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Yes, it is The Mayor's to-do list for that day. Just one of many small details that makes him one of the best villians ever.

All of the criticisms against season six and Xander throughout the series (even if I can agree are legitimate) are completely negated for me just because of how Willow's Big Bad-ness is dispatched.

"You see the way they were with each other? The get-a-roominess to them? I bet they're- …Singing.
They're probably singing right now."

I had a feeling we would be getting something on the weekend just because they had two more Big Bads to go through in the character discussion thingys.

Three are too many to count. It is a lot of fun to see so many faces pop up.

"I think not fleshing him out was a conscious decision to support the idea that there was no reasoning with him; he already had considered all the necessary variables and would not be deterred by bribery or flattery or reason, or anything short of a superior force."

This would have made things a lot more interesting. Though the Xander and Riley stuff is optional (and better [or at least more interesting] then what we got), the Adam idea should have been a must. We should have gotten to know him better as a character (even if the human character we knew wasn't there at all anymore

I just re-watched this and when I saw Pedro Pascal I actually had to stop the episode and check the internet because I wasn't sure and I couldn't believe it. He actually looked a little like William Mapother (Ethan Rom) from 'Lost' without his facial hair. He had a good scene and I was sad to see him killed (which I

Yes Adam could have been better but I cant help but feel he is a little underrated. Every now and then a real personality came out and it made him pop (Adam: Scout's honor. Spike: You were a Boy Scout? Adam: Parts of me.) and if they could have kept it up he might have made a better impact.

It showed, but I don't think it was to the show's detriment. Some of Spike's best scenes are when he is forced to live with Giles and Xander and the interactions he has with all of the characters in those episodes. When Spike is tied to a chair you know you are in for a good time.

I have never seen a vampirific dad joke and I applaud you. That was horrible/fantastically perfect.

"It's a big rock. I can't wait to tell my friends. They don't have a rock this big."

For a show that was so big on feminist themes it is kind of funny that all of these interviews are of men. But when the interview is this good it really doesn't matter. Marsters seems like a total class act.

Apparently everyone hates him. Which I don't understand because he is the most human character and that makes him ridiculously compelling. Maybe those fans see too much of themselves in him and cant take it, I don't know.

I understood that reference!

I will have to defend 'Dead Man's Party' because I don't think it is that bad. It resolves a lot of angst so we can get the characters back to a status quo that is comfy. Plus zombies are fun.

Having just re-watched it I mostly agree but the performances (especially the psycho vamp played by Jeff Kober, who is clearly having a blast) give it a leg up.

"You're not friends. You'll never be friends. You'll be in love till it kills you both. You'll fight, and you'll shag, and you'll hate each other till it makes you quiver but you'll never be friends. Love isn't brains, children, it's blood; blood screaming inside you to work its will. I may be love's bitch, but at

And he always had the best lines even when they were so few.

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