tinkererer
Tinker
tinkererer

They did, it's just that cats have nine lives.

It doesn't seem like it would be worth that much, but wouldn't it be nice if Emmit's stamp was Norm Gunderson's three-cent mallard duck stamp?

Bigfoot.

I think that's partially what's nagging me this season: too much focus on the bad guys (or the morally grey guys). Previous seasons very much focused on the main protagonists' home lives too, with a supporting cast of their dad, daughter, wife, son, friends, anything, featuring pretty prominently. As great as Gloria

Kind of strange how the Orville, which looks hella cheap, still has better art direction.

I wonder if the end result of the Mike and Nacho storylines is that Mike kills Nacho, Mike's way of "breaking bad". Nacho is definitely looking at a tragic end right now, so that would feel fitting.

Not really. Homosexual sex scenes, especially male/male, are very rare in media to start with, let alone one as explicit as this one. He doesn't need to be prude to have not seen one.

I think a lot of people are thinking Nikki is somehow conning Ray, which might still be happening, but so far there's no actual evidence of that. I think the character might be more interesting if she actually does love Ray.

It's heavily implied that Emmitt and Sy already had some shady shit going on, so going to the police wouldn't be the best idea.

They're definitely floating the Mesa Verde plot at the corners of the series right now, ready for some twist.

The more we get into Better Call Saul, the more worried I get about when and how the house of cards is going to collapse.

I guess that's true, yeah. If there was anyone to get a dig at Howard, it should've been Kim.

It was great, but I did feel kind of sorry for Howard there. Howard was never a thoroughly good person by any means, but he did support Jimmy and took on the acting bad guy role for Chuck. It's just that he chose the wrong McGill to support in the end.

Little character touches are always fun, but I love how the criminal vet is very concerned about the animals Mike and Jimmy bring to him as an excuse to visit.

Yeah, I can see that. It's all the awkward dinner scenes. (Although the Coens probably wouldn't do a space boner.)

I'd love to see the Chinese Eight Immortals.

I wasn't super into it last week yet, but this week completely sold me. The entire sequence in Chicago was tense and otherworldly. The casting on this show makes it phenomenal.

I don't really take issue with Jack having a romantic partner, but what makes it strange for me is that Ashi is really a child mentally and Jack is like 80 years old.

What?

Hey, AV Club, I appreciate the Trump angst and all, but please, if you're going to be a political website, don't make it so it gets harder and harder to get to the actual reviews and film/tv news.