This show feels like a big waste of time. I appreciate FX for pulling this together, but it's just not working for me.
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This show feels like a big waste of time. I appreciate FX for pulling this together, but it's just not working for me.
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Tallahassee is a durn sight bigger than Duluth and Bmidgi put together... but look how their police force fudged up that there Jameis Winston case.
These cops are downright tootin', I tell ya!
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Man, I think y'all have been ruined by cop shows and movies. Not that this show is going for realism, but I don't see how the police work here can cause any more cognitive dissonance than the hard core detectives you commonly see.
They had two reasons to hold this mild- mannered minister in jail. One was that a low level cop thought he was the same intimidating, threatening man he pulled over a week ago and the other was that he looked a little bit like a grainy picture. His alibi checked out and completely eliminated the first reason.
Molly isn't a Supercop, she's just trying to follow her leads and the ball keeps rolling in the direction of Lester. Odenkirk's character didn't want to look at Lester initially because of the awkward nature of investigating a friend and a victim, and at this point is refusing to look at Lester just to prove a point.
This show is great. The story is compelling, it's hilarious, the acting is fantastic across the board and Malvo is a great villain. I'm enjoying it more than I did True Detective as well.
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He said call anyone in the phone book, so they presumably did. Whatever his agency does to make these identities and back stories, they can obviously make them pretty thorough if he was confident enough to say "call anyone in the phonebook." I also assumed they ran the prints and nothing came back (not because of his agency, just because he wasn't in the database). I don't think that's any less likely than a cop noticing a shadow in a picture or pulling a thread from clothing from a crime scene or any number of things that happen all the time in crime shows.
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Are you thinking the minister is a real person? I think that might be the misunderstanding. Malvo's "character" is completely made up by his agency. He made the phone call before his arrest to put things in motion so that when the cops started asking around, they had the people in place to say, "yes that's the minister." The cops were talking to plants.
We admittedly don't know how they did that, but again, my point isn't that this is completely believable in a real world setting. My point is that this isn't any less believable than stuff we see in True Detective, CSI, Castle, etc.
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^ well, if they followed that protocol, he would be caught and there wouldnt be a show.
Many disasters and tragedies are the result of a sequence of unchecked oversights and incompetency. No matter how improbable or unlikely, they do happen--and that's what you're watching...an almost inconceivable lack of judgment and thoroughness. Not too farfetched considering how easy it is to criticize a process when you know the outcome.
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Why take his fingerprints in Duluth and not run them to see if they match the physical evidence from the St Paul scene where he hauled out the naked guy? There were witnesses - you don't show them a lineup?
I can see Odenkirk being obstinate about Lester's involvement in the Bmidji murders, but they've got plenty to tie Lorne to the Naked Guy murder investigation.

