Digby is also home of the Siesta Motel, home of Bob: the greatest guy in the world /car accident in Nova Scotia
'Safe'
Boxed Set, Vol. IV: It's always suicide-mission this, save-the-planet that.
A topic for the discussion of Farscape, Smallville, and Due South. Beware possible invasions of Stargate, Highlander, or pretty much any other "genre" (read: sci fi or fantasy) show that captures our fancy. Expect Adult Content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
Whitefont all unaired in the U.S. ep discussion, identifying it as such, and including the show and ep title in blackfont.
Blackfont is allowed after the show has aired on the east coast.
This is NOT a general TV discussion thread.
I wonder if there's a circle around the pie shop in which fruit immediately rots.
He keeps some pot of fresh flowers nearby for sacrifice when he makes his pies. In ep 3, when he tossed a re-freshed peach to Chuck, a bunch of mums by the side of the kitchen wilted and died. There was a cute moment in which Digby looked all distressed at the flowers dying and Ned looked at Digby and made this "don't give me that look" face.
wooden hand/arm that Ned uses this week to scratch Digby is the arm he ripped off of Lefty last week!
That was adorable! I loved that whole scene: Ned being all defensive about not believing in ghosts and Chuck telling Emerson about little Ned wetting his pants during a seance at her aunts' house. Lee Pace was ultra-cute when he said "I did NOT! Uhm, I knocked over a plate of hors d'oeuvre and the brie was runny." Emerson's face when he said "I'd stick with the pissing the pants story" was priceless.
last night's pizza too fast!
If Ned were to eat something he'd touched, like he did this last ep, it would turn bad forever in his mouth. If he ate it right after making it, it would still turn bad.
I loved that whole scene: Ned being all defensive about not believing in ghosts and Chuck telling Emerson about little Ned wetting his pants during a seance at her aunts' house.
I totally missed that scene. It must have been when we had the trick-or-treater false alarm. (Nine years, no trick-or-treaters. I don't know why my husband thought this year would be different.)
I loved that Digby made the dog purring sound when Ned was petting him.
The weird thing about this show, I find, is that I often enjoy it more when I watch the episode the second time. The first time around, I spend more time boggling at the WTF moments (of which there are many.) There are also a lot of details I miss on the first watch -- like Olive's gigantic bag of cash from the win having a huge dollar sign, the see/hear/speak no evil monkeys at Mrs Jacobs' house, etc.
I hear that the Writer's Guild of America strike is on as of today. I have concerns about the impact the strike will have on fledgling show like Pushing Daisies.
As much as I like Pushing Daisies, I have a couple of handwavey problems. If the death is scaled to the life he brought back (as in bird = squirrel or another bird or fruit = flowers), why did the fly he brought back kill his mom? Also, if he'd returned to his childhood home before, why had he never seen Chuck if she was right across the street the whole time? And weren't the aunts elsewhere rather than right across the street?
Also, if he'd returned to his childhood home before, why had he never seen Chuck if she was right across the street the whole time? And weren't the aunts elsewhere rather than right across the street?
Oh, yeah, this was confusing to me as well.
But I thought his mom just died coincidentally. I'm going to have to rewatch I guess.
why did the fly he brought back kill his mom?
Mom died of an aneurysm. When he left her alive for longer than a minute, it killed Chuck's dad.
why did the fly he brought back kill his mom?
I thought she died of natural causes, the first time.