uwir--disqus
UWIR
uwir--disqus

Speaking of BB, if there's one thing to take away from that show, if a lawyer asks you for dollar, give it.

And what does "innocent, but wrong" mean?

"At a hunting party for .001-percenters in Wyoming"

The main case was stupid. Suing a 3D printer company because their product is unsuitable for making plastic guns is like suing a vodka company because their product causes car engines to blow up when their product is substituted for gasoline. 3D printers produce objects that have the same geometric properties as the

And no Clyde! Oh, wait, wrong show. No Diane chains.

What was his play? Give away $18 million dollars to somehow put him in a better position to win the wrongful eviction lawsuit? Given up $18 million just to screw with Alicia? I can't think of any time that Canning has been characterized as vindictive. All of his scheming has been out of avarice, not spite. And I don't

What was with the Jesuit stuff? Catholicism doesn't prohibit remarriage if the first spouse is dead.

So, not only are you making a bullshit assertion that has been refuted ad naseum, you're responding to someone disagreeing with it by simply repeating what you said. Clearly, your only interest here is in being an asshole.

This "Atheism is just another form of faith" horse has already been beaten to a pulp. Calling not believing in something a "delusion" is simply an abuse of the word.

No mention of the callback to "I Fought the Law"?

"Uh, what truth?"

I spent a few of the fantasy sequences not sure whether they had switched back to the real world, until I realized that if Alicia was talking normally, it was a fantasy. Did they do that intentionally? Or to dramatize how she has less of a voice in her real life as she does in her mind? Another reason?

Perhaps he was literally phoning it in?

Syntax is all that matters! Down with semantics!

Right, because there's a Right Way to relate to one's identity, and a Wrong Way, and people who do it the Wrong Way should be mocked and criticized.

Plus, the having $80k that she can just toss aside isn't really consistent with being short of money. A normal person would be hesitant to kill someone just to influence a settlement. But I would expect even a sociopath to be just a little reluctant to give up $80k on a wild scheme like this. She's already not giving

I would compare it more to Criminal Minds, since I think that is the police procedural that concedes more than perhaps any other that their killers' motives wouldn't actually motivate a sane person.

"Borne" is the more standard spelling.

"Borne" is the more standard spelling.

I wonder how the opening is read by people just coming into the show. Finch's voiceover says that there's a computer system spying on people and he built it, but new viewers won't know he's talking about The Machine rather than Samaritan.