No. You're missing the point. The design of the thing is functional. The plan is not to shoot you. The plan is to get the girl. If there's no girl, then the plan, well, is like the room.

Early ,'Objects In Space'


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]


§ ita § - Aug 30, 2010 11:29:08 am PDT #5978 of 11838
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Because he doesn't think outside the box!

He gets dinged with that in poker too, I think. Doesn't Emily beat him in S5?


quester - Aug 30, 2010 11:59:19 am PDT #5979 of 11838
Danger is my middle name, only I spell it R. u. t. h. - Tina Belcher.

He seems to have a few gaps in his skills. Like chop sticks.

Well, I have seen Uncanny Valley, and I will be back for more. Good Reid episode.


Vortex - Aug 30, 2010 12:06:35 pm PDT #5980 of 11838
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

Sometimes the writers will have gaps in his skills/education for comic effect that don't make any sense, like in the episode with the "vampires" where Reid doesn't know what Twilight is. I think that it would have been funnier if he had read all of the books just because he's Reid, or maybe that he had some obscure knowledge about the book or the author, but no idea of the culture phenomenon.


-t - Aug 30, 2010 12:06:52 pm PDT #5981 of 11838
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

I think in an episode I watched last week, Reid won a poker game on the plane at the beginning of a scene. I can't remember if anyone commented on it or not, but I think it had the feel of him winning often. And I watched most of Season 1 more or less at once, so I can't recall now which ep it was.


brenda m - Aug 30, 2010 12:10:42 pm PDT #5982 of 11838
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

He's definitely something of a card sharp, and they've attributed it to his Vegas upbringing.


-t - Aug 30, 2010 12:22:23 pm PDT #5983 of 11838
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

Right, yes, that was the talk.


billytea - Aug 30, 2010 12:24:35 pm PDT #5984 of 11838
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

I read the chess thing as more a comment on Gideon. Reid, it seems, is supposed to be good at chess (it's not a gap in his abilities), but Gideon is just that much better.


§ ita § - Aug 30, 2010 12:27:54 pm PDT #5985 of 11838
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I'm only vaguely remembering the poker game with Emily, but he's quoting stats etcetera at her, and she pulls it out with the last card, or something. And Morgan is watching.

I think.


Barb - Aug 30, 2010 12:45:08 pm PDT #5986 of 11838
“Not dead yet!”

I'm only vaguely remembering the poker game with Emily, but he's quoting stats etcetera at her, and she pulls it out with the last card, or something. And Morgan is watching.

That was in "A Thousand Words" towards the end of S5. He draws one card to her three and presents a Full House. She grimaces, says she always forgets that he grew up in Vegas and he looks smug as he goes to pull the pot toward himself. She stops him and says that she, too, has a full boat and lays down a Full House that trumps his. He looks confused and says something to the effect that he can't believe she got a full house from drawing three cards, that it's something like 100-1 odds and she interjects, "Ninety-seven to one."

I love it because it's one of those subtle moments where the writers show us that in her own way, Emily's as brilliant as Reid. It harkens back to her first assignment with the team in S2-- when she, Reid, and Gideon went to Guantanamo to interrogate the POW and Reid was playing chess with Gideon and the plane banks sharply because of the approach into Guantanamo and Reid is disappointed because he thought he was finally going to beat Gideon and Emily absent-mindedly says, "He would've had you in three."

She is, in many ways, the closest thing to an intellectual equal that Reid has on the team. With better social skills from being a diplomat's daughter.


§ ita § - Aug 30, 2010 12:51:45 pm PDT #5987 of 11838
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Thank you, Barb. I thought I couldn't have hallucinated that much of a scene.

Reid is brilliant, but, yes, reasonably conventional.