Yup!
Joyce ,'Never Leave Me'
Procedurals 1: Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You.
This thread is for procedural TV, shows where the primary idea is to figure out the case. [NAFDA]
I saw something on FB about S3 of BBC's Sherlock. I didn't watch most of S2 because I hate their Moriarty and was very annoyed by the way Sherlock treated Watson in the Baskerville's episode. Has that Moriarty been fatally dealt with, ie, is he likely to show up again?
Given that Sherlock was fatally dealt with within minutes, I think it's fair to say that the writers can and will do what they damned well please with mortality. They're not going to be bound by "oh, but we saw him die onscreen!" if they don't want to be.
Oh, and they are assholes and Moriarty was popular. I wouldn't trust shit as far as I could throw it.
Ah, well. It's not like there's not precedent in canon.
My biggest problem with this week's Castle is that Alexis could pay the rent with a work-study job AND get a lease without a co-signer, based on said work-study job. YEAH RIGHT.
My biggest problem with this week's Castle is that Alexis could pay the rent with a work-study job AND get a lease without a co-signer, based on said work-study job. YEAH RIGHT.
In NYC. What kind of work study job does she have?
Is she still working in the morgue?
She might have bonds or something to pony up a few months rent up-front. She is pretty well-off.
Too well-off, I'd think, to get a work study job, actually...
Some schools have so hard of a time filling work-study positions that they will take people even if they are not underprivileged.
But then they're just "jobs," aren't they? Work study involves eligibility and federal funding.