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ThePrinceThatWasPromised
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Watched Ducktales. My ambition for this show was that it would fill the hole left by Gravity Falls for me since it had a lot of the same people working on it and shares similar DNA in its premise. I wouldn't say I was hooked enough to say it's up there with that, but it was very promising. Charming, funny, and

Yikes, this stuff- does not look good. I loved BB-8 but this Borg looks like a nauseatingly shameless attempt at making a cute marketable critter, and to be honest it looks more freaky than cute. And I really don't like the idea that Luke has been hanging out with them and fish nuns on this planet- I liked the idea of

As with all things North Korea I don't really take them very seriously in terms on believing in an imminent danger to anyone, but I was actually a little unnerved by how loosely people on Twitter were joking about a situation that involves potential nuclear warfare. It just struck me that if/when the "Apocalypse"

He's not totally retired from entertainment, for the record. He did a surreal puppet show/play called "Bears in Space" https://www.nytimes.com/201…

I didn't mean to say that Mr. C didn't know he was of the Black Lodge, I just meant I wasn't sure where he was telling other people he came from in place of the Black Lodge. I don't think "Jeffries" would have given Ray the full story.

I think we haven't heard anything about him being in this season, which is a bit odd given that his mom is still the casting director, but I guess either Lynch really just had no ideas for him or he's decided that he's totally out of the acting game.

I think "no spoilers" culture can go to far, but I don't see anything unreasonable about asking that one not openly give away the ending of a different TV show that airs on the same night. And that whole comment chain started with someone just politely asking that they not do that.

Re: "I know who you are" - My initial assumption was that Ray was saying he knew Mr. C was Special Agent Dale Cooper, a former FBI agent gone rogue- unaware that he's actually not that same Dale Cooper. But I'm not sure because I don't recall whether or not there's been any indication if when operating in the crime

The Bobby thing is presumable a sign of the show not being all told in sequential order- just like how we saw Dougie failing to play with Sonny Jim last week but this episode we seem to pick up with him the day after his meeting with the Mitchum brothers and Janey-E says he didn't come home last night- but yeah, the

But with what's been said in the show about Targaryen history it's clearly that there's a high probability of madness with incest

He said the Golden Company, not the Seconds Sons. Different group of sellswords.

They did him wrong by making him regress as a character, but I think that was a consequence of the plotting rather then the writers not caring about seeing his arch through- they decided they didn't want to do LS, but that was presumably at significant cost to Jamie's path forward in the series, and apparently the

Looking at it from that perspective I think it would actually be some pretty good poetic irony?

It would make sense to me if it was being played as if Tyrion made taking Casterly Rock a priority because he always felt it was his right to have it yet Tywin refused to give it to him, so he was misguidedly putting his personal desires before coming up with the smartest game plan- but there's been no indication that

I 100% missed it

They always show the Wall. King's Landing, Winterfell, and The Wall have been basically permanent parts of the credit sequence the entire series regardless of there being scenes there or not, I guess since in theory they are the three most important locations in the show.

I can't tell if this is a Davos/Stannis joke or if you're genuinely trying to make a correction

It wouldn't be bad writing if Olenna's message never reached Cersei, but it would be bad writing to kill Jaimie when he hasn't gotten through his character arch yet. Despite the constant shock value of the deaths on this show, no has ever permanently died on the show at a point where it didn't make narrative sense for

To be fair, Jon made the same argument to Mance, and the first point holds true for the situation he was in as well.

Him having tried to killed her child is probably going to be a hurdle to Dany accepting Bronn. It seemed like she got a good look at him.