If you're billed as a guest star in a bunch of episodes, apparently you get to pick which category to enter. [link]
Cable Drama: Still Waiting for the Cable Guy to Show Up with the Thread Name...
To be determined... (but it's definitely [NAFDA])
Um, is there anyone who didn't know that the painting was in the Wurlitzer?
If you put a pipe organ on the mantlepiece in Act 1, you have to use it by Act 3...
So last week on White Collar we had Shelley from Twin Peaks, and this week we had Bobby - I recognized that asshole swagger right off. Funny.
Also, isn't it deeply, deeply stupid for Neal to use an alias with Kate's last name?
Um, is there anyone who didn't know that the painting was in the Wurlitzer?
If you didn't know much about the woman in question, would you know that? Just because someone is looking for something for years doesn't mean he asked the right questions.
I was fascinated by how Parker views the team, since she was doing the casting in her head. Eliot comes off pretty poorly comparatively speaking.
Oh, I didn't think Parker was imagining them in the roles. I thought that was just for the viewer. I mean, Nate didn't either, really. And Eliot was realistic, just not heroic.
I didn't know where the painting was going to be -- I was just trying to figure out why they didn't end up together.
And I LOVED the way Aldis played young Charlie -- his voice and manner were so different, and so perfect.
I actually wept a bit. I'm a total sucker for a doomed wartime romance.
If you didn't know much about the woman in question, would you know that? Just because someone is looking for something for years doesn't mean he asked the right questions.
They just spent so much time talking about it. It was the first thing that they mentioned.
I actually wept a bit. I'm a total sucker for a doomed wartime romance.
Whereas I was bored and thought, "You could have just said, 'I gave the painting to the love of my life,' and been done with it."
And I LOVED the way Aldis played young Charlie -- his voice and manner were so different, and so perfect.
I did like that, though.
Breaking Bad : When Gus walked in, I thought, "Gus, you should really beat the crap out of Walt. But you're not the kind of guy who gets his hands dirty. You just make phone calls."
Uh, I was wrong.
Charlie had a lesson to teach. So he had to tell the story!
Jeff Eastin--take note about the Nazi looted art, eh?
Whereas I was bored and thought, "You could have just said, 'I gave the painting to the love of my life,' and been done with it."
When you're old and a pretty young girl is giving you her full attention, hanging on your every word, I bet you'll spin the longest and most romantic story you can think of.