Huh, I'm of two minds, either C MacMurray or M him. Both to do with
My Three Sons.
C because "daddy figure," ewww. M because he was still young enough to ping my, oooh, he's not bad for an older guy. I thought he was cuter than any of his sons. What can I say, I had crushes on half my male teachers from 5th grade on.
Good luck, Kristen and Kessie!
Andi and I were watching an episode of
Jeeves & Wooster
this week when Wooster used ankled in describing walking somewhere.
"Ankled down to the club" or some such, but I'm paraphrasing.
Ah, right. I knew there were some other catches why I didn´t enter.
As for the language, heh. My parents just look at me strangely when I talk like that to POD on the phone. But then again it´s foreign language to them anyway, in more ways than one.
Oh and thanks SailAweigh and Jesse!
Isn't
Variety-
speak based on slang from the 1920s?
Imagines Kristen in flapper wear chain-smoking and tossing back drinks in a Prohibition-era speakeasy...
...or in some hotel, sitting alone in a room, trying to come up with a new story, with John Goodman next door.
I want ita in a speakeasy, with a Derringer in her garter.
A hammer would be funnier.
Allyson, why are you not writing?
Allyson, because you needed to take a breath. Now go have a nic fit and laugh at the antics of some crazyass people you type to in a glowing box.
PS, Ruby says rub her ears and cater to her every whim. Says Mister Kitty.
Thanks to Kristen (who not only rocks, but gets lots of luck wishes for her contests!), I got to read the script for "Pre Filer". And then, to babble.
And once again, an episode starts with distancing Rebecca from a group that could be hers, this time the students (and Paul, who is with her, and older, so supposedly further away from the students, is closer to them, because he used to be one of them, and probably liked it, too).
Rebecca freaked me out a bit, at the end of the teaser. It was like she was seeing something just enough different than what I was reading, to make it look the-same-but-not, which may be even scarier, to me, than seeing things completely differently. I wonder how it turned out on the actual show.
"He's a profiler. Does what we do" - I loved how it was Web who said this line. Because of the murder element that came along, with the profiler's understanding of the future killings - because Web himself killed, at least one criminal that we know if, in the first episode. And, yeah, the guy that Web killed had already committed at least several crimes, but still.
And then, I loved how it was Web who questioned Rebecca about agreeing with the murderer-of-murderers-to-be approach. After he killed one in front of her. And I loved the description of her hesitation to answer without a careful thought first, because it was Web who asked the question.
Oh, and after the "tell us who we're looking for", when it was the last slide, and it was Rebecca's own shadow on the screen, as if in an answer, to both questions, the direct one and the "do you agree with that?" one, but her spoken words showed a different answer. I really wonder how it looked on the actual show, because reading it was such a lovely - creepy - tapestry.
Oh, so the guy stalking in the car, the gay who fit Rebecca's description of the pre-filer, was "just" a murderer-to-be, to be murdered by the murderers-to-be murderer, before they murdered? OK, this is too complicated to type, I'll stop. But still - at least the way it was read, Havens fit the description of the pre-filer, and it made it even more interesting that it wasn't him. The similarities between victim (who may or may not become a killer), and the actual killer (who wanted - what? To save the victims? To act all FBI? Some of both, or none of the above?). Interesting.
"Danny's grin fades. A chill. Paul holds his look" - there's some history here, right? It's not just the easier-to-pull-a-trigger atmosphere that Danny has all around him, there are actual facts, too, right? And it's really interesting, how, again, the killer-to-be and the man whose job is to stop him share similar characteristics. Would Danny resemble the pre-filer, too? Or would somebody else? Rebecca, who seems to get inside his skin so easily? Web, who already killed instead of bringing to justice? Paul, who seems furthest from all this?
And I love how the "line" continues - Rebecca in the seat of the murder victim, and Web - "he does what we do" - in the seat of the profiler, the actual killer. The one who actually gets inside the head of the maybe-would-be-killer is Rebecca - she even looks through the mirror at Web, behind her, just like the victim could do. And then all the jumps between all three - Rebecca, the maybe-killer-to-be and the pre-filer. Did I mention already that it's creepy?
Oh, and obviously, since one of the crew members may be like the pre-filer, it means that this person may be a future potential serial killer, and therefore the pre-filer has to track that person and try to stop them, as is his way. It spins my head, a bit, with the question of how he may look upon his own handsdoing - wouldn't he hate himself, in a way, too? Because of his method? Or would he just ignore that aspect, that one not-that-tiny difference?
"That's you. - It's him." - I love how such two simple sentences, all of, what, four words and a couple of apostrophes, can be this creepy, in the way they encompass so much meaning inside. Because it's not just the simple facts of who did what and was where and all, it's "you" and "him" on the inside level, as well, right? At least, that's the way my mind's ears heard this being read. (continued...)