The poem doesn't seem to apply to Oklahoma City so I Googled -- Timothy McVeigh had them read the poem as his final statement before he was executed. So point in favor, Invictus associated with building blowing up, point opposed, Travers was not the one who blew the building up. I dunno.
(You know why I didn't get it, when I heard "minor character" I immediately thought Andrew for some reason, and couldn't think of the building that blew up around him.)
so I see the destruction of the WC as a bad thing.
All those BOOKS! Such a tragic waste.
All those BOOKS!
But Wesley has them all.
Okay, he's dead. But the books still can exist.
Oh, god, he's dead. I'd managed to forget that...
I thought it was a crime that the 99 episode previouslies that appeared at the beginning of The Gift weren't on the Season 5 DVD. I know they use little bits of it here and there on the DVD, but that was wonderful, and I'm still terribly disappointed.
I thought that was going to be an easter egg on S7 DVDs. No?
Yeah, but it really was part of the episode
The Gift,
in a way in which none of the other previouslies were.
Oh, god, he's dead. I'd managed to forget that...
Depends on what contract he signed.
Depends on what contract he signed.
Hmm. Doesn't seem the sort to sign without reading -- didn't he commit before finding out there was a post-death clause in existence?
Seriously, he could be dead, but still around.
Angel committed for them, though they all said, "Oh, OK." It could be an interesting legal debate. If they all got the standard contract, then the end of A:tS had interesting ramifications.