I think they're the most realistic of the teenagers we've met.
I think they're the most realistic of the teenagers we've met.
The Guilty Remnant is consumed by attachment to the Departure, to the need to provoke and remind everyone it happened, to cigarettes, to the belief that it's going to happen again and soon, to advancing their cause no matter the cost in dollars or lives. In each scene that a GR member speaks aloud they've revealled…
I have no idea if they ever plan on addressing this directly, but it recalls in my mind an early scene implying anyone (including dogs?) who witnessed the Departure went a bit nuts. So I'd buy a Depature that also blinded recording devices the moment it happened.
The problem last week wasn't how the show defines hate crimes – crimes motivated by the victim's religion are counted as hate crimes in the real world too – it's how you define hate crimes, Sonia.
So will you be passing the reviewer's mantle to someone who actually wants to watch the show?
Have they ever mixed up the pairings? Say Nance and Spyke, or Candace and Lance? I want to see that.
It really was a loud celery.
Wasn't he the one who saw a figure in the storm clouds that preceded Ragnar's arrival at the monastery in Northumbria?
This will never end
My favourite part was when he asked about the amp, only to reveal that not only does he know, he knows the guy who built it. Why ask, then? Because he's a pompous jag who wants to show off. I sort of wish the sketch had gone more in that direction.
I couldn't take the dinner party sketch, had to fast forward through it.
ReGenesis, always and forever:
http://www.youtube.com/watc…
I was glad to see the return of Nina and Lance; it seems like it's been ages. The pet shelter sketches just aren't connecting with me, however.
A lifetime? I wouldn't be surprised if Athelstan is still in his late 20s or early 30s, which means he's spent roughly a third of his life, a little under half his adult life, doing whatever Ragnar tells him.
Here in the 21st century you don't "hear about" Christians, you see what they get up to on the news.
But that's a scene we already saw during the gas leak farm season, while everyone was on the highway looking for Carol's daughter.
"I was trying to protect you" is one of the most infuriating lines/motives in the history of television writing.
In that last shot of her eye-smirking, I half expected her to hoist skirt and reveal a fake pregnancy belly cushion.
The woman in the chair was missing the back of her skull, and the two in the bed had dried blood pooled under their heads, so I think it's safe to say they all swallowed bullets.
That nobody on the show has mentioned this place is built on ocean ice has bugged me from the start. The preview for next week included Alan saying something about Level R not being the lowest level, so maybe they'll finally reveal that the base that just happens to look like a UFO is actually a boat that just happens…