Francis’ romantic rival, Conde, needs to back off on the
love proclamations. Not only is he jeopardizing Mary’s reputation by his
continued flirtation with her, he is also taking advantage of her
vulnerability to do so. He feigned sadness over Frary’s recent troubles and
still continues to pursue her, rendering his protest a falsehood. The
Conde/Mary connection is heavily reminiscent of hers and Bash’s. Why she could
let go of him and not Conde is a strange query.
Despite some major dramas in the past, her yearning for Francis has always superseded any interest she’s had in other suitors. Why not now? Given the fragile state of the Frary union, one would think that Catherine would’ve stepped in by now. While it’s understandable she’s been sidetracked by her poisoning, the meddlesome mom should be sensing something is amiss with her favorite son’s marriage. At this point, a heart to heart talk between the two queens is a must.
Despite some major dramas in the past, her yearning for Francis has always superseded any interest she’s had in other suitors. Why not now? Given the fragile state of the Frary union, one would think that Catherine would’ve stepped in by now. While it’s understandable she’s been sidetracked by her poisoning, the meddlesome mom should be sensing something is amiss with her favorite son’s marriage. At this point, a heart to heart talk between the two queens is a must.
In an unexpected and humorous twist, Greer became an
incidental Madame. Whether she embraces this role as a possible route back to
court should be interesting. The one glaring omission in all of this, were the whereabouts
of Castleroy. Shouldn’t they be leaning on each other now? We don’t even know
how he feels in the aftermath of his entire life being upended. Plus, Greer
shouldn’t be running around all by her lonesome. She is a married woman and one
would think it’d invite further scandal on her name to be cavorting around alone.
One can hope a Greer/Castleroy reunion is not far off.
The Blacklist | “Ruslan Denisov” was one of the most convoluted and hard to follow episodes of the series. After making some headway with the overarching storyline in the two-part Super Bowl special, any progress made into the mystery of the Liz/Red connection and the fulcrum was relegated to the back burner. Lately, "The Blacklist" seems to have become too consumed in its procedural component.
Taking down the bad guy of the week has its appeal but what made season 1 so compelling was that it all took a back seat to the character driven stories surrounding Red, Liz, Tom and fellow team members. This episode felt like “Captain Planet” on steroids and not in a good way. Red is starting to give off the vibe that he’s a fringe political radical as opposed to a government rogue. Something about it rings hollow to the character audiences were introduced to last season.
The Blacklist | “Ruslan Denisov” was one of the most convoluted and hard to follow episodes of the series. After making some headway with the overarching storyline in the two-part Super Bowl special, any progress made into the mystery of the Liz/Red connection and the fulcrum was relegated to the back burner. Lately, "The Blacklist" seems to have become too consumed in its procedural component.
Taking down the bad guy of the week has its appeal but what made season 1 so compelling was that it all took a back seat to the character driven stories surrounding Red, Liz, Tom and fellow team members. This episode felt like “Captain Planet” on steroids and not in a good way. Red is starting to give off the vibe that he’s a fringe political radical as opposed to a government rogue. Something about it rings hollow to the character audiences were introduced to last season.
The Vampire Diaries |
Full disclosure, I could’ve watched last week’s episode and chose not too after
getting spoiled online about the fate of Mama Forbes. All interest in seeing
the episode was subsequently vanquished. Why TVD? Why? What purpose does this
storyline serve? Are TPTB satisfied now that 99% of the show’s characters are
orphans?
Instead of killing off the latest super villain nuisance (Kai) or pointless hanger-on (Enzo), the show has went above and beyond to kill off every character’s parental unit. It’s revolting. Calling it now, Liv’s dad will be the next and last to go, for a while. Have never been more tempted to stop watching this show.
Instead of killing off the latest super villain nuisance (Kai) or pointless hanger-on (Enzo), the show has went above and beyond to kill off every character’s parental unit. It’s revolting. Calling it now, Liv’s dad will be the next and last to go, for a while. Have never been more tempted to stop watching this show.
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