know about other places, but the general sentiment here seems to be negative about the way they did it, not that they did it.
Credit where it’s due: Emilia Clarke has usually not been much more than a decent actress (though I’ve often defended her from critics who assert she’s bad, which I don’t think she has been), but she has been absolutely wonderful this season, even as the writing for her character has turned into a trainwreck.
I think it was a good idea that was poorly executed.
If good writing accompanied that I wouldnt mind.
Honestly maybe even worst served than Dany’s arc was Jaime’s.
What in the seven hells was Jaime’s plan? Did he seriously want to run back to Cersei, even when it was clear she hired a hitman to kill him? The framing of their death being tragic was really weird.
Probably 8 minutes of brainstorming at the Chateau Marmot before they wrote it on a napkin. They overthought this. Tried too hard to be contrarian. Even if Mad Queen was always the ending, they could’ve built up to it in a more convincing way. She basically went from sweet, empathetic queen to genocidal maniac in…
Agreed. Cheap, redundant, and an absolute bullshit return for the past decade.
Solid contender for worst fucking episode.
I’m wondering exactly which word needed to be taken out of that in order not to trigger you. I’m guessing either/or “white” and “male”.
I also call words I don’t understand ‘bullshit’ sometimes. Someday maybe we’ll change for the better, friend.