You always think harder is better. Maybe next time I patrol, I should carry bricks and use a stake made out of butter.

Buffy ,'The Killer In Me'


Boxed Set, Vol. 1: Smallville, Due South, Farscape  

A topic for the discussion of Farscape, Smallville, and Due South. Beware possible invasions of Stargate, Highlander, or pretty much anything else that captures our fancy. Expect Adult Content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.


§ ita § - Nov 20, 2003 5:26:13 am PST #2252 of 10000
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Seth is the mack fucking daddy. Mmrrrowr.

I'd really hope we get to see some of him explaining it to Ryan.


tina f. - Nov 20, 2003 5:29:20 am PST #2253 of 10000

But amych! Lana realized Clark is too dangerous! Surely we'll just see her pass by him in the halls and they might mention her once or twice but they won't be a couple and there is no way the meaningful last scene of every episode will be Lana coming to the barn and telling Clark that she just wants him to open up and trust her. Right??

Mmmm. I do love this dry Egyptian heat.


tina f. - Nov 20, 2003 5:41:23 am PST #2254 of 10000

Seth is the mack fucking daddy. Mmrrrowr.

And in an argyle sweater vest. Adorable.

Hottest makeout scene so far? My vote goes to Seth and Summer in the poolhouse.

When Summer caught Sandy in the poolhouse and freaked out? My love for her grew a million times. They must make her a regular.


smonster - Nov 20, 2003 5:44:46 am PST #2255 of 10000
We won’t stop until everyone is gay.

Seth is the mack fucking daddy. Mmrrrowr.

Yes, yes he is. He is also the daddy mack.

The thing is, with him it also ties in to his insecurities. He can't believe that one girl would like him, so when there are TWO, he doesn't know how to decide between them. And doesn't want to miss out on the opportunity to mack, since he doesn't know when it'll happen again.

Or I could just be projecting.


Jessica - Nov 20, 2003 5:51:16 am PST #2256 of 10000
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

Did anyone else see a difference in Marissa this ep?

The Orange Sweater of Self-Actualization! Still not too bright, though.


Madrigal Costello - Nov 20, 2003 6:46:09 am PST #2257 of 10000
It's a remora, dimwit.

I liked that this episode put Clark in a position where he couldn't just figure some perfectly right solution. He could have helped get Lex hospitalized immediately, but that might be a bad decision because Lionel could have something planned. Yet keeping him hidden isn't such a good idea because he's unpredictable and scares horses. And now he has to pretend that Lex hallucinated the thing he did with the car, because admitting that Lex isn't entirely loopy about that would mean revealing his secret. Clark got to be selfish and self-preserving.

Previously it sounded like Julian died of SIDS or the like. It might have been some accident, like a young Lex putting a teddy bear in the crib that ended up smothering the baby, or it could just be that he didn't notice the baby had been quiet too long until it was too late. I do think regardless of whether it was Lex's fault, Lionel let Lex blame himself, and probably subtly encouraged it.


Lyra Jane - Nov 20, 2003 6:58:13 am PST #2258 of 10000
Up with the sun

And now he has to pretend that Lex hallucinated the thing he did with the car

More than that -- he has to pretend Lex hallucinated his presence all together. IIRC, there was no earlier time when he could have just left that would have made sense; if he was there at all, he would have had to stay until the doctor & Lionel showed up.

but it is a great position to put Clark in, for the angst.

It might have been some accident, like a young Lex putting a teddy bear in the crib that ended up smothering the baby, or it could just be that he didn't notice the baby had been quiet too long until it was too late.

Do you think? It almost sounded like it was more Lex's responsibility than that, like if he was supposed to give the baby a bath and he drowned, or if he dropped the baby and Julian hit his head on something. Which are still not a 10-year-old's fault, but I can see it being a huge guilt trip, especially with (yes) daddy subtly encouraging it.


Cass - Nov 20, 2003 7:01:40 am PST #2259 of 10000
Bob's learned to live with tragedy, but he knows that this tragedy is one that won't ever leave him or get better.

"Lana's Parents Are Dead"
What???!!??!

Did we know this?


Anne W. - Nov 20, 2003 7:08:58 am PST #2260 of 10000
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

From the TWOP recaplet:

Lana tries to help and gets trampled by a horse (the horse will forevermore be known by show fans as "The Savior"),


Madrigal Costello - Nov 20, 2003 7:12:51 am PST #2261 of 10000
It's a remora, dimwit.

With the Luthors being as wealthy as they were, odds were each son would have his own nanny, so I doubt Lex would have had to care for the baby. But I could see him volunteering to do something, or trying to help and making a mistake. That might make it even worse - it wasn't that he had to care for the baby and was unable to, but he chose to jump in and caused a disaster.