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AMC: Friday, 7/2/10


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I'm loving this new Angie storyline, except why the hell do they have to somehow indirectly make it all David's fault that Angie is going blind??? Ugh.

I'm getting tired of this Damon/Colby crap... It was going well with the Liza spice, but its getting boring and tired.

Man, I miss the Annie/JR/Scott/Marissa storyline. That MCE kills me with her awesomeness!

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Interesting... anyone else notice the map behind Jesse in the police station? Llanview really is close to Pine Valley!!! And if you're going to make a fake map, you might as well put the ocean/big salty body of water that Pine Valley sits around...

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I don't agree with Angie and Jake keeping David in the dark (pun intended) about Angie's condition. Regardless of how she feels about him, he is still her boss, and as an employee, it's her duty to tell her boss that she isn't as fit to perform her job as she was before. And Jake really needs to get the heck out of there. None of his business at all.

She's poised to become the next Erica. Greenlee has ultimately failed at that.

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:lol:

This one's going out to Colby and Marissa:

"♫I'm mad he don't call me anymore. We don't even kiss. Am I his fool? What must I do to keep him loving me? All this love I give. That. Ain't. Cool. I got whatchoo want, got whatchoo need. Lemme git another shot, this time I'll make it hot...♫"

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yeah at this point I think Annie makes for a more entertaining bitch. Greenlee is just mean and spiteful but Annie is fun and refreshing. I laugh and get pure enjoyment out of her schemes and bitchiness but Greenlee just comes across too nasty and hard to get behind

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And forget David, Angie's not the type to potentially put a patient in danger by not being able to see (let alone accidentally exposing someone to her own infectious blood?). She's in quite the predicament.

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WTF was that Windows Movie Maker transition from Tad punching Paul to landing in jail? That sh-t looked like a fan edit not something from a television show. Very sloppily done. They couldnt have had Tad punch him back at the Martin home and then the next segment we see Tad arrested?

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I think they wanted to have Brot nearby, so they had it happen in a public setting.

Really, they should have ended that scene with Paul screaming at Brot to arrest Tad (or better yet, Brot just doing it without having to be told). They could have picked up with it on Monday.

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The show has been doing stupid stuff like that and they need to stop. Just like that scene when Madison helped Erica get dressed to break out of the hospital. It was all sped up with this poppy music played over it. Just tell the story.

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I rmemebr that and it was odd to say the least. It makes the show look so cheap and it shouldnt considering its now in HD. I think Kreizman needs to be told that he doesnt have to work as if he's on GL's budget over here

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    • 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.
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    • @NothinButAttitude thanks for sharing the rough draft. I had bought "Shadows on the Wall" from Kathryn Leigh Scott's website probably 20+ years ago. It's a fascinating read into a very different version of what the show could have been. 
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