Also, I miss the chinese restaurant from last season. Whatever happened to that?
I was just wondering that myself.
'Beneath You'
This thread is for procedural TV, shows where the primary idea is to figure out the case. [NAFDA]
Also, I miss the chinese restaurant from last season. Whatever happened to that?
I was just wondering that myself.
Maybe it just went out of business. The restaurant business isn't an easy one.
Maybe Booth got some wicked food poisoning and they don't go back there anymore?
He warned the squints that if they started going there all the time that he'd give it up.
Plus, it doesn't have the cool windows for dramatic from-the-street shots.
Actually, they haven't been back to the chinese restaurant since the end of season 1. Why? I dunno.
1. CM: Gross.
2. LIfe - OMG - is polygamy the theme of the evening?
(Okay, not so much in CM - but seriously.)
Oh my god, Damian Lewis, how are you such a sexy bitch?
Life: okay, Ted just became infinitely more awesome this ep at 50 minutes in.
And all the parrallels between Crews and Farthingale and the sparse houses and impersonal desk spaces was just charming.
I'm a little perturbed that Dani has taken zero interest in her partner's potential involvement in Ames' murder. She doesn't seem to care that he may have done it, and she doesn't seem to care that he may not have done it, and be defensive for him.
And holy crap that the white-haired-dude is her father!
I loved this episode. A lovely, twisty case of the week and amping up on the conspiracy theory and Jack Reese being involved (did he kill Ames?!! They were arguing in that first scene.) And I freakin' loved the team Charlie/Lt/Dani in the conference room with the bottles of wine and the baseball caps. The Lt., in all appearance, is an antagonist to Charlie yet she's also a good cop and recognizes that Charlie is one as well. I really like the ambiguity.
I like the idea that the LT, and also Bobby Starks in this respect, are good cops with motivations outside of setting up Crews, and yet in the process of being good cops they are following the letter of the law which makes them do things that possibly aren't favorable to ultimate justice (acting upon planted evidence, suspect motives, etc.)