tonyyanksfan--disqus
tonyyanksfan
tonyyanksfan--disqus

I agree with you. I found it ambiguous, at worst, and, at best, clear that it was not Draper who made the ad. Apparently, now many people involved with the show are confirming that Draper did make the ad. That does fit in with the character of the show and it's sad to imagine Draper just repeating his mistakes,

SPOILERS BELOW

Maybe. But I didn't foresee book Shae being in Tywin's room either.

Little about "Yara" has made sense. I don't have any idea why they changed her name and why they had that foray to liberate Theon. If the idea was merely to emphasize how far gone he is, they've already done a pretty good job of it. It also totally takes away from some of the most interesting scenes with her and

Varys, as we know in the books, does have a particular end game: to put the Targaryens back in power. Littlefinger, on the other hand, just wants to sow chaos to create opportunities for him and I think his end game is to sit the Iron Throne. He knew Arryn was searching for the true parentage of the children and he

In the books, he did frame Tyrion, though. He hired those dwarfs because he knew if would infuriate Tyrion and lead to a public confrontation with Joffrey.

Yeah. I'm not a Clarke hater, but the manner of speech in her conversation where she tells Jorah her plans to rule in Meereen is so overacted. It just came off as corny and overly dramatic.

I'm a lawyer and see no problem with it. It was a contract renegotiation and they had no legal responsibility to advise him on his options; he very well could have said, I need to think it over and speak with my attorney. Neither party had legal representation, so neither party was in a necessarily more advantageous

Ken also strikes me as a guy who forgives and moves on. He's always been one of the nicest if not the nicest characters on this show. Polite, midwestern manners and all.

She never really got over the cash in the face part, but the last fight between them that I can remember is when Don intentionally got Ted drunk and Ted made a fool of himself as a result and she called him a monster or something to that effect. I don't understand why she's still angry about that given her hatred of

I agree. I do remember she was mad at him after dropping the client/John, but I'd think over time she'd see his not so unreasonable perspective that he was getting back at that guy. Joan's complaint that it made what she did all for nothing doesn't make sense, since she got a partnership out of it. Why be reminded

Ok, so what was the deal with Bob Saget? Why did they bother having him narrate all these years? Somehow changing that in the last episode was ok, yet it wouldn't have been ok to reshoot an ending that made sense with new kids?

Well, it's not really gone. It's just in ruins.

Worst ever: Boardwalk Empire. Completely unconnected to the show. I was desperately hoping they'd replace it for Season 2. I think it made me predisposed to not like the show during Season 1.

Game of Thrones. End of discussion.

Yes, Timothy Olyphant, as someone mentioned below. That may be the one person I can see doing this properly. Josh Brolin wouldn't be bad, but Olyphant so much better.

I thought so, too. I was really surprised to see such a negative review. This past half-season has been really strong, in my opinion, with this being one of the best.

This idea of "granting her wish to become a zombie" makes no sense. Carol doesn't want there to be more zombies around that could eventually bite her and kill her. I don't think granting a psychopath's dying wish is high on Carol's list compared to the need to ensure her survival. Plus, a shot in the head was the

Or why zombie scratches don't turn you anymore. I get that it is very hard to imagine a group surviving if all it takes is a zombie scratch, but if I recall correctly, that's how that guy Jim or Andrea's sister turned in the first season.