I think she was the target, actually.
Steve Guttenberg trying to kill her off to get sympathy votes?
'Serenity'
[NAFDA] Spoiler Policy: Seasons 1-3 and the movie are fair game. Spoiler font two weeks for new content presented all at once (e.g. Season 4 on Hulu is fair game as of Aug. 9, 2019). New content presented as weekly episodes may be discussed with no restrictions as it is released.
I think she was the target, actually.
Steve Guttenberg trying to kill her off to get sympathy votes?
Finally saw the premiere and really liked it. I have a lot more to say, but work looks like it is going to be grizzly to day. Hopefully lunch time will give me a little time.
he said to VM "I'll miss you."
Lovey relationship talk. "I'm going to the store!" "I'll miss you!"
I've skimmed. Someone's probably said this.
I think the bus crash is a way for the writers to have Veronica break out of her self-imposed summer vacation from harsh realities.
Lovey relationship talk. "I'm going to the store!" "I'll miss you!"
They weren't in a reationship by then. It was Duncan/Veronica all the way. She'd already dumped Logan.
The Logan/Duncan thing reminds me a lot of Dylan/Brandon from 90210. I didn't feel that way last season, but the whole "Logan's mom is dead, Dad in jail" thing reminded me a lot of Dylan.
I suppose I shouldn't have started with that because I actually really liked the premiere. I love Veronica and Wallace together. I think Veronica/Duncan is boring, but in the context of where Veronica is at after the whole summer's events, I can see why he might be appealing to her. Still, I think he comes across as a giant cardboard cut-out (who could got nutso if he forgets his meds).
Watching the premiere has validated my decision to ditch Lost and go with VM.
Steve Guttenberg trying to kill her off to get sympathy votes?
That would be more sinister than what I had thought initially, which was just a rival killing her off as an intimidation tactic.
It must have something to do with Steve since it's an obvious plotski -- and since the main villain almost never is presented at the beginning of a story arc, I think they'll try to use this to cover up his villainess. And I mean, who would suspect Steve Guttenberg? Even with facelifts?
It would also serve the Rob's-a-one-trick-pony theory: make the washed-up-actor guest star the villain.
What. Ever. Too obvious.
Clearly, Wallace's love interest, the girl we haven't seen yet, is the villain. Or maybe it's Charisma.