threenineteen--disqus
Three_nineteen
threenineteen--disqus

A theme that runs through a lot of Lynch's work is the objectification, terrorizing, and abuse of (mostly younger) women by (mostly older) men. Some people see it as a problem, some people see it as commentary on society.

How can you say that about the movie that gave us the immortal Dan Hedaya line "Richard Grieco…you see right through me"?

So many comment threads now don't discuss the episode that just aired - it's all about guessing what's going to happen next.

Don't forget Mail Robot from The Americans.

Wouldn't it be more annoying if the fridge only kept a shopping list for refrigerated items, and you had to make a separate shopping list for everything else?

The fridge is keeping a shopping list.

Then the 1st amendment can't be restricted in the way we are talking about. We need to find a better analogy.

We do restrict speech when it results in harming people. It's called incitement to violence and it's against the law.

It wasn't that the drugs were expired or not good — the drug dealers were diluting them so they could sell more. Then there isn't enough active ingredient for the medication to work.

So agreeing to go back to her abusive boyfriend to try and make up for what she did isn't quite enough for you? It was for me. Putting her life in danger shows her repentance, even though I think she was wrong to do it (what she did should not cost her life).

It's not a spinoff - it's a prequel. It's putting together the world that is already fully formed when Walt joins it in BrBa.

Sharon met Rob after he sobered up, so she doesn't know what he's like drunk. He hid it well, plus Sharon is pretty self-involved and puts most of her attention towards the kids, so it makes sense to me for her to dismiss Rob's behavior as him just being his weird self and not think he may be drinking.

"Hi kids! Not only did your dad beat me, but then I killed him. Don't worry, I'm only going to prison for a few months."

And then Celeste told Renata without minimizing or excusing Max's behavior.

Probably because serial killers and murderers aren't really prevalent in most women's day-to-day experiences, so it's easier to separate actor from performance. Rapists and abusers are unfortunately types of men that women are more likely to know, either first or second hand, so it's easier for women to imagine the

I don't think the flashback format worked for this series. The show wasn't a whodunit, but that framing made everyone look for clues as to who died and why. If they had just started the series with Madeline falling and Jane helping her, everything would have built up naturally and I think the ending would have had

Well, not watching this show again. I'll miss you, Charlie.

Yes, as a white person who lived in the rural Midwest in the 1980s and now lives in the suburban Midwest, I am demonizing white people, including myself and almost all my friends and family, because I pointed out what Trump's stump speeches said, not to mention my own experiences.

Well, when unemployment and drug use ran rampant in inner city black communities in the 1980s, the suburban and rural white people called them lazy thugs and said it was their own fault. Now that unemployment and drug use are running rampant through rural white communities, white people are blameless victims, and

Edward betrayed the family by choosing love over duty. In Margaret's situation, wouldn't she be the one to betray the family if she chose love over duty? The show really annoyed me by putting the blame on Elizabeth. The entire season reinforced the idea that Edward was wrong, but Margaret was right, for reasons.