They're doing a riff on an eidetic memory, which is that he remembers everything he reads or sees. So, he knows the law, he just doesn't know how to interpret/apply it.
Cable Drama: Still Waiting for the Cable Guy to Show Up with the Thread Name...
To be determined... (but it's definitely [NAFDA])
I decided to give Necessary Roughness a shot because 1) I found out Marc Blucas was in it and 2) it got good ratings (I'm tired of watching a pilot then finding out it did horrible and will most likely be cancelled).
Why the heck did they call it Necessary Roughness? The show didn't even register with me because I thought it was related to the movie with the same title.
Eggs! Max Medina!
I liked it and set up a season pass for it.
The show didn't even register with me because I thought it was related to the movie with the same title.
Wait, it's not?
Although that is a football term, I think, and not just associated with the movie. But I thought the same thing.
I liked N.R. too. Of course, my teeth were a bit clenched based on years of truly appalling representations of therapy in the media. (Sweets, I love you, man)
I enjoyed it and found Mark Blucas attractive in a way I never have. I also like the lead a lot...memfaulting her name...based on her performances in Rescue Me.
I'll watch.
Callie Thorne. I never really thought of her as someone who could carry a project. I guess it would be good to be wrong.
OMG. I'm waiting for Leverage to start, and TNT is showing Return of the King, and the Grey Havens scene is breaking me all over again. Stupid allergies.
The end of LOTR: Return of the King always makes me cry. Haven't I seen it enough times for this reaction to wear off? Answer, obviously: no.
And now, Leverage geekgasm: Timothy Hutton playing Nate Ford dressed as Ellery Queen who was played by Jim Hutton! And Sophie dressed as Irene Adler! ADORE
Timothy Hutton playing Nate Ford dressed as Ellery Queen who was played by Jim Hutton!
Right! Too bad they couldn't work in a Nero Wolfe (or, you know, Archie) reference.
I don't understand why Eliot or anyone would have seriously considered the idea that Nate had killed that guy. Was I missing some sort of subtext?
I didn't understand that reaction, either, P-C. Nate's the Good Guy, the Honorable Man! Nate doesn't want the bad guys dead, he wants them punished and suffering and, oh yeah, maybe having a chance at redemption and that. Besides, even if he did mean to kill someone, he wouldn't do it on an island with no way off. Even drunk, he's smarter than that.
Although I was yelling at him for wandering over to look at the guy who just got tossed over the balcony, as if no one else was there.