Red knows all ... but tells fuck-all. And only in bits and pieces at that.
'Potential'
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]
In all fairness to Red, Lizzie wouldn't have believed him if he had just told her. She had to find out for herself.
He told her a bunch of times. This one's not on him.
Man, she's stupid. (See also: oh hai freshly burning bucket of documents. I think I will not kick you over until later. Whoops, ashes.)
oh hai freshly burning bucket of documents. I think I will not kick you over until later. Whoops, ashes.
Groan. Totally this. Having had _extensive_ experience burning piles of papers (what?) it struck me instantly, how hard it would be to obliterate a non-crumpled, stack...that fact.
Red really has warned her a bunch of times. Lizzie really needs to extend her discernment abilities from her work life to her personal life. Tons of evidence really ought to have turned her head by now.
Man, she's stupid.
Yes, lawd. I have to watch the show on tivo delay so that I can fast forward through her stupid.
I don't generally complain about tv because...hey, entertainment.
Having said that, I wish Scott Bakula would become so enamored of something else in his life that acting holds no more thrall for him.
I'm a fan. So much so, it hurts to see him either stretched beyond his skills or just not much caring.
I watched NCIS original recipe just to see how Bakula would do as an NCISpinoff. Ugh.
He looks great, but that amorphous, coming and going southern accent is just painful. "My brothuh" and "boo" made my teeth ache. Especially up against Lucas Black's actual southern accent.
Bakula isn't a Yankee, but sheesh.
Yeah, NCIS NOLA was painful. Wanted to like it, given my fondness for Bakula and Black, but not so much.
I hadn't even been aware that there was an NCIS NOLA. I learn so much here ....
Technically, it's not spun off yet. Last night's episode was a crossover to introduce the soon-to-be spun NOLA gang.
Great essay by Hettienne Park about Beverly Katz's departure from Hannibal, fandom reactions, and Park's experiences as an Asian American woman in theater and film.