AmexRuislip
Retired Spy 🕵️♂️
The plot is laughable nonsense. The writer should be bashed with a baseball bat and thrown over a barrister.
Corrected for you!
The plot is laughable nonsense. The writer should be bashed with a baseball bat and thrown over a barrister.
In the end it showed she was armless...
Did anyone understand that? Would appreciate an explanation!
I think:
R Huntley was not bent but felt obliged to impress/do what Hilton wanted, who plainly was bent.
Also in the bent gang was Rupal, the criminal lawyer and a couple of hoods who wore balaclavas (who protected and used by the educated ones).
Overall a decent series, but R Huntley's pursuant of the simpleton (which was the originating story) and the black fella's lightning fast conversion to the bent gang were the 'let downs' for me. Maybe to draw people in they need something a bit silly to kick it off?
I'm with you there on disliking that Americanism, my fellow fan!
Exactly. Americanisms are okay from Americans but we should avoid them at all costs even when in America (unless there's absolutely no other way of making the natives understand). Over here, definitely not. Don't get me started on people in shops and cafes saying "Can I get ...?" You're British, FFS ...
The posh solicitor is the key to this, he's a bad'un I tells ya.
Thanks for the explanation [emoji106]I think:
R Huntley was not bent but felt obliged to impress/do what Hilton wanted, who plainly was bent.
Also in the bent gang was Rupal, the criminal lawyer and a couple of hoods who wore balaclavas (who protected and used by the educated ones).
Overall a decent series, but R Huntley's pursuant of the simpleton (which was the originating story) and the black fella's lightning fast conversion to the bent gang were the 'let downs' for me. Maybe to draw people in they need something a bit silly to kick it off?
Don't get me started on people in shops and cafes saying "Can I get ...?" You're British, FFS ...
Exactly. Americanisms are okay from Americans but we should avoid them at all costs even when in America (unless there's absolutely no other way of making the natives understand). Over here, definitely not. Don't get me started on people in shops and cafes saying "Can I get ...?" You're British, FFS ...