No, Bianca. It is that crazy. Midget was the first one in the episode getting some...lots of some.
And yeah, Gulch, I didn't warn her, for the funny factor.
SORRY FOR LETTING THE CAT OUT OF THE BAG
BUT SERIOUSLY
EVEN THOUGH THE SHOW IS SOME WHAT CONFUSING IN THE FIRST EPISODE I HAVE NO DOUBT THE STORY WILL START GETTING MORE TIGHTLY PUT TOGETHER IN FUTURE EPISODES
I want to see Camelot, but I try to focus on one show at a time so I can focus on homework. Since Criminal Minds is winding down this season, Game of Thrones it is, though I'm probably going to record the next few episodes and just watch them marathon style after I'm finished the book/home for the semester 5/6.
No, Bianca. It is that crazy. Midget was the first one in the episode getting some...lots of some.
And yeah, Gulch, I didn't warn her, for the funny factor.
SORRY FOR LETTING THE CAT OUT OF THE BAG
BUT SERIOUSLY
EVEN THOUGH THE SHOW IS SOME WHAT CONFUSING IN THE FIRST EPISODE I HAVE NO DOUBT THE STORY WILL START GETTING MORE TIGHTLY PUT TOGETHER IN FUTURE EPISODES
per almost all the reviews i've read, the pace picks up greatly in episode 2 going forward
I had two missions last summer. One was to watch The Wire because I was tired of admitting I hadn't seen it. The other was to read George R.R. Martin's A Game of Thrones.
The experiences turned out to be surprisingly similar. Both kidnapped me to intimately drawn worlds with stories of a grim conflict and characters so achingly human that you end up rooting, tragically, for both sides. And neither one has dragons in it — at least, not at first. Martin, 62, is as fine a researcher as he is a storyteller, and he packs in enough miserable fact about the meanness of medieval life that it occasionally echoes Baltimore in its harshness.
With HBO's adaptation and Martin's long-awaited fifth book in the A Song of Ice and Fire series about to be published, my endorsement isn't necessary. But I'll still feel compelled, like all those fans of The Wire, to pull you aside and tell you that Tyrion Lannister is the best character in fiction since Stringer Bell and that if you have not read these books, you should be ashamed of yourself.
I had two missions last summer. One was to watch The Wire because I was tired of admitting I hadn't seen it. The other was to read George R.R. Martin's A Game of Thrones.
The experiences turned out to be surprisingly similar. Both kidnapped me to intimately drawn worlds with stories of a grim conflict and characters so achingly human that you end up rooting, tragically, for both sides. And neither one has dragons in it — at least, not at first. Martin, 62, is as fine a researcher as he is a storyteller, and he packs in enough miserable fact about the meanness of medieval life that it occasionally echoes Baltimore in its harshness.
With HBO's adaptation and Martin's long-awaited fifth book in the A Song of Ice and Fire series about to be published, my endorsement isn't necessary. But I'll still feel compelled, like all those fans of The Wire, to pull you aside and tell you that Tyrion Lannister is the best character in fiction since Stringer Bell and that if you have not read these books, you should be ashamed of yourself.
Comments
BUT SERIOUSLY
EVEN THOUGH THE SHOW IS SOME WHAT CONFUSING IN THE FIRST EPISODE
I HAVE NO DOUBT THE STORY WILL START GETTING MORE TIGHTLY PUT TOGETHER IN FUTURE EPISODES
Via: Screen Rant
George R.R. Martin
By JOHN HODGMAN Thursday, Apr. 21, 2011
I had two missions last summer. One was to watch The Wire because I was tired of admitting I hadn't seen it. The other was to read George R.R. Martin's A Game of Thrones.
The experiences turned out to be surprisingly similar. Both kidnapped me to intimately drawn worlds with stories of a grim conflict and characters so achingly human that you end up rooting, tragically, for both sides. And neither one has dragons in it — at least, not at first. Martin, 62, is as fine a researcher as he is a storyteller, and he packs in enough miserable fact about the meanness of medieval life that it occasionally echoes Baltimore in its harshness.
With HBO's adaptation and Martin's long-awaited fifth book in the A Song of Ice and Fire series about to be published, my endorsement isn't necessary. But I'll still feel compelled, like all those fans of The Wire, to pull you aside and tell you that Tyrion Lannister is the best character in fiction since Stringer Bell and that if you have not read these books, you should be ashamed of yourself.