How I Met Your Father: Season 1/Episode 10 “Timing is Everything” [Finale] – Recap/Review (with Spoilers)
Everyone is forced to reconsider their relationships in this episode, and Ellen tries to bond with a stray cat.
Everyone is forced to reconsider their relationships in this episode, and Ellen tries to bond with a stray cat.
Sophie breaks up with Drew, while Jesse visits his ex for answers, and Charlie tries to get everyone to watch soccer together.
Sophie pretends to be sophisticated at her thirtieth birthday party, Jesse and Ellen bond, and Charlie and Valentina figure out their relationship status.
Sophie, still hung up on Ian, struggles to live in the moment with Jesse, and Charlie tries to make new friends.
Sophie sits down in 2050 to tell her son the story of how she met his father, which starts with a Tinder date in 2022.
“One Day At A Time” returns on a new network and, well it comes back with a whimper more than a roar.
With a change in one-half of the shows, and no crossing over, is the newest entry of Live In Front Of A Studio Audience as good as the first?
Merry Happy Whatever is an ode to those who hate their in-laws and how their spouse changes when around them.
Toxic Masculinity and consent are taken on, and while the episode is too short to address the problem fully, it hits the topics as hard as they can to make it count.
In the season finale, we get a strong reason to wonder will they or won’t they when it comes to the fate of Lydia.
As Elena and Alex’s homecoming dance comes around, Max reveals something which could mess up his relationship with Penelope.
As Lydia and Penelope DTR their respective relationships, Elena finds out Alex’s devastating secret.
In a rather uneventful episode, without any serious hot topic, the importance of work and communication is focus.
Penelope is growing tired of being some kind of supermom and superwoman, leading to her doing something which shocks the family a little bit.
What begins with addressing Alex going through puberty, and the attitude which comes with that, becomes a conversation on racism and colorism.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.
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