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Misstify

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Posts posted by Misstify

  1. On 7/20/2016 at 10:25 PM, Dave in Chicago said:

    They really need a second symptom for Eleven other than those small nosebleeds that don't slow her down at all. They're so frequent it could be the basis for the world's grossest drinking game.

    I am thinking that the small nosebleeds are just foreshadowing for some big showdown where Eleven has to use her powers so intensely that something much, much worse than a nosebleed happens to her.  (I have only watched thru this episode, just guessing).

    • Love 2
  2. Quote

    Jonathan eventually understands his Mom a bit more after taking his creeper party photos to the dark room. While Barb's disappearance isn't fully explained, he does see a monster lurking in the background, fitting the description of the monster that Joyce witnesses coming out of the wall. 

    Wait, he did??  I was waiting all episode for someone to spot a monster in the background of the photos, but I never saw it.  Maybe it's my TV.

    • Love 1
  3. On June 28, 2016 at 4:50 AM, candall said:

    I appreciate that Richard and Monica haven't developed into moon-June romance, but Erlich and Laurie would be great.  Erlich's tempestuous enough for two.

    I don't know why they don't utilize the programmer with the bright blue/fuschia hair--she's smart, cynical, hardcore, funny.  Is it because she makes all the rest of them look like losers?  Does it have anything to do with being a Mike Judge Production?

    I love Carla and would be thrilled to have her back (not as a love interest).  I like Monica as a non-kooky foil for everyone, but hope she gets more stuff to do.

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  4. Those ads are fabulous.  Thanks.

    The whole Jonah storyline is great, but one detail I especially loved was Richard's beaming smile when Dan walked into the campaign office to rip them to shreds.

    Also: the fact that Gary thought the c-word was "crone".  Selina's dismissive attitude about the fact that everyone had called her a c*** was priceless, as was Catherine being in love with her mother's body double.  

    • Love 1
  5. I've recently been rewatching Party Down, and the spaces/tabs scene tonight was way too reminiscent of the Party Down scene where Martin Starr's character blows up his chances with a woman because she doesn't know the difference between fantasy and sci-fi.  The Party Down scene was great because Roman's passion for hard sci-fi was established over many episodes, it didn't come out of nowhere, and his character was established as a misanthrope who has no patience for anyone's foibles.

    Splitting up the virgin margarita and adding alcohol brought from home...wouldn't that have been better coming after Erlich realizes Bachmannity is broke?

    I agree with whoever said Jared's childhood stuffed animal was the best joke.  It was perfectly set up because when you hear him say the toy was named Winnie, of course you think it's going to be Winnie-the-Pooh.  Not a ziploc bag filled with shredded newspaper.

    • Love 3
  6. This is why the show would have been well-advised to include more of the explanation contained in the novel. It was actually pretty plausible, and, more than that, entertaining/engrossing. It wouldn't have bored people. 

    I would have liked to see that.  I really want to know why JFK's continued existence leads the election of George Wallace instead of Richard Nixon in '68.  (And was Col. Sanders the VP?).   I'm also wondering about things like...if there was no Vietnam War, what was the counterculture like?  Was the 1968 Democratic National Convention a calm, dignified affair?  What happened with the civil rights movement?  And was the devastation we saw in 2016 caused by nuclear war, economic meltdown, conventional warfare, or what (and in which decade)?

    I don't know if I want to read the whole book, since I just saw the series, just to find out the details of the ending.

  7. Frank and Conway played Agario!  I once spent a 30-minute car ride listening to two 10-year-olds talk nonstop about Agario.  How you can talk for 30 minutes about a game where dots eat other dots, I don't understand.  Frank and Conway squeezed a few seconds of dialog out of it, and they at least were using it as a metaphor.

  8. My favorite part of this episide was all the other performers coming to Chip's rescue and the ensuing scenes where they ran off and Chip hung out with them. If only he had stayed with them he would have gained a family and some skills!

    That was AMAZING.  I loved how even as they were running away from the police, one of the clowns was doing a kind of exaggerated run--never breaking character.  And Chip could hang out with them without knowing French because...mimes.

    • Love 1
  9. The passport photo with the bee! 
    I may have enjoyed the photo stuff more because I watched this the day before I was getting a headshot taken at work.  The day before the headshot, my hair got a perfect wave in it all by itself.  Day of the headshot: no wave.  The photographer (a colleague of mine) nicely told me he could get rid of the flyaway pieces of hair "in post".
    I guess Ilana and her brother are both fans of Kirk Steele.

    Hmm...nobody's mentioned the opening scene, and what was going on in the background.  Mr. Outlier doesn't watch the show but I had him watch that, and he didn't notice anything, so I'm wondering which one of us is the true outlier--the one who noticed it or the one who didn't. 

    I saw someone being carted away by EMTs in the background, but I missed what had actually happened to them.  Naturally, Ilana and Abbi noticed nothing and found the park to be idyllic (I don't remember the actual word they used).

    • Love 1
  10. I guess I can see how it might be boring to some but I personally ended up really admiring Kim's character and perseverance.  If they did another usual thing where they just cut to someone wearing clothes from the night before with their hair disheveled saying they needed coffee to recover from the allnighter, I'm not sure it would have allowed the same insight into her work ethic and intelligence.

     

    I enjoyed the sequence of Kim steadily, steadily working.  She never seemed to get bleary-eyed, she did not complain in front of the junior workers and did not let them know she was working all night.  Just wearing the suit and heels for all those hours would've done me in without any documents or phone calls.  Calling all the people she's ever ever networked with was grueling as heck.  She knows she screwed up by recommending Jimmy for the job, and she figures it's fair enough that she should be in the doghouse for a while, but she thought she had accomplished something that would make up for it and get her back in her old position.  It didn't work that way because, as people have said, there's something personal going on.  (I still think the "something personal" is really about Chuck and Jimmy, with Chuck pulling the strings and using Kim to get to Jimmy; although Howard may also have something against Kim).

    • Love 5
  11. Many great Martha moments in this episode.

    She expresses her preference for "set it and forget it" not once, but twice in the episode (first GPS over "turn left at the tree" type directions, then cruise control over regular driving).

    Her dislike of confrontation is so strong, she is compelled to say, "I don't want to seem like that kind of a person" to the police before asking about incriminating herself.  Also, she is terrible at charades--so much so that Chip has to repeat his mouthing of "Call 9-1-1".

     

    "Where are we going?"

    "To deliver some cowboy justice."

    "Okay, but where?"

    • Love 2
  12. She could have told them that Jimmy misled her, and gave her the impression that he'd already received permission to run the ad.

     

    When Jimmy informed Chuck that he'd misled her, Chuck remarked that it would have helped her to bring that up when Hamlin was chewing her out. Jimmy explained that she probably didn't want to get him in further trouble.

    I think it also may have been embarrassing for Kim to confess that Jimmy lied to her (or "strongly implied" an untruth) about the ad being approved.  It may have helped her somewhat, but then again it may not have...since she recommended Jimmy for this job.  I think she is already realizing that getting him into that job may have been a mistake.  She had faith in him, I believe she really did, but that was misguided.  That has become apparent rather quickly.

    • Love 1
  13. The way I read the title is that it's meant to reflect the literal role the city of Amarillo plays in the story -- it's this distant place where Jimmy thinks he's free to do his own thing, but he discovers when he gets home that he's still going to be held accountable for what he did there. And that's what the whole episode is about, really, in both Jimmy's storyline and Mike's: how people act when they think no one else is watching, and how relationships change when it turns out that someone is.

    I agree with all this. But I do think there is an additional layer with the pointed mention of canary yellow and the fact that this city name was chosen by the writers as the particular distant place that Jimmy goes to. Now that I think of it, Playuh's Hummer and shoes were also yellow. I'm now thinking there are yellow warning flags being dropped all over the place, and Jimmy is ignoring them. Maybe on purpose.

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  14. Amarillo = yellow in Spanish. The episode made a point of letting us know that Jimmy picked out the canary yellow color of the flyers himself. What's up with that?

    The only symbolism I know of re: yellow is cowardice. I did not think Jimmy acted out of cowardice in this episode. Are there other things yellow could mean? Or was there other yellow stuff that I missed?

    • Love 2
  15. I think the boutonniere had a fern, a rose, and a piece of heather. He removed the fern and left the other two. The heather was just a thin stalk beside the rose, but it was there.

    Regarding the removal of the fern from the boutonniere...I just finished reading JF's novel Snobs, and this detail comes up in that book as well! The book takes place in the 1990s. There is an aristocratic wedding, and a character who is an usher mentions that "of course" the white carnation had been stripped of the fern that the florist had attached to it. There is no real explanation; I inferred that it was a matter of taste, and perhaps the unsophisticated florist is messing with perfection by adding the fern. (The book didn't say that; it was just my theory as I was left somewhat mystified about the "of course" and then seeing the same thing again in Downton!). If that's the case, it is consistent for Carson to want the boutonnieres at his wedding to reflect the aristocratic style.

    • Love 1
  16. I think the show cast a very docile child as Marigold because they didn't want to give her any lines or spend time wrangling an active child on set. I actually found myself wondering if they had dosed her with Benadryl before the Mrs. Drewe scene.

    • Love 3
  17. The most frustrating thing in the episode for me (besides the realization that there was going to be more Drewe Drama) was how insistent Anna was that she could not have children and that it was set in stone. I realize she probably didn't want to suffer false hope, but the stone wall of, "Nope. Won't work. That won't work either. Not gonna happen." was maddening.

    We learned in her doctor's visit that 12 weeks is the point where she will get a cervical stitch. So presumably she has gone past that point in the incidents, which we now perceive to be lost pregnancies. (Which makes me a bit confused about her earlier comment that it has happened "Two, maybe three" times. Was the "maybe" case not as late as the others?). Anyway, I think bed rest would be required with that cervical problem. Please, please don't make this a thing where Anna wants to hide the fact that she's pregnant in order to spare Mr. Bates from false hope and also has to make up some excuse for staying in bed, which leads to further misunderstandings!

    Mary's underclothes were more fabulous than any garment I've ever owned.

    ETA: I forgot to mention Cora's mysterious "idea" about what to do about Mr. Mason. This was before the Mrs. Drewe meltdown, so what was Cora thinking?

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