I really don't like that casting, and I'm a bit miffed that she lied to him about dinner being ready, but I'm not exactly Ms. Relationship Compromise Wisdom or anything.
I think that she didn't want him to feel bad.
'Sleeper'
To be determined... (but it's definitely [NAFDA])
I really don't like that casting, and I'm a bit miffed that she lied to him about dinner being ready, but I'm not exactly Ms. Relationship Compromise Wisdom or anything.
I think that she didn't want him to feel bad.
What a super tense episode of MM that was.
No kidding. I kept waiting for the teacher in the car situation to somehow interrupt their discussion, but I also figured she was too smart to go up to the house.
I think that she didn't want him to feel bad.
I guess it was how she framed it--that she was too bright to have expected him home. No, you were dumb enough to expect him. Don't big yourself up.
I read that the way Vortex did as well--a white lie so he didn't feel so bad.
a white lie so he didn't feel so bad.
Yeah but she got him back by feeding his dinner to the dog. (Who should really not be fed at the table, much less on the table, but whatever. Dogs in Hollywood are not like real dogs--they never get catastrophic diarrhea at 3 am and poop all over the living room carpet.)
The guy who plays Caffrey is disturbingly pretty.
And OMG Mark Shepherd AGAIN.
He's EVERYWHERE.
Well, she didn't really get him back--she said there was no dinner, and he gets no dinner. Though there might have been an implication that she was going to cook dinner later, but I didn't quite get that.
I hear ya on MM, Le Nubian. At the end of the show, the DH turned to me and said "Well, that was harrowing."
Great work by Jon Hamm. I'm not surprised that he shaded the truth about what happened, and I'm glad that Betty called him out on his fib about the date of the divorce.
Yep, harrowed -- and well-deserved harrowing, too. And with the Suzanne situation, not all the chickens are home to roost.
Loved the Roger portions, too. So much backstory so well portrayed/alluded, illuminating the character present.