fuheel
Well-known member
Is anyone else embarrassed for the chick in the intro that messes up "mailchimp"?
think I read somewhere that she is 13, but it still pretty bad.
Is anyone else embarrassed for the chick in the intro that messes up "mailchimp"?
Is anyone else embarrassed for the chick in the intro that messes up "mailchimp"?
think I read somewhere that she is 13, but it still pretty bad.
Ah okay. Kind of mean that they included it.
This week's episode was the first one I found kinda meh. Just more high school kids being unreliable.
This a theory more than a spoiler......
I dont think Adnam went to track practice. The only people who say he did are Jay and Adnam. Not showing up to practice gives him a lot more leeway in committing the murder and makes the cell calls more consistent evidence. Also, it snowed out practice the next two days which makes less likely that the coach remembers him missing the practice. It also gives them time to seek out the drug dealer. I think she was killed right before Adnam and Jay went to Cathy's
I will say, Jay's apology to the judge prior to sentencing indeed sounded sincere to my ears. I don't know, man, I don't know. Jay has to be involved one way or the other, because otherwise he would have no reason to tell that story to the cops -- in other words, I don't think it was a random serial killer.
See, I thought it sounded completely fake. I also thought that detective they hired sounded like a doofus. But I agree with pretty much with Deaclaw and ITK -- they were both in it, Jay got the deal, Adnan got the time. Had Adnan said anything about Jay, like that he could have been acting alone as the real killer and is framing him? I forget, but it seems odd to me if he hasn't since that was implied at his trial by the defense.
I sort of get why Adnan keeps saying he doesn't want people to think he's innocent because he's a nice guy, and wants them to look at the (lack of) evidence and how the trial went down, but to me that seems like a convenient way for him to get out of it in a disconnected way -- sort of allows him to straddle some line of justifiably saying how it was a weak case and he shouldn't have been convicted, while not being able to be convincing of his innocence. I don't know if that makes any sense.