A year and a half ago, I could have eviscerated him with my thoughts. Now I can barely hurt his feelings. Things used to be so much simpler.

Anya ,'Dirty Girls'


The Minearverse 4: Support Group for Clumsy People  

[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls and The Inside), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.


Kat - Jun 23, 2005 3:15:07 pm PDT #40 of 10001
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

oh top 40?

well that's interesting and pathetic of me.

Off I go again.


evil jimi - Jun 23, 2005 3:23:43 pm PDT #41 of 10001
Lurching from one disaster to the next.

Allyson ... great article on Popgurls.com

Tim ... damn fine show! Watched the first ep last week and have ep2 on my hdd and ep3 downloading.


Kristen - Jun 23, 2005 4:09:37 pm PDT #42 of 10001

This was, obviously since it's what I quoted at the site, my favorite part of Allyson's popgurls piece:

Rebecca never stole her friend's boyfriend or nursed her best girlfriend through a bad breakup with Pringles dipped in hot fudge. She went to school, hid behind her unicorn-print Mead Trapper Keeper, got good grades, and kept mostly to herself. If you turned her dial two clicks to the right, she could have ended up with a few decapitated heads in a freezer in an isolated compound in Montana.


quester - Jun 23, 2005 4:42:08 pm PDT #43 of 10001
Danger is my middle name, only I spell it R. u. t. h. - Tina Belcher.

The first 50? This is a record for me. Of course, I'm behind like 300 in the previous thread.

Just watched Episode 3. When they all went to the door with their guns raised, I kept wondering who was watching the back door.

I think I watch too many of this kind of shows, maybe.


Polter-Cow - Jun 23, 2005 4:49:04 pm PDT #44 of 10001
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Hey, maybe the little kid was guarding the back door with his water gun. Danny taught him well, after all.


§ ita § - Jun 23, 2005 4:57:03 pm PDT #45 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I'm trying to think of FBI TV shows, and google is giving me no love.

Outside of the obvious, I can think of

  • FBI
  • Numb3rs
  • Profiler
  • The X Files

What else is/was out there?


JenP - Jun 23, 2005 4:59:22 pm PDT #46 of 10001

Really liked last night's ep. Sorry I missed the watch-n-post.

The story grabbed me and did not let go. I love that. I felt slightly skeevy for finding the serial killer guy in the backseat kind of funny - at least in that scene.

Thought the wife was phenomenal, especially when she broke down to Paul. Rebecca's coldness toward her was really well done, too, I thought. (Plus - the nun! I loved that ep.)

Funniest: the silent how to hold a gun tutorial

Also funny: "That's mine." and "How much coffee have you had?" "None."

I laughed at the four agents pointing guns at the door/kid, and I also thought, "Huh? Shouldn't one of them be, I don't know, covering the others' six or whatever?" Didn't pull me out for long, though, because... well, funny.

I thought RN was fab in this ep; I feel like I'm starting to get to know what Rebecca's deal is. And more Katie time, yay!

When the guy was driving away at the end, the look he gave the two girls on the lawn.. so. damn. skin-crawlingly awful.


§ ita § - Jun 23, 2005 5:00:30 pm PDT #47 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

It never even occurred to me that the four guns might have been funny. Aside from the whole "What are you doing?" thing, I thought it was really horrific, and purposefully so.


Tom Scola - Jun 23, 2005 5:13:43 pm PDT #48 of 10001
Mr. Scola’s wardrobe by Botany 500

Twin Peaks


Frankenbuddha - Jun 23, 2005 5:21:42 pm PDT #49 of 10001
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

I figured out why I liked this episode better than the last two (which I also liked, but this one really did it for me) - it was pretty much all cat & mouse and, other than "who's the victim", not a whodunnit. The killer was revealed in act one.

The first two, while having cat & mouse elements throughout, definitely had a lot more "who's the killer?" shell game going, and with a limited number of suspects, it's either obvious (in that it had to be one of these people) or an asspull (in that it's nameless numberhead killer).

Outside of giallo movies, I generally have little use for whodunnits. And with giallo, it's the stylishness of the movies that usually hooks me in - who's the psycho is usually SUCH an afterthought. It's also probably why I liked COLUMBO so much - you ALWAYS knew whodunnit. The fun was watching Peter Falk annoy the killer into confessing work it out.