She's 11 years younger than I am, but I think I would have found ASH just as attractive when I was 27 as I do at 38. I know I did when I was 32/33, at least.
Buffy and Angel 1: BUFFYNANGLE4EVA!!!!!1!
Is it better the second time around? Or the third? Or tenth? This is the place to come when you have a burning desire to talk about an old episode that was just re-run.
Ouch! This is from way back in March, but I just ran across a TV Guide quote about a former Angel star at TwoP:
HOW DID THIS HAPPEN?: Elisabeth Rohm has gotten work again. As an actress. The wooden Law & Order alum has been cast in the Fox pilot Briar & Graves, about a priest and a doctor who team up to explain the unexplainable. Like how Rohm got another acting job.
"Elizabeth Rohm" +wooden turns up 134 hits on Google.
ita, when I did it without the plus sign on "wooden" it gave me 15,000 hits but lots of them just on "wood." I thought I didn't need the plus sign? What's it doing different?
The + in that case is acting like quotes -- without either, it's not being literal about wooden -- it also searches on grammatical variations of the same stem.
I really wish it didn't default to that, though.
Scott and I are still working our way through the BtVS episodes in order. Last night, we finished watching Choices. We'd fallen asleep during it, the night before. Next, we put on the disc with The Prom (sob) but I don't think I saw past the teaser, before I was out light a light.
Narrator, I thought of you during Choices, when the lackey vamp notes that Faith killed the courier who brought the Box of Gavrok, and she asks, "What are you, the narrator?" You took your board name from that, right?
We might have caught a minor continuity error in Choices. When the courier first arrives at the airport, he's looking for the Mayor. He expected the Mayor to meet him, with the money, personally. The lackey vamp has a briefcase with him, and says he's got the guy's money, right there. Later, when Faith returns to City Hall with the Box of Gavrok, the Mayor asks what happened to the courier, and notes that he was supposed to pay him. He takes out an envelope that appears to hold said payment, as he's saying he was supposed to pay him. Faith takes it, and then replies that she made the courier and offer he couldn't survive. I don't usually note those things. And I am surprised I noted one after all this time.
Season 3 had a nice steady build, all along really, putting forth the idea that Buffy and Angel just aren't going to be able to make a go of it, together. Tonight, it was the Mayor's turn to drive that idea home, but Spike, circumstance, and even Buffy's own desire for a break a few episodes prior, have done so, throughout the season. There are elements of season 2 that I prefer, and Surprise/Innocence and Becoming are always on my favorite episodes list. But all in all, I think season three had the best pacing. Season two's ideas may have been more exciting and certainly had a higher HSQ, since Angel himself was the Big Bad, but I think season 3 is tighter, somehow.
We'll try The Prom again tonight, I'm sure. And I'll have tissues at the ready, because damn, baby, that's a tear jerker. But in a way, Choices is a more special episode for me, or special in a different way. There are a couple of episodes like that in season 3. I'd have to go back and check to see which ones, and I haven't had enough coffee, yet. I think what I like about it (and those episodes like it) is that it isn't one of the big episodes.
I don't know how to convey this idea more clearly than to say that the sort of ordinary episodes have a particular charm. Don't get me wrong. I adore the big reveals, and the teary and painful moments. There's just something comfortable, and uniquely enjoyable about this show, when it manages to reel me in, with an episode I could have otherwise skipped, without missing the big picture. I like these little-picture-moments episodes, in a special way.
Narrator, I thought of you during Choices, when the lackey vamp notes that Faith killed the courier who brought the Box of Gavrok, and she asks, "What are you, the narrator?" You took your board name from that, right?
Yep. It seemed to me that any other posting name I thought of that was even half-way interesting was already taken. (There were other good names that came after mine, but I didn't think of them at the time I was selecting my posting name.) I figured no one had grabbed "The Narrator" yet, so I did.
When I first went to the Bronze (and my first lurk was at the linear side), I was all set to post as "Closet Buffyholic" and when it was taken, I was so sad.
What was your Bronze name, Cindy? I don't think it was the same as this one.
Cindy, I'm doing the same thing. Just watched "Faith, Hope & Trick" last night. I love Giles all the time and this ep just confirms that love, "There is no spell." Also, nice foreshadowing of Willow's magic problems.
We might have caught a minor continuity error in Choices. When the courier first arrives at the airport, he's looking for the Mayor. He expected the Mayor to meet him, with the money, personally. The lackey vamp has a briefcase with him, and says he's got the guy's money, right there. Later, when Faith returns to City Hall with the Box of Gavrok, the Mayor asks what happened to the courier, and notes that he was supposed to pay him. He takes out an envelope that appears to hold said payment, as he's saying he was supposed to pay him. Faith takes it, and then replies that she made the courier and offer he couldn't survive. I don't usually note those things. And I am surprised I noted one after all this time.
How is that a continuity error? (I may not have had enough coffee yet, so any explanations will help greatly.)