Newsroom's debut was a big letdown for me. Maybe I'm over the revisionist look at news? Or maybe the drama between the staff just hasn't ramped up again yet.
Burn Notice- I don't know where the hell the writers were going with this episode. Michael's trip down memory lane seemed like a waste of time, and a long journey just to infiltrate the group... and out of all the questions he was asked, "Jimmy" didn't think to ask him the most important one: Are you going to betray me? Good grief! After all of this, I'll be disappointed if they don't reveal that Papa Weston is alive and well, and the one behind the burn notice.
Orange is the new Black- even given the decided lack of fem on fem nekkid-ness that tantalized me in the 1st eps, Ive been enjoying this series. the lead is a wasp who has to do 15 months for her role in an ex's drug smuggling endeavor years ago, and her experiences in a fed womens facility. typical shell-shocked woman meets crazy-ass felons equalling massive hilarity follows..........altho the lead character "Pipes" is *quite* the lily white, lost lil girl (so much so that it almost gets annoying when u see that even as far as Eps #7 she still hasnt learned to be mindful of wat comes out of her mouth.)
Tazer
Originally posted by Andrew NDB
Geoff Johns should have a 10 mile restraining order from comic books, let alone films.
Burn Notice- I don't know where the hell the writers were going with this episode. Michael's trip down memory lane seemed like a waste of time, and a long journey just to infiltrate the group... and out of all the questions he was asked, "Jimmy" didn't think to ask him the most important one: Are you going to betray me? Good grief! After all of this, I'll be disappointed if they don't reveal that Papa Weston is alive and well, and the one behind the burn notice.
Au contraire, mon frere! I actually really dug the episode. It was an interesting look into what makes Michael tick (Props for the return of Dead Larry) and I thought that the lengths this James guy went to were extreme, but also necessary. People who've employed Michael before haven't done as much and look at what happened to them (Carla, Vaughn, Anson, Card). This is supposed to be the end run, so setting apart James so as to make sure he thinks he knows who he's dealing with is all they can really do before the inevitable take-down. That said, I'm interested to see where the story goes from here, seeing as how now that Michael's officially in, he now has to figure out a way to bring the whole damn network down.
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