wesfazzani--disqus
Wes Fazzani
wesfazzani--disqus

I'm a big big fan of Ritter from her time on breaking bad. On that show too she managed to do a lot with very little. It helped though, on BB, that the very little she had was written by Vince Gilligan. The writers on all three of the Netflix/Marvel joints just aren't at that level however, so Ritter proves herself in

Totally agree, the writing here does okay with pacing and plots, at least it gets away with those things due to the binge-watch market the show is aimed at, but I've definitely noticed the stilted and shabby dialogue. As someone who's never even visited NY, Harlem always seemed to me to be this bright, vibrant,

I only recently read the free Luke cage intro comic on Marvel's comic app for iOS and hadn't come across him before that so when watching JJ I had an "oh shit that's Luke moment" so I was kinda nicely surprised that a) they included this scene and b) that I got the reference with my limited Luke experience. Guess the

For the record though it may be pronounced phonetically the way you wrote it, the word is actually "blood clot ", which is why college educated Jamaicans yell "pulmonary embolism" instead.
This post is a joke post with no offence meant, before I get slaughtered
Wezza

I agree. I really wanted to like DD and overall found it to be average. I fell in love/lust with Ritter in Breaking Bad and really really wanted to like JJ and have to admit I prefer it over DD, but am still not loving it like I did stranger things for instance. I'm hoping that LC as the third MCU/Netflix production

Awesome comment… As a parent I too gain a secret joy from finding harmless yet annoying ways to irk the hell out of my kids, this will be added to my ever expanding arsenal forthwith

I know I'm watching this in 2016 (Thanx Netflix) but am I the only one, at this stage in the viewing, wondering why Damon isn't connecting the dots on the 12 dead innocents / human sacrifice / expression angle. It's frustrating as fuck, with Bonnie mentioning expressionism and The Professor being accused of killing 12

I know I'm watching this in 2016 (Thanx Netflix) but am I the only one, at this stage in the viewing, wondering why Damon isn't connecting the dots on the 12 dead innocents / human sacrifice / expression angle. It's frustrating as fuck, with Bonnie mentioning expressionism and The Professor being accused of killing 12

Love your name btw

Just wanted to say a massive thank you for these recaps, and those of this show's prequel "better call Saul". I came to this show in the year 2016 and binge-watched the hell out of it on Netflix. I'm sorry to see the show end, though I'm happy with the conclusion they came to, and man did I love the ride. Great