wetbuttsdrivemenuts--disqus
WetButtsDriveMeNuts
wetbuttsdrivemenuts--disqus

"Tune in last season to see how all these people die later!" - Noah Hawley

The crime in question was the hit and run. In that context, Rye was the victim.

Yeah. At what point during the chase did Hanzee go "fuck it"? It had nothing to do with the alien, apparently, and Hanzee believes in self-preservation as much as his own deadly will, but was it just that Lou spooked him?

But I get the sense that she knows she can't get out of going to jail, and Lou really nails it in her that what she did was wrong. "People died, Peggy." shut her up real quick.

Basically kiddie-locks, yeah.

Yeah, but that would totally ruin the symmetry of Mike running a dude's tie through a typewriter earlier in the season. Now you get the mental tragic-comic image of him hunched over the thing, grumbling because he keeps making mistakes.

"Personnel" is so much more personable. It's not exactly informal or anything, but at least it's not as cold, sterile, and alien as "Human Resources" sounds.

This is exactly true in much of the rural Midwest. My girlfriend's father can field-strip a deer, keep what he wants, and responsibly dispose of the rest, but instead he brings it to a butcher he likes who does it more responsibly, quickly, and for not much money.

It totally had the tone of, "we're going to civilize you, and trust me: it's a good thing." It was well-meaning condescension. He doesn't want a guy like Mike getting his throat slit out in the field.

Imagine how uncomfortable a Kitchen Bro 2-minute confession-booth scene would be.

Exactly. Breaking the cycle doesn't mean letting everyone off the hook.

In general, knowing when to yield to the will of other people makes you a more humble person. If you never learn humility (even as a goal to attain) then you can't really become a good person, particularly good enough to become a super hero. Jessica Jones helps people because she sees them as better than her, or on

Yeah, it's more honest to both acknowledge that victimhood is often cyclical, while also not excusing the actions of victimizers.

"I hate lasers. They're coarse, dry, and they get everywhere." - God

They pass through a time-slip, and blow up the towers on Sept. 10th, 2001. Bush shakes his fist angrily at the TV, calls off 9/11.

This is essentially the story of the Tower of Babalon, right? God was cool with smaller buildings, but once he saw this big old K'nex tower his children had made, he couldn't help but knock the fucker down.

I can't wait to see how it ironically incorporates klezmer music.

It is a Fox property!

We're all bumpkins in the eyes of the New Yorkers.

That's not fair. East coasters think we're bumpkins, and you guys think we're not on your level either?