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exatera's Replies
Yes! It was totally unbelievable how precocious Chloe was. I have an 8y.o. niece who is quite bright and my guess is she wouldn't understand anything that girl said and wouldn't be able to relate to how that girl behaved.
Also, people only normally become seriously interested in music (if they do) in their teens, not in childhood. I found this well-rounded little music aficionado bit completely unrealistic.
It wasn't murder, it was an accident.
"The only rape of Celeste that I recall was in the beating that made her decide to leave Perry."
When did this happen?
How is that interesting, exactly? Have you never seen True Detective or American Horror Story or multiple other series with famous actors?
Besides, practically everyone on this show is a well-known actor, and I am not even sure which of the actresses exactly your subject line is referring to because all the three main heroines are quite big in Hollywood.
Was her amnesia mentioned. OR any particular smell. Less snark and more to the point responses, please.
And no, there certainly aren't many men over 6'4" around. Yes, it is a distinctive enough feature not to mistake a 5'11" interior designer for him.
Bump
Well, I am just wondering if it ended the same way in the book - was somebody impinging upon their newfound sisterhood?
You don't condone it, seriously? I fully condone it! That psychopath needed to die!
Bonnie didn't "straight up kill him", she only pushed him away from the women. That he ended up getting killed in the process was an accident.
Even if this is the case, why would they need more people for their dumpster?
He doesn't need them as allies!
All he wants is slave labor, and they aren't going to provide it.
Yes, and what was she providing in return? And back to my initial question - why would Negan spare any of his people in the first place? This deal didn't make any sense.
The Gregory version doesn't work because he never knew the details of their plan.
Dwight didn't betray anybody.
And the Kingdom was constantly providing him with food.
With the Scavengers it looked like a one-sided kind of thing. Jadis seemed to be under the impression that she had a lot of power in that partnership.
Actually, I didn't understand that either. I mean, it was clear they were talking about people, however I don't understand why Negan would even consider giving any of his people to another group. I also don't understand why the Scavengers even need people - there is plenty of the "heapsters" as it is.
Just that whole deal did not make sense to, hence my "Since when does Negan make deals?" thread.
Yeah, I agree that this was hard not to understand.
It's was a progression of events that culminated in this change. First she sensed that something was off in her last encounter with Daryl, and she asked Morgan about what really happened with the Alexandrians. Then that boy from the Kingdom died on her table (courtesy of a Savior). Then Morgan finally told her what actually happened. By that point she was in an entirely different mindset.
You realize the episode aired already, right?
And no, it didn't suck. In fact, I'd go as far as to say it was thoroughly satisfying.
Yes, that's the one.