Oh, I never doubted it was out there, just that there’s enough for his knowledge to be vast…
Your knowledge is strongly vaginal.
No comment.
Johnson.
Ha, Maude! But, I don’t know- he sure knew a lot about those pants Eddie Izzard was wearing in Circle…
I have no response for that statement
oh, thank the gods, it’s a quote. I was afraid there for a bit
Lauren has accepted that she’ll never be “normal”, and her old life is over. She’s accepted her destiny to raise and protect her baby sister, and she’s gone.
I imagine the necklace symbolizes that she has cut her ties to her normal past life. Of course, it would have been nice if they had alluded to the necklace in the episode at all prior to this point. It just came out of nowhere, so that’s just stupid.
Did you miss LebowskyFrak?
But those were some fabulous pants. S&M buckles notwithstanding.
I hereby declare that DBT’s new name is Cliff. As in the notes.
I tend to think they made them even more fabulous.
nope, but virgin that I was at the time, I was a bit overwhelmed
and yes, I know–I keep dishing 'em out
Oh, I see. It’s one of those quotes that, if you haven’t seen the actual movie, you may think I’m an absolute creep. (Ok, “more so than usual”. There. Happy, Apolly?)
It’s like when I said to some people earlier that I “jizzed my pants”.
When I get my own procedural show on TNT, it’ll be called The Summarizer.
They did. Derek told her to hide it under her clothes. I can’t find it- still looking.
My sig is going to look like it’s written by Tolstoy.
I loved the pants, too. I was just supplying evidence that his knowledge is not completely vaginal
Aw, hon, I don’t think you’re a creep!
That’s a safe bet.
<literary criticism>
But the vestigial token they script used to symbolize the innocent times gone by, it was the birdhouse. And the birdhouse gets no play at all in the second half of the show. And all of a sudden, at the end of the show, the dramatic act of giving up her past is to relinquish the necklace. It’s just not the tightest writing I’ve seen.
</literary criticism>