[S2E1] Coming Home
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Katherine: What's going on What is itEddie: I want to come home. There's nothing I want more. But I promised you no more lies, so there's something I need to tell you. It's not Jon's baby. And I didn't day anything to you because she and I agree that it needs to he Jon's, and I couldn't lie to you. I couldn't ask you to take me back and lie to you.
His words and his actions showed how he was ready to put her first. When he told her how much he wanted to return home, and later on, how much he wanted her to come back home -- how much he plans to be someone worthy of her -- it was believable.
I plan on spending the rest of my life trying to prove to myself that I'm worthy of being your husband, and I can only hope that along the way, maybe I can get you to believe that again too. Katie, please come home.
But there is something about Delilah never being able to do anything without a million people holding her hand that remains bothersome, and this is coming from someone who loves the communal vibe and found family trope to pieces!
While some TV dramas go perfectly with a vat of tea and a chocolate hobnob, and others sit well with a glass of wine, the best accompaniment to The Missing series two might be a flipchart, multi-coloured board markers and a stack of Post-It Notes. Episode one was cluttered with questions to file away and a timeline so convoluted that a homemade diagram was your best hope of keeping up.
Once they get home, Georgia calls Zion and tries to pick a fight. Zion tells her she is only acting like this because she misses the kids. She asks him not to tell the kids she called. He asks her to be a bigger person and he says he will drop the kids off the next day.
Thanks for watching our first episode of the winter series, in the coming days we have a video planned where we look over some of our top 10 moments during the filming so far. As always please subscribe for more and we will see you in the next episode!
And just where is Alex Well, she had a big rush of \"what a feminist icon!\" publicity after speaking out about UBA, which you can tell from all the magazine covers about herself that she has spread out on a table in her home, which seems super normal, not weird at all, no sir. But she's now retreated to Maine. She's been writing her memoir (of course), and she lives in a picturesque house and splits her own wood, which is perhaps the most Cher-Horowitz-ian \"AS IF!\" moment of the episode. In effect, Alex is starring in her own revival of the Diane Keaton classic Baby Boom, minus the baby and the hot veterinarian.
Van der Valk's new season begins with windmills; who doesn't love those, even if a dead woman hangs nearby, scarecrow style, as a bloody cheese slicer is washed. The series cuts to another woman, Juliana Holt (Saskia Neville), on a date with Rita Wyngarden (Liliana de Vries). She returns home to be drowned in her own fish tank. Meanwhile, our titular detective abandoned dating, only to have two women throw themselves at him. He's rescued by a stranger, Lena Linderman (Loes Haverkort), who he then goes home with.
Cloovers identifies the quote from 1677's Ethics by Baruch Spinoza. VdV heads to the Spinoza statue Holt walked by on the way to her date; dredging brings up her body from the canal, an X on its back. There's another note: \"Tick Tock. Who owns this city The fire stealer.\" Holt's home has circus music playing when VdV and Hassel check it out. VdV turns it off, which reveals \"EXILE BETRAYAL\" with a red X on the wall. Django catches on to VdV's surveillance of their commune and turns cameras on them before kissing Clara.
Richard Armitage (North and South) and Charlie Murphy (Peaky Blinders) star in Netflix's upcoming thriller Obsession, a racy tale of sex, betrayal, and, yes, you guessed it -- dangerous obsession.
With Spring 2023's lineup of British series airing on Sunday continuing through April, here's a rundown of everything coming to PBS Passport from the new Tom Jones to a whole lot more imports from Walter's Choice.
[Jill] When designing the kitchen, they went for a homey, collected look, with a combination of painted and stained cabinets, spaces for their China, cookbooks, cookie cutters and pots and pans. The tiles behind the stove were found in Ohio and Pennsylvania. The Warrens also enlarged the window above the sink to bring in more light. This is definitely a working kitchen but also orderly and inviting.
On September 26, 2010, LaRod Stephens-Howling - nicknamed \"The Hyphen\" - was about to kick-start the Cardinals in their home opener. Little did he know that his explosive play would lay the foundation for a future home.
On September 26, 2010, LaRod Stephens-Howling - nicknamed \\\"The Hyphen\\\" - was about to kick-start the Cardinals in their home opener. Little did he know that his explosive play would lay the foundation for a future home. 59ce067264