waronhugs--disqus
war_on_hugs
waronhugs--disqus

I can sort of see that, and yet here we are. Putting Mobley's alias on the flyer was a little too much, if nothing else. I think fsociety is meant to be shown as a little reckless in the wake of the hack.

The top suspect is Tyrell Wellick, they know the hack originated through Allsafe, and they suspect (correctly) that Allsafe personnel was involved. And we're not talking about the general public; we're talking about E-Corp's chief counsel.

He was logged off, or at least the screen showed a password input. It's implied that Darlene either hacked him or just knew his password. (Which doesn't reflect well on Cisco's espionage skills anyway…)

Having the party at their hacking headquarters was a pretty dumb idea to begin with, really.

Depends on whether this show follows "TV violence logic" or "real-world head trauma" logic. Whacking someone in the head with a baseball bat at full strength should be treated as an attempt on someone's life, whether that's the batterer's intent or not. But there are countless action movies that use of trope of "just

My parents told me to major in whatever I want — but add a second major in something useful. Worked out for me.

Not to mention (d) she intuited that Romero was worth checking out the first place, when no other agent thought so.

To quote Monty Python: "Come see the violence inherent in the system!"

And it may have actively helped E-Corp in the long run, if the nods to E-Coin are anything to go by.

I see what you mean, but as a senior E-Corp exec, the connection to 05/09 should be the immediate assumption, no? Groups like ISIS haven't shown any interest or capability in something like the E-Corp hack.

I think Elliot and Darlene would know, or at least be able to guess, considering they met there in the flashback. (It was the same place, right?)

Minorly fun fact, this was the very first song of AV Club's Undercover series (and Ted Leo knocks it out of the park): https://www.youtube.com/wat…

During

A fate worse than death

He did a bunch of shitty things that may or may not have been crimes. I'm comfortable judging his character without taking a strong stance about whether the verdict was legally correct.

I think it's more the time period than the audience. Do you really think that Woody Allen's audience isn't primarily liberals?

My favorite example is that Ray Bradbury insisted for decades that Fahrenheit 451 was not about censorship.

Does Compton count? That was a pretty great conceptual soundtrack from just last year, though I don't how officially affiliated it is with the Straight Outta Compton movie.

How so? He already had the power to take those guys down if he wanted to. I read that meeting as Price showing Angela that he values her — and that she can do more "good" from the inside.

It could just show that she started the process, right? Having the documents drawn up would be a first step, at least. It doesn't mean they'll be divorced immediately or anything. Of course, she could be faking it.