The Queen opened up the Mclaren Technology Center. She reportedly is an F1 fan liking Mclaren for most of their history. She’s also had Lewis over for dinners a couple times.
The Queen opened up the Mclaren Technology Center. She reportedly is an F1 fan liking Mclaren for most of their history. She’s also had Lewis over for dinners a couple times.
Sainz was right. It was Latifi passing him as he exited the pits and holding him up for the better part of his out lap that cost him position and the race.
This is me as well. They seem to think gore = better (and maybe some audiences are reinforcing that idea) but I think you nailed it with creepiness being the horror’s appeal, rather than the outright violence. However, if the theme is they are going for 80s slashers this season, at least these grisly choices are…
Erica is the worst kind of precocious kid character. This show usually gets the kid-characters right, but she is so tiresome.
Ferrari still being it’s own worst enemy. It’s hilarious.
Yeah, and he’s a good lawyer to boot.
“Final note: a bit disappointed in Mike for not sniffing out that something was wrong about Lalo’s threat.”
Point 1 - agree to disagree
That’s why it’s indirect responsibility; no one’s saying they planned for this specific outcome, but it nevertheless occurred as a result of actions they were directly responsible for. (And the drug causing a heart attack in a third party would be something they were directly responsible for, because they were the…
This is absolutely right, and in particular I think the last sentence 100% nails it.
Indirect responsibility is still a factor, but this is perhaps bordering a little on disingenuous. I think it’s fairly safe to say that there’s a bit of a moral difference between, say, planning a surprise birthday party for someone which inadvertently leads to them having a car accident on the way there, versus…
If we’re going to blame Kim and Jimmy for being the indirect cause, then we may as well include Gus, Mike, Nacho, Hector, and everyone else connected with the cartel.
But he also told Jimmy: ‘I always liked you.’ He talked him up to David and Main. He offered Jimmy a job and told him how much he admired him after Chuck’s death - which he felt bad for. He backed Jimmy on the scholarship thing too. They have seen his good side.
I agree with you in terms of the “Jimmy and Kim are the reason Howard was there” logic — that was just a coincidence. But I do think Jimmy’s willingness to be “a friend of the cartel,” and Kim’s willingness to stick with him regardless, do give them some moral culpability for Howard’s death. They invited gangsters…
But, we now know that Kim doesn't actually give a shit about helping the downtrodden. If she did, she would have gone to the Ed Begley Jr. Foundation meeting and achieved all her goals. But she blew that just to fuck over Howard.
Thing is, they tried to play by the rules. They worked hard to do honest work that would help real people who needed it. And they were punished for it.
When the intern asks about the soda trick, and Howard says Chuck was the greatest legal mind he ever knew, and the intern says he hopes somebody says that about him some day, Howard says
I’ve been arguing for weeks that Howard isn’t that bad and people consistently call him a douchebag for reasons I can’t understand. He’s a little smarmy in his professional life but the way he interacts and treats people outside of work consistently paints the picture of a kind-hearted person.
AVClub: Stranger things is “bogged down by its runtime”
Never understood reviews that critique not getting all the answers. There’s still a season and half to go, why would you expect everything to get wrapped up now?