uwir--disqus
UWIR
uwir--disqus

Three people enter! Two people leave!

It was broad daylight when Kalinda got pulled over, and it was night when they had the conversation about charm. So, what, the detective spent several hours with Kalinda in her car? And then she had sex with someone she had just arrested? That's rather rapey.

Nathan Lane also tends to be cast as very boisterous characters, so having him stumble through a cross examination is against type.

Plus, if it hadn't been a set-up, why would the cop pull Kalinda over, rather than McL?

I was thinking that maybe there were two different meetings.

"Homosexual" and "heterosexual" are a bit more ambiguous than "lesbian", though, since, for instance "homosexual" literally means "same sex", and therefore logically applies to a same sex couple, even if they are not gay, while "lesbian" is more arguably a term that applies only to orientation, rather than gender.

Girl-on-girl?

Seeing as how their "sparring" consists of driving through city streets at 100 mph, I really don't find it very endearing.

1: Great until the end. Swinging off the roof on a fire hose, etc. doesn't really go with the whole "This is an action movie rooted in reality" theme.

What's really bizarre about "goddamn" is how the first syllable is often the only one bleeped out.

Presumably, there was more to the set that got removed while Barney was telling the story, leaving only the one room.

Unless they do more than one per episode.

I didn't downvote, but being able to see the good in people is a valuable skill. It means that you can understand where they're coming from, why they're doing what they're doing, and how to get them to do what you want.

Did previous episodes explain why their base is on a plane? They have this woman who they think might have dangerous superpowers, and they take her into a cramped plane and fly her around for a few hours? If you're trying to calm her down, that ugly-ass cell is not exactly the best place to start.

The fight scenes strained my credulity. He's got a wrench, AND he can teleport, AND he for the most part is fighting one-on-one rather than having to take on several agents at once, and he doesn't manage to do any serious damage?

And when a bunch of people were worried that she might have super powers, and that those super power might be dangerous, he drove a car into the crowd.

Plus, the whole "Let's take a highly traumatic experience and lie about what happened as a prank" thing rang really flat to me.

"That, or we're Alien 3 all over again."

When they have those "don't cancel the show" campaigns, they try to find some item that has something to do with the show, like peanuts for "Jericho" because of the "nuts" story, or Subway for "Chuck" because they were a big sponsor. If there's a campaign for this show, what will people send in to network executives?

So long ago, science and religion didn't go well together, and they're having problems now, but in between there was some period of co-existence? When, exactly, was that?