triplea85--disqus
Adrian
triplea85--disqus

I can't really remember ever liking Handlen's reviews of this show. I think he's the wrong person to be writing about it because he seems to want the world to be more black and white and requires a level of hope that the show never promised in the first place. And this comes through in the asking of questions that I

I don't think that's what I positing, but if it came off that way, I apologize. I didn't mean to suggest that Kelly loving her late husband means she's incapable of loving anyone else. I simply meant that I don't buy that she (or anyone else) is falling in love over the course of two meetings and one sexual encounter.

I loved this episode, but I think the ending is wrong. Not because there's no twist or whatever; San Junipero being exactly what it seems was totally the right choice. But I think the ending argues that somehow what Kelly and Yorkie shared in their scant few hours together was strong enough to if not erase then

I think your proposition would be an interesting story, for sure, but I also don't think it would be in keeping with the themes of the show. The idea that he twisted himself into knots over something as simple as masturbating would say more about our poor sexual mores than I think it would about our uses of technology

I don't know that I think Kenny giving the girl her toy back is actually all that innocent. I think it is in the sense that he does nothing more than give her her toy back, but it's also the first moment my spidey sense alerted me to something being off about this guy. It was during his panic attack while Hector was

Yeah that's what I was thinking too. Though I also think he hurt Laurel in a different way than these two, so maybe killing him won't seem like the answer. But it's certainly possible.

I don't think Frank's motivation is random at all. First he kills Wes' father, the man responsible for hurting Annalise the most, then he kills the man responsible for hurting Bonnie the most, it all reads like he's apologizing, or trying to make amends, or just trying to fix certain, seemingly, unfixable portions of

True, and I'm not saying that the group's reactions aren't fair. It makes sense that they would react in that fashion. I'm saying that we, and Connor, and Oliver know that their reactions are bullshit. And instead of having Connor just take the fall for cock blocking Oliver here, it would have been nice if he'd just

I still think it's problematic. If it's not assuming the worst of Connor, then it's still a kind of regression to the mean that I find baseless. But I'll be the first to admit that someone looking at a situation and saying "Well people in this situation usually act like this" without actually looking at the person

I could not disagree more with the points about Oliver and Connor. I was more or less with it up until this week. I think the show is right that sometimes breakups aren't neat and tidy or make much sense the way they tend to on TV, but Oliver's reaction to this scene shows that he actually has a very low opinion of

Nate's question about Annalise having another man in their bed, and her response of "Who's to say it was a man?" was just brilliant!

"we don’t get quite enough detail on the scandal to understand why it’s such huge news"

I don't watch this show, but given the nature of contemporary TV, I'm assuming there's only a matter of time before one of these ladies is killed off, right? Anyone taking bets on how long these gals will last?

Logistics question: If Frank wins the election (which I'm assuming has to happen for the show to continue), then will that be his first or his second term as president? Since he wasn't voted in to begin with, and I don't think he's served a full 4 years yet, does anyone know how that works?

Is that to suggest being Press Secretary for this president with all of his women coming and going in the White House wouldn't lead to a book deal?

Oh man, don't even get me started on the hand drawing scene. Talk about shipper bait. It broke my heart.

I think I'm coming out in opposition to the Abby stuff in this episode. Not because she isn't great in those scenes, and not because I'm unhappy about her ascension. Only because I really like Abby and David and it feels like the show is setting out to ruin them both by having forgotten who either of them is deep

I certainly thought it was a great episode, and I loved the stuff with Annalise's family, but I don't think the episode did a good job with the Hapstall stuff or Frank's flashbacks. It didnt feel as emotionally rich as the rest of the episode, and the stuff with Caleb felt rushed and haphazard.

I never read the comics, so I'm more than prepared, and also OK with, spoilers. So is Negan an actual person, or is it something else? Do the "we're all Negan" statements here actually matter, or is it just a way to take an actual person and turn him into some kind of deity? Don't worry about spoiling anything for me,

As a serious Meechum-Frank shipper (and a general Meechum fan from the start), this episode broke my heart into a million pieces. Not ok, HOC, not ok at all!