The daughter's death might not faze him, but the death of his grandson and heir to Winterfell and the North might.
The daughter's death might not faze him, but the death of his grandson and heir to Winterfell and the North might.
If Karstark had been a tad more ambitious he would have taken the opportunity to knife Ramsay and put his family on top in the North, with the Bolton heir as his ward until dying under mysterious circumstances once power was consolidated.
Limbs, genitals and teeth removed, then, once nursed back to relative health, mailed off to Pyke.
The dogs tracking Sansa were hounds, these were not.
And snake "starts with an S or a 5", which is among the known things about her father Kimmy listed Micromachine-style to Andrea.
Not Accomplishing Space Anymore
The idea that every gay man is a bit (or a lot) prissy is a stereotype heartily embraced by a vocal segment of the gay community too, and if you dare contradict that you'll be called self-hating and internalizing homophobia. Look at any comment section for a show with a gay character that isn't a stereotypical priss…
She's the Jessica Jones of East Dogmouth.
Madam Yao also employs some of the worst stunt fighters in her drycleaner: I noticed two back-to-back telegraphing that they were about to be hit.
Funny, but they aren't given anything to work with.
But is it a Max or Alex joke?
If a show has a stereotypically gay character it's derided for misrepresenting gays by relying on tired stereotypes, and if a show has an atypically gay character it's derided for not making him gay enough (read: passing judgment on all gays not like him).
It was a surprise to me and I still didn't think it was that funny.
I didn't see any payoff with the double poison oak bits. Shouldn't it be painfully itchy? Why go there but not show Forte or Sudekis suffering from it?
I'd really like season 2's reviews to have a no-book-spoilers policy. If I wanted a review of the books, or an essay comparing and contrasting the adaptation, I'd go read that.
That doesn't matter in TV reviews anymore. Fictional characters being raped = real rape. (As long as they're female.)
Beast/Martin remarks that this was the furthest Quentin's ever managed to get, so it could be that in previous loops he does what you say and it stops them from proceeding.
He knew, but didn't know she hadn't "changed" it when they got married.
Why was the beach on fire?
Judging by the ruined exterior and ancient office furniture inside Polis, I assumed it's a building from the Before Times that just happened to survive the apocalypse. Now, with Pol(ar)is inside, I'm guessing Alie 2.0 had something to do with making sure it survived.