I never considered the implications of Moriarty's Irish accent... Maybe I'm too used to seeing characters of Celtic extraction who are violent and treacherous. And whoops, Moriarty's alias was"Jim." I have no idea why I thought it was "Iain", except that one's my dad's name and the other my uncle's name. Now I feel bad for not even remembering the names of the marginalized characters.
My pet peeve was the treatment of Mrs. Hudson. I'm desperately hoping that she'll move away from the role of mother/servant/buffoon, and turn out to be a master criminal. I can dream...
the 'ha ha we seem gay but WE AREN'T WE AREN'T WE AREN'T' got old very quickly.
Yes, yes, YES. Ugh, it was funny the first time. After that it just seemed homophobic. Like the notion of gayness is only brought into the script as an awkward joke or as a kind of "Surprise!" moment.
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I never considered the implications of Moriarty's Irish accent... Maybe I'm too used to seeing characters of Celtic extraction who are violent and treacherous. And whoops, Moriarty's alias was"Jim." I have no idea why I thought it was "Iain", except that one's my dad's name and the other my uncle's name. Now I feel bad for not even remembering the names of the marginalized characters.
My pet peeve was the treatment of Mrs. Hudson. I'm desperately hoping that she'll move away from the role of mother/servant/buffoon, and turn out to be a master criminal. I can dream...
the 'ha ha we seem gay but WE AREN'T WE AREN'T WE AREN'T' got old very quickly.
Yes, yes, YES. Ugh, it was funny the first time. After that it just seemed homophobic. Like the notion of gayness is only brought into the script as an awkward joke or as a kind of "Surprise!" moment.