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Pop Tart

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Posts posted by Pop Tart

  1. I ended up liking this more then I thought I would. I was leery after Vinyl, but the fact that there are a couple of strong female leads helped a lot. I think I had pretty low expectations of what roles there would be for women, given that this is about stand-up comics in the 70s, but they managed to create several women characters who seem to be complex beings with their own agency. It doesn't hurt that they've cast Ari Graynor and Melissa Leo for those parts.

    Though this pilot was a bit uneven, I found myself pretty engaged, pretty quickly. I know I sound like I'm damning with faint praise, but really I thought I'd watch a few minutes of this and know that it wasn't for me. So to have watched the whole thing and end with a feeling of expectation for the next episode is pretty astonishing. 

    • Love 3
  2. Quote

    She does. One of her biggest asshole moves tonight was slurping up sympathy from Luann, diving deep into those furry arms  -- with all the grace Sonja reserves for pawing up mashed potatoes  -- and then snottily trashing Luann later.  It's almost compulsive; like projectile soul vomit. And so profoundly hypocritical.

    That was what really turned it for me regarding Bethenny. I don't generally like her, but last night was thinking she was having some genuine moments. And the scene where she and Lu were alone and Lu was trying to comfort her was one of them. But the very next scene is her with Carole ridiculing Lu for what was some really pretty basic advice. That's where I think Lu was being genuine. When she says she looks forward and not back and was suggesting Bethenny be happy that she got Bryn out of the mess, that's not wrong advice. Sure Bethenny wasn't in a good place and Lu apologized when she realized that, but there's nothing inherently wrong with what Lu said. A lot of people feel that way. And heck it's healthy to do so. For all they get on Lu for being delusional, she seems like a very well-adjusted, self-aware person to me. Bethenny is none of those things.

    The other way that Bethenny loses me is that she uses catastrophic language for everything regarding her own experience. She's being tortured, she's in a dungeon and will never get out, she's in hell... I can't even remember all of it, but when you get that dramatic and over-the-top in your language, I'm going to start side-eyeing what you're saying in a major way. And she does this with anything and everything to do with herself. All while barely acknowledging that others may have a point of view or opinion.

    Someone upthread mentioned how the editing seemed off last night, I agree. I feel like we saw Sonja and Ramona get ready to go downstairs 3 different times, but this was all the same day wasn't it? I did laugh when they came down the second (3rd?) time, dressed like twins and entered the room with a kind of "ta-da" announcement of their presence and the other ladies were deep in discussion (I think Carole was letting them know how bad it was for Bethenny) and no one acknowledged S&R's entrance, so Ramona made another "ta-da" type noise and nothing. Made me laugh.

    And Dorinda's house? There's a lot going on there decor-wise, but she certainly seems fond of velvet. Blue velvet couches in one room, purple velvet couches in another and Sonja and Ramona's headboard was also blue velvet.

    • Love 13
  3. Quote

    I am torn about whether I like the Trapper/Burns/Blake years better or the BJ/Charles/Potter years.  Both have merit but I think it comes down to me liking Charles Winchester III over Frank Burns.   I liked that he was able to get one over on Pierce and BJ on occasion.    

    For me it's not so much one cast vs another as it is middle years vs first and last. With sitcoms often the first year is a settling in period for the characters. There are good laughs, but also some clunky moments while they figure out the rhythms and beats of the characters and writing. Then they settle into really good stuff for the next few years, as happened here, and then often wind up in the last year or two suddenly getting super serious about things which I definitely thought happened with MASH which got a little preachy towards the end. Still good stuff, but really the best was from about year 2.5 - 10.5. Not to say there weren't really great episodes in years 1 and and 11, just that it didn't always work for me then.

    Other sitcoms follow the pattern as well, clunky and broader comedy at the beginning and then trying to be too dramatic by series end. 

    My favorite MASH moments, oh so many. But I always love the Sidney Freedman episodes. Second time when he appears, he's come to attend a conference (which is really a marathon poker game). Colonel Flagg is in this episode too and even sits in on the poker game for a while. All sorts of madness is happening throughout the camp as the game goes on and it's all just so well-timed and well written.

    Adams Ribs, one of my all time favs. And the later one when Margaret's dad is visiting and the guys have gotten hold of a side of beef - they've "purloined some sirloin" according to Charles. 

    Oh and one other continuity error for the series - in early episodes Hawkeye has a sister, but later he's an only child. 

  4. Quote

    Dorinda/Carole/Barbara:

    D – I bid a $1000

    C – Oh, Dorinda that’s nice!

    B – You bid a $1000?

    D – Yes, cause it’s a charity

    B-àC  - Dorinda just bid $1000

    C – Yeah, that’s good. Teeth whitening, that’s expensive

    B – I know like so many dentists

    B – What about down there?

    C – Um brushes, mumbling…  What are you doing for Christmas?

    B – I’m going to see my mom, then I’m going to Luann’s wedding

    C – Are you excited?

    B – Honestly, no.

    C – Is she excited?

    B – Honestly? I think she has something to prove.

    C – To prove what?

    B – She’d rather go through with it and divorce than call it off.

    C – What about him?

    B – There’s so many rumors that he hangs at The Regency and still hooks up with women.

    B – That’s pathetic.

    C – Does she know that?

    B – I told her

    C – She could be making the biggest mistake of her life

    Thanks KungFuBunny for the transcript. When I first heard it I thought Barbara was saying that Luann had said that she'd rather divorce than call it off, but that's not what was said. Carole asks Barbara if Lu is excited about the wedding and Barbara replies "Honestly? I think she has something to prove." Carole asks prove what and Barbara then says the line "She'd rather go through with it and divorce than call it off". Reading the exchange makes it clear that this is Barbara's interpretation of how Lu is feeling. Maybe based on convos with her, maybe just assuming she knows, can't tell. But they aren't Lu's words. 

    • Love 7
  5. Quote

    Also agree with this but probably not for the same reason lol.   She is different from the others, in that every other woman Tom has promised he was exclusive with has left upon finding out he's a dick slinging liar.   Their connection is he has agreed to philander more discreetly.  In exchange for a gorgeous penthouse view and more fabulous white Armani pantsuits, she has agreed not to let it get to her.  Remember that what bothered her most about Tom's slip up at the Regency wasn't that he was making out with another woman or even that it was irrefutably him, it was that it was public.   Why marry?  For him you mean?  That part is still a mystery to me but it makes sense if he'd finally found a woman with enough lack of self esteem as to be willing to look past it, if that were her condition.  I mean if you think about it, he doesn't lose much, he can still hoe around without the fear of losing her, he just needs to make sure he's not caught. 

    Your interpretation could be right. But for all their dissing on Tom and what a cheater he is, I still think Sonja and Ramona would have said yes to a proposal faster even then Lu did. 

    Still I think there must be something there for Tom other then a woman who won't complain if he cheats. He's been happily (by all accounts) dating his way through the UES for years. So why marry? Lu doesn't have tons more money then he does, she's not pregnant, she's not the first woman who would look the other way, so what's different? No idea. 

    • Love 7
  6. Quote

    Sonja is being an odd duck as well. She throws Tinsley a party to introduce her to all her friends, then acts offended when Tinsley starts become friendly with them. What was with that separate entrance? The work of a mad woman, I tell ya. Tinsley seemed to be getting on well with Carole and Bethenny, so that's sure to stick in her craw. 

    I've been trying to pin down just what Sonja's problem is with Tinsley given that she shared space pretty amicably with Luann. She had Luann living with her last year and was totally fine with her, so why is she being so passive-aggressive, and just downright aggressive, with Tinsley? I think it's that she is finding Tinsley a threat. With Luann she could feel that they were in the same boat. 50-something women trying to find that someone to spend the rest of their lives with - both having the same basic social circle and known to each and all for years. That Luann managed to get engaged is not something that Sonja expected (thus why Luann wasn't a threat). Sonja's nastiness to Lu last season all started after her serious relationship/engagement to Tom came to light. Up until then, Sonja could tell herself that her situation wasn't too bad, because Lu was in the same boat. Only when that changed did the aggression emerge.

    With Tinsley, I think she thought here would be this person who would be dependent on her and was as screwed up as she was. Instead she's got a 20-year-younger version of herself in the house, one who is going out with her own friends and even scarier to Sonja, making friends in Sonja's circle. And by friends I think we can assume she's most worried about the men. Tinsley is everything Sonja has to offer, just a couple decades younger. So she's trying to proactively bring her down and undermine her confidence.

    I liked Lu's dress. Wasn't sure at first, but as she pirouetted I liked all the angles. 

    Other then that? Ramona? I agree about how she's not used to being the one iced out, so it's really throwing her - that and the fact that she has absolutely no story of her own is going to be a problem for her this year. I think Bethenny is very, very aware of how much damage she did to her own personal brand last year with her viciousness to Lu, so she seems to really be walking on eggshells this season. Noticed in the upcoming scenes that she's apologizing to Tom about drama she may have caused for him. So I think she's trying not to really lose it on anyone. That plus she really loathes that she's contractually obligated to attend these events. She uses any and every excuse to duck out early or not attend at all.

    And Carole? She was fine last night. But I think it's interesting that for all the talk about how she's living with Adam and struggling with sharing her space with him, we haven't actually seen any scenes of them in that space together? Or I haven't. I missed most of the first ep of the season, so perhaps there? Given her general tenor with how she's talking living with him and how he's been mostly invisible, I'm guessing that relationship is not long for this world.

    • Love 9
  7. Quote

    Victoria, you are thirsty for a pasty prolapsed rectum who is currently delivering man milk to a woman who once picked nits out of your brother's pubic hair. Please locate some self respect. Who wants to lay bets on whether or not a catfight between Red and Mop is on the horizon? Romcomcom!

    I agree with this - hate the idea of Victoria chasing after Billy (beyond gross) - but I will admit to finding some pleasure in how much Phyllis's nose is getting out of joint because of Vic. It's only been what, a day? in show time, and yet Phyllis is already starting to lurk around corners in fear that Victoria is going to take away her man (shuddddder and swallowing of vomit). So anything that makes Phyllis unhappy has to make me somewhat cheer it on. I kind of wish they'd revisit Victoria and Jack. It could start with them consoling each other over the jerks in their life and go from there. I know once upon a time he was a stepfather to her, but she's now in her 40s and he his 60s (or late 50s by show reckoning), so it's not out of the realm in terms of age difference, especially on a soap where all the older adults (meaning not the 20-somethings) occupy this kind of ageless state.

    • Love 8
  8. Quote

       10 HOURS AGO,  POP TART SAID: 

    I want Scott with Sharon, but if they're putting him in a chem test with Abby, how about his being a bit humble about his lack of business experience? How about he says, 'hey, your grandfather wants me to work with you and I owe him for the $10 million ransom, so I'm going along with it, but I know I don't know anything about this business, so...'

    Hey, Poptart- are you throwing shade at Prictor because he's 150 years old with a 20something year old daughter? LOL. 

    Ha! Caught me. You know I started to type father and then 'corrected' myself because I was suddenly sure he was too old and had to be grandfather. I know the whole story - still hate, hate the fact that they disappeared Brad as her dad - and still my brain could only think grandpa.

    • Love 2
  9. Quote

    Abby tells Prick that now she understands why Vic bailed, because he has no respect for women.  Prick is offended by this.  Abby says Scott’s only qualification is that he is a man, and that he owes Prick his life.  She is furious that she is being put in this position.  She feels that she is being tested, and he acknowledges that everyone has to earn his trust.  

    Not a fan of Abby (don't hate her, but find her mostly irritating) and the storyline of her meteoric rise to power at Newman has been rushed and dumb, but I have to say 'bravo' to her for verbalizing this. This scenario where the male journalist without an ounce of business experience is going to be set to watch her on Victor's behalf is just gross. Certainly it proves what a misogynist Victor is, but it doesn't do Scott any favors either with him going along with it and insisting that he works "with" Abby not for her. Yes Abby was the Naked Heiress (so stupid), but Scott has no idea what she's been doing since then and the condescending dialogue they've written for him in his interactions with her just make him seem as much of an ass as Victor. 

    I want Scott with Sharon, but if they're putting him in a chem test with Abby, how about his being a bit humble about his lack of business experience? How about he says, 'hey, your grandfather wants me to work with you and I owe him for the $10 million ransom, so I'm going along with it, but I know I don't know anything about this business, so...' Instead he's all like 'I was in dangerous places in the world and you're just a blonde bimbo so I'm entitled to consider myself your equal as a business co-worker'. This has Mal Young's fingerprints all over it. It's sexist and meant to be rom-com snarky, hate you, now I love you stuff, but it's just so sexist and gross.

    I would guess that Sally wrote the scenes that Scott has had with Sharon and this stuff with Abby? Mal Young all the way. 

    • Love 13
  10. Quote

    Is Chuck that big of an egomaniac where he would loose millions and cause his friend loose millions just to bring Axe down?

    I didn't quite get how the plan could have been put it play without his revealing to the new US Attorney guy (formerly investigating Chuck for unethical, possibly illegal deeds) that he'd put a whole bunch of money into the IceJuice thing and that's why Axe was going to tank it? Chuck okayed his dad raiding his blind trust for the money to fund the investment, and though I don't know much about blind trusts, I got the sense that this was at the least unethical and possibly illegal, because Chuck's dad made a point of saying once the IPO happened they'd put the money right back in the trust. So how does Chuck get the investigator guy on board with going after Axe without telling him that Axe is likely to tank the IJ offering and if he tells him that wouldn't the investigator ask how he knows that's likely to happen?

    I did love the double con, and Chuck's reaction at the end was perfect, crying and laughing at the same time because, yes he's now got Axe on illegal doings, but he's also lost his entire trust and it's probably cost him Wendy as well.

    • Love 3
  11. Quote

    The whole Dorinda meltdown was kind of lost on a lot of us because it's never really revealed what Sonja was saying about her. It would have been a lot more interesting if we knew what Dorinda was so pissed about. That story line was poorly executed by production.  

    This is why I think Dorinda was in more control then she appeared. She was being very careful to not give voice to the things that Sonja was reported to have said. And though I thought she definitely lost the high road because of how very low she was going, I did think she was being smart to not actually name the things being said. If she says them, then they just get that much closer to being believed. Dorinda couldn't be specific as to which FB post she was talking about because of this.

    • Love 4
  12. Quote

    So people in finance are that loyal?  I don't know if one of these soft, upper middle class guys was facing prison or testifying, I think most of them would flip.  They would probably be blackballed in the industry, so no more big paydays.  But how do they weigh things, prison vs. money?

    I'm not sure it's this - it's more that right now the US attorneys are just fishing. They don't know of any one thing that Axe is doing illegally at the moment, they suspect because they're a hedge fund that they must be doing something illegal, but they don't have anything actionable at the moment. So if you're Taylor or Mafee for that matter and the US Attorney comes to you and makes vague threats against Axe and Axe capital are you going to immediately spill everything and give up your hundreds of thousands of dollars in salary and bonuses? Or wait for the actual shit to be hitting the fan?

  13. I have only watched this very occasionally and really only last season and this one, so my question for the experts: Is Cameran with anyone? Dating? Married? Living together? Divorced? She's so interested in getting Shep and Chelsea to hook up, because Shep can't be truly happy until he commits or something, but is she with anyone in a committed relationship? Just wondering.

    And that aside I don't know what a single one of these women sees in any of these men. They are all pretty gross, aging frat boys who think they're all that. They actually make me shudder a little, just no. I don't care who or what these women have done, none of them deserves to be with any of these guys.

    Since I'm a recent viewer and that only infrequently, I don't hate Landon, and in fact thought she had a genuine moment last night when she told Craig that the way Thomas treated Kensie was the way her parents were all the time. It didn't seem like she said it to elicit pity, but rather was trying to joke about it and be self-mocking, but I could see there was some real hurt there underneath. Or that's how I read it.

  14. Quote

    Though they spilled their "troubles" to Wendy a bit in a prior episode, that was really 'I'm more upset with myself for being not that upset." Again, no real development about how or why the sudden embrace of the "darkness." But also, what exactly about signing that report signaled Taylor's walk on the wild side anyway? We've never seen Taylor asked to do anything illegal or even terribly immoral, that I know.

    I think you're right about Taylor's convo with Wendy. It was more like they thought they should be upset at what had happened in Sandicot and weren't, so was that wrong. Early on when Taylor told Axe that working at the firm made them physically uncomfortable I got the sense it had more to do with the overly-energetic people, hard-charging environment, then it did doing what the firm does. Taylor has several times suggested that what they feel is actually different then what they think they should feel - in addition to the Wendy discussion, there was the discussion about being on the chess team when they were in college. Taylor at first suggests the reason they left the team was one thing, but eventually admits they were pushed out for being too good and how angry that made them feel. 

    All of this is to say that I don't think Taylor is necessarily a liberal/progressive, rather is someone who has a worldview that makes sense to them guided by really very pragmatic and objective considerations. Taylor does form personal connections, like wanting to cheer up their fellow analyst because they weren't doing well (bought him the UFC poster) and certainly seems to be developing a respect for Axe, but in broader terms I don't think they're easily labeled. Taylor was the one who said they should pull the plug on Sandicot without reference to how that made anyone feel (I think this was after the discussion with Wendy). And I think Taylor's meeting with the US attorney guy (can't remember his name) was merely a fact-finding mission. If Taylor thought they had enough to charge Axe, the conclusion of that meeting would have been far different. But because Brian (ah I just remembered his name) didn't have a shred of evidence and instead was making all kinds of assumptions about who Taylor was based solely on their resume, Taylor almost laughed in his face. 

    Quote

    Even though last week I thought she was aiming for Axe, I kind of bought Wendy taking a shot at Lara too. I don't think it's ever been confirmed that Wendy knew Axe before Lara did but I could see their resentment being something that's simmered for a long time.

    I also don't get what Lara's brother's issue is either but that may be because it's Lara's family and they all carry the tedium gene.

    We did get evidence in this episode that Axe knew Wendy before he knew Lara. When Wendy is apologizing to him for telling Lara the truth, she references when Axe met Lara and how she (Wendy) at first was skeptical of their relationship and Axe's quick decision that Lara was the one.

    The reason Lara's brother has an issue with Axe is because he's a cop and they found out last season that Axe had somehow done a deal at the expense of first responders who died on 9/11 or one that exploited their memory. I can't remember the details, but he had been looked up to by police and fire because of his big donations to them, but it came out that he had also totally exploited the events of 9/11 to make millions of dollars. So Lara's family (which includes a fair number of first responders) really soured on him. 

    • Love 4
  15. Quote

    With respect to Hannah in particular, Shosh made a few digs at Hannah wearing overalls, calling her "Teen Mom" and even suggesting that Hannah wearing overalls to a formal event was standard behaviour for Hannah and therefore would support the cover story that Shosh had invited Hannah to begin with. The bottom line is that Shosh found Hannah, with her rudeness, inappropriate social behaviour, and lack of fashion sense, at odds with the kind of friend she wanted to have. Even if Hannah had made a genuine effort to maintain the friendship with Shosh, which it seems she did not, since she had no idea Shosh had even changed her number, I think Shosh would have iced her out one way or another. 

    Even though the Inside the Episode suggests that Shosh is truly leveling up and finding true happiness, I saw a few warning flags: the quick courtship and engagement (zero to engagement party in six months?), the overly gushy speech at the engagement party (which pretty much boiled down to "Look at how happy and in love I am! Seriously! For realsies!"), the fact that Byron may have issues of his own (Shosh brags about him completing all steps of Al-Anon, which is for relatives/loved ones of alcoholics), and Shosh flashing her ring like it's some sort of mic drop. So Shosh's obsession with image and status--the Instagram-worthy engagement party, the handsome fiance (whom she loves so, so much, like seriously you guys, so much), her pique at Hannah wearing overalls when she's many months pregnant and has trouble finding anything that fits, etc.--over substance (quickie engagement, etc.) continues unabated. Good luck with that, Shosh. Let's see how many of those pretty girls with nice purses are there for you when your marriage falls through.

    Agree with all of this. I thought the fact that Shosh had deliberately excluded Hannah while inviting everyone else, including Elijah (you can't tell me that Elijah wouldn't have told Hannah about the engagement at the least), was unnecessarily harsh. I'm not saying she doesn't have a reason to want to let her friendship with Hannah fade away - but getting in touch goes both ways. Her beef that Hannah hadn't called to tell her about the pregnancy? True. But clearly Shosh had not called Hannah in all that time either. I wouldn't have an issue with the lack of invite to Hannah if she hadn't included everyone else, even Ray (her ex), Marnie (the woman who dated her ex) and Elijah (who lives with Hannah). She clearly was going to be dropping all of the women as friends, not just Hannah, so the exclusion of Hannah was just mean.

    And I also agree that I don't necessarily think Shosh is heading for a happy ever after with her true love Byron. Things can happen fast and work, but her emphasis on making sure everyone knew they were so in love and happy just seemed forced.

    That said, I could totally see it happening in this way. The whole party scene was very well done and captured that feeling of affection and loss that comes with the ending of friendships. I liked that Jessa and Hannah came to a rapprochement. And I loved the evidence that even Jessa was changing (loved her line about having been waiting outside of Shosh's house since 4).

    • Love 4
  16. Quote

    With the Amy and Sheldon plotline, I wish she would call him out more directly.  When he says (as he ALWAYS does) that she (or anyone else) gets to make a certain decision unless Sheldon disagrees, he needs to be told "NO! NOT ACCEPTABLE!! Stop acting like a spoiled child and act in a fair manner like an adult!"

    The thing that gets me is that Sheldon is always bragging about being the smartest of them all (the gang) and always wants to dominate in all work situations, but really hasn't he proven time and again that he's definitely not the smartest? There have been many instances in the show where he thinks he has something, but really has gotten it wrong and the work that has been successful has all been based on someone else's ideas. 

    • His not successful efforts: the element he thought he'd discovered, but didn't because he had used the wrong factor for one of the numbers; his mono-polar (?) experiment when they went to the south (north?) pole; his work with Kripke where he realizes that Kripke is leaps and bounds ahead of him; and his having to give up his field of study because he was stuck in a dead end. 
    • His successful efforts: the article/theory he and Leonard co-wrote where they were asked to present and got into the fight in front of everyone (early in the series), not clear whose idea it was, but think it was Leonard's; the theory Leonard came up with while having dinner with Penny that Sheldon then helped him with the math and wrote the article (for which he ended up getting sole credit!); I'm thinking the current project he's working on with Leonard and Howard for the military was Howard's idea, so that; and now his collaboration with Amy on an idea that she originated.

    This isn't all of the examples in either category, I've probably missed some, but I think it's pretty clear that Sheldon - at the least - is not the guy who's going to come up with the ideas/theories, Leonard and the others are. Is he brilliant at helping them with the math and science? Probably. But pretty much anything he's worked at on his own has not succeeded. What I'm curious about is whether the writers know this or not. I'm inclined to think not. I think Chuck and company still think Sheldon is the smartest so it's right that he should get his way, but he's really not as far as what we've been shown. He has an eidetic memory and is very smart when it comes to math and science, but as an original thinker of potentially universe changing ideas, not so much.

    • Love 8
  17. Quote

    Liking the vibe between Sharon and Scott. **existing stage left immediately**

    (small voice) me too.

    I can see they are chem testing Scott with several of the women on the show and I'm actually glad of that. With the last few writers they'd bring on a character and already be set on who they'd be paired with come hell or high water or crashingly bad non-chemistry. I like Scott with Sharon and would love to see a slow-build relationship with them, especially because I want her to stay far, far from Nick. But I'm okay with their testing him with other actresses as well. I truly do not want Phyllis to be the one they go with, please, please, no. Other then her...okay.

    • Love 12
  18. Quote

    I'm sure Axe is worth a lot of money but it's probably not all cash. It's tied up into his assets (property, his investments, his corporation etc.) and only some of that is liquid cash. Anyway, 5 million isn't much to him but it still hurts to burn that type of money in a bad deal. Plus, it's not the 5 million for the property (and the motorcycle) that is going to hurt him, it's the towns debt he bought that once they declare bankruptcy he will owe a shit ton more than 5 mill I bet.

    I think Axe has ready capital to the tune of about 2-3 billion, so 5 million is not a big deal. In the last episode when he was going to do the currency deal and he called on all his former enemies he told them they'd need 5 billion and that he only had about 2 or 3 billion available as ready cash himself - which is why he needed them to buy in. If the deal succeeded, and I think it did because I think he did end his quarter in the black, then he should have had his 2-3 billion back plus whatever profit they reaped. Now his total worth? No idea. That would include his business and all properties, etc. So 50 billion? 100 billion? 

    In regards to Rhodes vs. Bobby as to who's the villain? I think the show is more about how far someone will go to accomplish their goals. Just what rules will they break, boundaries will they cross to achieve their ends. Clearly Bobby more visibly crosses boundaries and breaks rules, but I think Rhodes does all of that too. Someone mentioned how he, in the first episode, decided he was going to go after Bobby until he found something prosecutable. That's not how it's supposed to work if you're the prosecutor. Added factor - though it's been a while - I'm pretty sure he decided to go after Bobby because even then there was tension about the fact that Wendy worked for him. So he decided to pursue someone who hadn't yet, that he had any evidence of, broken any laws, and he did so largely because he didn't like that his wife was consorting with this hedge fund guy.

    I consider Rhodes and Bobby to both be extremely grey characters, but not ones without their own ethical outlooks. Rhodes ethics (for the most part) drive him to pursue these wall street moguls by any means necessary and Bobby's ethics drive him to make as much money as possible, but also to protect the people he considers to be his. 

    • Love 1
  19. Thanks for the correction on Wags, dwmarch, I knew Wax didn't seem right because then we'd have Wax and Axe, but I was totally hearing it. And now that you've said it, I agree the shrink might have set it up. He made such a point of naming Wags when the fight was going to get physical, so that had jumped out at me, but I hadn't gotten as far as him maybe setting up the whole thing. I think he's going to be a real problem down the road in some way - perhaps to sow dissension between Wags and Axe, not sure.

    We did see the Rhodes kids in season one. Pretty sure it was a son and daughter (with the daughter as the older). There was the time Rhodes was in the park with his son getting an ice cream cone and some guy he'd prosecuted came up to them to yell at Rhodes. And I'm pretty sure we had at a couple scenes of the kids at home, if only briefly. 

  20. Only two episodes in and I'm really loving this season so far. The interactions between all the characters are so sharp and every moment seems to be working to further story and character development and I like that I have to be listening carefully because it all moves through so quickly. I've actually watched both episodes multiple times because I keep catching new details and nuance. 

    In this week's episode I have to say I loved the Axe/Taylor interactions the best, just because I'm finding Taylor to be such an intriguing character. Taylor seems to be a complete straight arrow, so while they may be a help to Axe now, will it come back to bite him later if he does something that Taylor notices is illegal/unethical? Not sure how that will go. Seems to be mutual respect between them now, but how will it play out? And then there's the new woman watchdog person (sorry don't remember her name) and the way that Wax may be feeling threatened by her. His interactions with the psychologist guy (a creepy jerk) were great and I loved when he went off on the idiots at the sushi restaurant and how they were all ready to try and bully him until they realized who he was. 

    Rhodes is much more interesting this season having to struggle in his job and life. Last season he was just too smug all the time. Here he's having to figure out how to survive and I find that a lot more compelling. And his deputy's struggle to figure out what he's doing with his career, and how being a prosecutor isn't quite the white hat role that he envisioned is being well handled as well. 

    I'm even somewhat interested in whatever business Axe's wife (blanking on her name) is going to come up with. Not because I think it will be interesting in and of itself, but because of how it might play into all the other stuff that's going on. 

    • Love 1
  21. Quote

    IMO saying that Penny, Bernie, and Amy don't want to go to Comic Con isn't a statement that NO women want to go to Comic Con.

    You're right - but this is combined with the fact that anytime a female enters the comic book store the characters act as though a unicorn has walked in. With pretty much everything they do in terms of their geek obsessions on the show, it's made clear that "girls" don't participate. That it's a miracle when one does want to participate. So I take it all as a theme from the writers. 

    • Love 3
  22. I'm so tired of the "girls just won't like comic con" bits. Certainly Penny won't geek out to the extent that Leonard and the guys would, but if nothing else it's a huge spectacle and it's in San Diego. Granted they live in Pasadena so not the same draw as it was for me coming from Wisconsin, but still, San Diego! I'm sure Penny could find plenty to occupy herself if she wasn't going to all the panels that the guys wanted to go to. And the panels, they're not just nerdy comic book ones, there are tv show panels and movie panels, lots and lots of big stars, etc. Again, not totally Penny's scene, but the whole girls won't like it is just old and frankly sexist. So that was irritating on top of their just not talking to each other.

    Otherwise pretty meh.

    • Love 14
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