Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just couldn’t get over Dean getting married at that young an age. Like on 90210, so unrealistic.
Dean made way more sense to me getting married early than Lane. That was crazy!
I actually sort of bought both of them getting married early. Though in Dean's case it seemed natural, and also I thought led to one of the more emotionally complex storylines in GG - and finally, too, led to Rory not being such an angel. In Lane's case it seemed sort of tragic. Zach seemed unworthy and it was so miserable that she had sex once - hated it, but ended up pregnant with twins. What was she being punished for?!
Anonymous wrote:People who really ate like that would not be that slim.
A single mom running a b&b in a small town with no financial help from anyone would not be able to have a designer wardrobe for herself and her teenage daughter.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just couldn’t get over Dean getting married at that young an age. Like on 90210, so unrealistic.
Dean made way more sense to me getting married early than Lane. That was crazy!
Anonymous wrote:I just couldn’t get over Dean getting married at that young an age. Like on 90210, so unrealistic.
!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who really ate like that would not be that slim.
A single mom running a b&b in a small town with no financial help from anyone would not be able to have a designer wardrobe for herself and her teenage daughter.
Did Lorelai only take tuition money from her parents? I just started watching GG recently, no particular reason. Season 1 is like a time capsule.
That's what the show tells us - it's a point of pride for Lorelei. She manages a small town inn... it's not exactly a well paid job.
Anonymous wrote:How did Lorelai afford all their food, their amazing wardrobes and the furniture in her giant house without a college degree and a small town job? Why did every guy fall in love with Rory?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They talk(ed) way too fast. Nobody talks at that rate. its tiring
That’s the Sorkin walk and talk. Not that it shouldn’t annoy you, but it’s not an accident
It’s not a Sorkin show. And on actual Sorkin shows, the characters are usually extremely well-educated professionals in very fast-paced, demanding jobs. So it makes more sense, at least, even if it’s still not very true to life.
They also draw from references that few people, other than TV writers I guess, would get. They’ll reference Bjork, the Bronte sisters, and the Bubble boy in the same breath, and the other person will immediately know exactly what they are talking about. It’s absurd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They talk(ed) way too fast. Nobody talks at that rate. its tiring
That’s the Sorkin walk and talk. Not that it shouldn’t annoy you, but it’s not an accident
It’s not a Sorkin show. And on actual Sorkin shows, the characters are usually extremely well-educated professionals in very fast-paced, demanding jobs. So it makes more sense, at least, even if it’s still not very true to life.
They also draw from references that few people, other than TV writers I guess, would get. They’ll reference Bjork, the Bronte sisters, and the Bubble boy in the same breath, and the other person will immediately know exactly what they are talking about. It’s absurd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rory was the parent to her teenage mom. And when she started to make not-so-smart decisions, it was because she had the mom that she had and the grandparents that she had.
Yeah, I really disliked this show.
And it showed disordered eating. The only way you could stay thin eating all of that is to develop an eating disorder.