yonof--disqus
Fletcher~Munson
yonof--disqus

They say at the end of the season right there in the first paragraph.

Um… There are only 7 episodes this season…
The last shot of the last episode could be Cersei sitting on the throne and that would still be on the under.

"When will Dale Cooper return to being Dale Cooper" seems to be this Twin Peaks' iteration of "Who killed Laura Palmer".

I'm truly baffled by how much this show is disregarded.

Great question, generally.
Not really relevant when said decisions also have the potential to derail the entire global economy, tough.

So, what do you think - are American TV writers explicitly aware that almost all of their protagonists share pretty much the same personality?

Maybe there's some sort of feedback-loop thing going on there, where agency is (colloquially) used to frame a person as an actor in the social narrative, which causes fictional characters - which are basically agents of an author - to be characterized by the trait of agency, a characterization influencing the actual

Asshai = Amsterdam = (Givatayim² x Moscow)

I think I would be perfectly happy with an episode that doesn't even mention feminism (or contain a mystery plot for that matter). I think the show actually did a better job having interesting and well-developed female roles (however marginal) in previous episodes.

Your comment really helped me realize the reason this finale felt a little 'off' for me: The final battle with the Ads felt a bit rushed, and it didn't really demonstrate the Ad's strengths or expanded on their overall strategy. Which is a shame, as it seems most of the plot points made by last week's episode could