Jump to content

AMC: Wednesday, 5/26/10


Recommended Posts

  • Members

I looked it up - the guy's name was Rob.

So this was after she was involved with David. During a transition time when they had Tad and Krystal explore dating outside of their relationship/situation. Krystal found Rob and Tad would see them on dates (random) or at family gatherings (I believe Thanksgiving/Christmas)...Tad was a bit jealous and had to get over it. This is when he started dating Liza (before Damon)...then Krystal/Rob broke up bc of their failed sexcapades, and then Tad/Liza broke up bc of Damon. Now they are back to Square One.

Rob was not really a main character at all, barely ever said anything. I would say recurring (average once a week).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 48
  • Created
  • Last Reply
  • Members

Yeah, that's another hang-up of David Kreizman's; he can't keep characters' ages straight for [!@#$%^&*]. I think Lizzie Spaulding, in particular, turned 18 three years in a row. And Harley Cooper's daughter, Susan/Daisy Lemay? She actually returned from boarding school younger than she was when she went in!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

It was the dullest episode this week, but I still enjoyed most of it.

Liza's schemes against Damon are getting a little old, but what would you expect from her? It also harkens back to Phoebe and Palmer plotting to keep their loved ones away from an unsuitable partner (Chuck from Donna, Brooke from anyone other than Tom, Nina from Cliff, etc.).

It looks like Krystal is planning to run her restaurant instead of work at Jack's office. If it means she's seen more as a waitress and less as a main character, I'm all for it!

I'm not sure why Marissa was eavesdropping on JR et al. I hope it means she'll leak the real story to the press soon and finally develop more of a character. The expression on Annie's face at the end when she knew JR saw her kissing Scott was priceless!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

YAY! We get to now watch Krystal wipe down the counter and fill up salt & pepper shakers!

I hope she does as good of a job as Mateo did when he spent every scene in SOS chopping limes behind the bar!

Don't get me wrong. I hated the random ass name "BJ's" for a restaurant, but "Krystal's?" Is she really that important of a character on this show to have an establishment named after her?

It looks as if I'm due for yet another summer break from this show.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I'm starting to see the similarities between DK's GL and this show....

Liza=Alan Spaulding

Tad/Kyrstal/Jake/Amanda=The Coopers

Most notably the latter, but then again the propping of those four as some sort of new heart and soul of the show isn't new, but it's more apparent now than it was before.

On the other hand, I'm finding the drama that's unfolding in the Chandler mansion more entertaining with each day they're on. I wasn't at first, but I'm genuinely torn as to whether Annie should be with J.R. or Scott. That's something I didn't expect to happen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Ok first Hiya guys. Finally the mods gave me permission to post. I've been lurking. Cheap21 FLOVE your siggywub.gif Would be glad to help w/ the epi. caps when I can.biggrin.gif

Kwak changing BJ's to Krystal's I srsly have an issue w/ it, love Bobby but IDK what they are doing w/ her character.

Damon finally showed a softer side even though I still don't believe he deserves Colby.

Jamanda is sickening, RPG grosses me out, he's funny but he grosses me out. And I swear if they were in one more scene my screen would have been cracked. Spread your love elsewhere.

JR and Annie, I swear I watch for you. Scott you're an idiot, you can't see she's using you?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

It's hard for me to imagine crazy ass Annie in an honest to goodness relationship at all. Her and Scott, poor Scott'll be going, "Ohhh that Annie :rolleyes: ..." for the rest of his life, and her and J.R., that seems like too neurotic and dysfunctional of a couple. I can see her dating, having short-term relationships with various men, but she's so nuts that it's hard for me to buy her being in true love and not nutso infatuation. Of course this could all be fixed if they tweaked the character a bit. Now, everything comes across so frenzied with her it's sometimes hard to tell what's real and what's :wacko: .

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Listen, it's all Scott can do not to get lost on his way back from the bathroom. Asking him to see through Annie's Maybelline-glossed self is like asking for a miracle.

Welcome to the cage club, Clear Drama! :-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Cage club? is Ryan suppose to pop out? let me stop? Thnxs.

I mean he explained it perfectly the press would have kept diggin' and JR's reputation would have been shot...Annie threw Scott under the bus to protect JR, she didn't know if that lie would have saved him, but she used Scott's name in JR's place to protect him.laugh.gif

C21, me too. I can't keep straight faced too much.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Jamanda is a wee bit sickening but soaps are so lacking in genuine romance and love in the afternoon that I can't help but find them...refreshing? They're pretty (well Amanda is) and happy and that works.

JR just annoys me. I find myself liking Scott/Annie (Scannie?)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

She isn't... but Frons seems to think that she is the AMC matriarch-in-waiting.

Honestly, and no ill-will to Bobbie Eakes intended because she was great as Macy on B&B, but whoever said they want KWAK to have an exit SL, I am right there with you. I'd rather have the restaurant re-christened "Blow Jobs" than this self-righteous, play-the-victim scammer name it after herself.

Gah, Jamanda are such crushing bores. Jake looks like he hasn't showered in a long, stinky while. As far as chemistry and heat are concerned, the only place I am seeing that is any scene which happens to involve JR and Annie. Yowza. Melissa Clare Egan really is AMC's MVP.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



  • Recent Posts

    • Last installment of 76 Felicia is horrified to arrive in Rosehill and discover that Charles has been in a coma since the night she left. She spends every moment at his bedside and, learning that a friend had a promise to God produce favorable results in a similar crisis, vows to give Eddie up forever in exchange for Charles’s recovery. Shortly after her prayer Felicia is told that Charles has rallied and has regained consciousness. Felicia now is determined to avoid Eddie and honor her promise. Bruce explains to Lynn that he must contact her parents or he and Van could be legally charged for allowing a minor child to live with them without parental consent. Bruce doubts Lynn’s assurance that her parents could care less, and is shocked when he discovers for himself that Lynn’s mother is as unfeeling as the girl has claimed. He informs a delighted Lynn that he plans to become her legal guardian.
    • I think that worked, but not as much by the late '80s, where I think they started getting things wrong with Mack.  I do respect Kevin Dobson, who did well when he was given the material he deserved (like the story with Jason).
    • 1976 Pt 2 The Organization has retained Michael Selby to represent their hit men. The district attorney recognizes his opponent as a noted courtroom specialist and knows he has his work cut out for him. Raising technicality after technicality, Selby quickly eliminates Lieutenant Price’s testimony implicating Bailey and Jerry’s testimony about Heather’s being assaulted. ‘Then, after cutting Julian’s testimony out as common knowledge, Selby goes straight to the heart of the  prosecution’s case. He demands that Carrie be produced now, sure that she’s been taken by the Organization. To Selby’s horror and shock, the doors open and Carrie walks in, and the courtroom explodes into pandemonium. As soon as the judge can restore order, Carrie is sworn in and begins her testimony. When court recesses for the day, Steve is confronted by another Organization man, Franklin, who questions him about why he took Carrie away. Steve tells him that Carrie was so frightened by the hit man lurking around that he saw his opportunity to be alone with her and “score.” Steve then adds that she wasn’t at all cooperative or friendly—she just cried all the  time—so he dumped her. He insists he has no idea how the police got her after that. Franklin accepts his story, and Steve learns that his next test is to testify to just what he’s told Franklin, omitting, of course, the reference to the hit man. Carrie insists upon a meeting with Steve and begs him not to go underground. He tells her he can’t back out now; you can’t go through life letting somebody  else do it all the time. Steve takes this opportunity to inform Lieutenant Price that he has to dump on Carrie on the witness stand for the Organization, but he can’t stop now. Julian, irate that Selby has blocked any reference to Nurse Fellowes’s disappearance and murder, as she was the only witness who could corroborate Carrie’s testimony, confronts Selby on this evasion. Selby | coldly tells Julian that there is no concrete connection between the nurses’ death and anything else that’s happened in this case and that to bring it into this trial would be a miscarriage of law. Julian, realizing  that it all falls on Carrie’s shoulders now, warns her that Selby will be out for blood; he has to make the court believe she’s lying.  The next day the district attorney introduces Carrie’s tape recorder. The tape, burned, as is the recorder, is barely audible. Selby calls for a mistrial, claiming that his clients’ reputations have been damaged enough. As the judge calls a recess: to consider the motion before the bench, the district attorney admits that he predicted everything Selby would do to this point, but had not guessed about this motion. If it works and there’s a new trial, Carrie is in far greater danger.  Steve now tells Castor that either he’s working for  the Organization as of now or he’s going to look elsewhere for a job. Castor offers the rainy weather as an excuse to wait before contacting “him,” because “the iron in him’Il be driving him crazy.” Realizing that this is a lead, Steve starts to write it down. When he is nearly caught, he warns himself that from now on  everything he learns will have to be kept in his head.  As soon as possible, he passes the “iron” clue along to Julian. The district attorney gains a respite when the judge  turns down the mistrial motion, but the tape has been disallowed also, ruled inadmissible. So it’s Selby’s turn to cross-examine Carrie. When he forces her to admit that she never actually saw the hit man, Selby turns to the jury and informs them that this proves she’s been lying. He then suggests this has all been a plot to boost the circulation of the newspaper she works for. Selby then goes to work on Carrie’s personal morals. Since she’s admitted that she and Steve spent three days in the apartment, alone together, he asks questions and makes insinuations designed to make the jury believe this was actually a sleazy affair. To Carrie’s horror, he then calls the landlady, Mrs. Wilson who testifies that that Steve and Carrie,registered as Mr. and Mrs. Clark, spent the three days in question drinking and partying with loud music and assorted other sounds coming from their rooms until late each night. Carrie rises to her feet and screams at Mrs. Wilson, ““You’re lying!” Steve is served with a subpena.  Joe Castor visits “the man”: Fred Harrington! Castor gives Harrington his report on Steve. He thinks Steve, with his computerlike mind, could be invaluable in helping the Organization work out money-exchange problems. Harrington tells Castor he wants the trial over as soon as possible, no matter how it goes. Those men are expendable; he has a bigger problem: Julian.
    • Given the weird fantasies/out of town barn trips she does for Reva/Kyle, I can't see it either. (Not to mention Kyle's obsessive talking to paintings, or Billy's nightmares.)
    • She would be great, but I of course am thinking of her in What's Love Got to Do with It.
    • Agreed that they had a home in the present tense of the first set of episodes.  But I was wondering if they lived in the mansion in the past when Sophia disappeared, and moved out when Santana got pregnant?  Or even when Danny was born.
    • According to the French Santa Barbara site the Andrades had a house in the early episodes.  I thought I remembered scenes in their home. The Andrade house
    • I always wondered if the Andrades lived at the Capwell Mansion?  Certainly they could've had a living room in their space or wherever they went on days off. But, I felt like it was never clear whether Santana visited Rosa when Kelly and Eden were young, or if she actually lived in the servant's quarters (one hopes modern developers have found a euphemism for that space).  I always imagined that Rosa, Santana, and Reuben lived with CC up until Channing was murdered, and then they found their own place because the kids were mostly over 18 (and Santana was pregnant). I like the idea of Rueban and CC being close until Santana got pregnant.  And then Reuben would've hated the adoption of Brandon.  Which would have meant he hated CC, and would've only continued to work for him to try to get info on whatever happened to his grandson. With regard Ava Lazar, having recently rewatched the pilot for the millionth time, I find her captivating to watch, but her line delivery is so dull. She looks amazing, and I just want her to be more quick witted.
    • I liked the original 4 family set up.  The families were all different from each other and were intertwined.  They should have been given equal airtime. I felt that Lockridges were perfectly cast with the exception of Laken.  She should have been quickly recast.   I liked all 4 of the actors cast as the Andrades and wish they would have been given better writing.  I really thought Ava Lazar (Santana) would have been one of the breakout stars if she had not been replaced. My only issue with the casting of the Perkins family was Robert Alan Browne as John and as much as I liked Mark Arnold he was the wrong actor to recast Joe Perkins. And of course it was ridiculous how badly they screwed up the casting of CC. The other Capwells were well cast.
    • This late 1976 stuff doesn't sound as bad as it has in other versions I've read (weekly recaps from Jon-Michael Reed and SOD synopses). I am surprised that there is a variation of Ian - Meg - Arlene - Tom playing out this late in the game, but it doesn't sound half bad. Ian's involvement with Beaver Ridge and how it impacts Rick and Cal's future also intrigued me  more than I expected. Even the Carrie - Betsy connection having Carrie watch Suzanne while Ben is visiting was a nice surprise. I feel like this all falls apart pretty quickly with the arrival of Mia Marriott, Michael Blake, and a slew of other half baked characters under Upton.  
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy