Saturday, January 31, 2015

Bobbi Kristina Brown Found Unconscious in Bathtub, Recovering: Report



Bobbi Kristina Brown is now recovering after reportedly being found unconscious in her home bathtub, TMZ reports. The daughter of the late Whitney Houston and Bobby Brown was first found by her husband Nick Gordon and a friend.

PHOTOS: Celebrity health scares

Police in Roswell, Ga., tell TMZ that Gordon used CPR on Brown, 21, before police and paramedics arrived. She was taken to a hospital and is now breathing and stabilized. No further details were given.

PHOTOS: Whitney's life

The incident is quite unsettling, as Brown's famous mom, after years of drug abuse, was found dead in her bathtub at the Beverly Hills Hotel back in February 2012. Houston passed away at 48, and according to the L.A. Times, there were "no signs of foul play."

PHOTOS: Celebrity moms and daughters

Brown's health scare also comes just weeks after Houston's Lifetime biopic premiered on Jan. 17.

Story still developing

Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-news/news/bobbi-kristina-brown-found-unconscious-in-bathtub-recovering-report-2015311



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The Only "Low-Life Scum" in the McCain Hearing Was Henry Kissinger



"Arrest Henry Kissinger for war crimes!"

The strained, sing-songy chant that sent Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) into a twitching fit of rage Thursday afternoon had died out by the time security escorted one last graying activist from the hearing room. For McCain, though, the quarrel never ends.

This was no ordinary disruption, and the man seated before the panel, former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, was no ordinary guest. All of which goes to explain McCain's jarring choice of words when he finally, and now infamously, called the departing disruptors "low-life scum."

Source:YouTube

May we use a junkyard simile? (We think we can). If McCain was the pitbull in this setting, then Kissinger was the decaying clapboard chop shop he was intent on defending. The intruders, in their defiance, were mauled for having attempted to carry out a "citizen's arrest" of the 91-year-old Nobel Prize winner for atrocities committed by the U.S. governmentduring the 1970s in countries including Vietnam, Laos, East Timor and Chile.

The senator's resulting outburst, in all its wild-eyed wonder, had the unfortunate effect of overshadowing the substance of the their charges: namely, that the bloated figure wheeled out before them had, in the course of an eight-year run as the chief U.S. foreign policy strategist, masterminded a series of violent overt and covert campaigns against civilians and democratic governments across Southeast Asia and Latin America.

Kissinger spent a little more than two of those years beginning officially on Jan. 20, 1969, and ending on that same date in 1977 serving concurrently as secretary of state and national security advisor to President Richard "d**k" Nixon and, after his resignation, Gerald Ford. His power, and the seemingly counterintuitive respect he inspires, cannot be overstated, nor can it be rationally explained. There are hundreds of thousands of deaths on his crooked shoulders. Millions more were physically or psychologically wounded.

Source:Anonymous/AP

The secret bombing of Cambodia: The German-born "president whisperer" made his first dark mark on the planet in early 1969, when, confronted with continued advances by North Vietnamese fighters from bases in neighboring Cambodia, he and Nixon conspired to order a top-secret bombing campaign called "Operation Breakfast," which turned into the longer-running "Operation Menu."

It might seem quaint today, given the mind-bending frequency of executive power overreaches, but Nixon's authorization to strike inside eastern Cambodia and Laos would come to represent a then-unprecedented scale of wartime deceit and illegality. Over the next four years, the U.S. would drop millions of tons of explosives on the neutral countries, all the while denying the programs' existence at every turn.

"Estimates of the number of people killed begin in thelow hundreds of thousands and range up from there," Henry Grabar wrote in the Atlantic, "but the truth is that no one has any idea." World Without Genocide, a watchdog organization, estimates that 750,000 Cambodians were killed between 1970 and 1974, most of them by "American B-52 bombers, using napalm and dart cluster-bombs to destroy suspected Viet Cong targets."

No one in the U.S. had anything more than a suspicion it was happening until May 9, 1969, when theNew York Times published a story titled "Raids in Cambodia by U.S. Unprotested." Kissinger responded swiftly, telling aides and the president, "We mustcrushthese [leakers and journalists]. We must destroy them." Infamous FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover was more than happy to oblige and, as told in Robert Weiner's Enemies: A History of the FBI, the two quickly set up wiretaps on the aides Kissinger suspected had leaked the story. Kissinger denied it all until 1992, when he conceded his part in the process of settling a related lawsuit.

The side effects from the Cambodian campaign were far more costly to the region that felt the brunt of the bombing. In Cambodia itself, the resulting chaos cleared the way for the rise of Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge. Their brutal regime is estimated to have killed between one and two million people between 1975 and 1979.

Source:AFP/Getty Images

Backing Indonesia's invasion of East Timor: Kissinger's role in Vietnam fills volumes, but it's his and America's ostensible absence in East Timor on Dec. 7, 1975, that speaks more directly to his malignant diplomatic tactics.

Traveling alongside President Gerald Ford, Kissinger led a Dec. 6 meeting in Jakarta, Indonesia, with Indonesian dictator Suharto. At issue: East Timor, at the time a small Southeast Asian territory recently abandoned by the colonial Portuguese. With Ford concerned about regional Communists filling the vacuum and Suharto, an ally, with his eyes set on an invasion and occupation, Kissinger only asked that the Indonesians wait until the U.S. delegation leave to begin their assault. Additionally, he promised to supply Suharto with American armsover the inevitable objections of Congress.

"We will understand and will not press you on the issue. We understand the problem and the intentions you have," Kissinger told Suharto, the details emerging viatranscripts released in 2001. "We would be able to influence the reaction in America if whatever happens happens after we return. If you have made plans, we will do our best to keep everyone quiet until the president returns home."

The transcripts also reveal Kissinger asking Suharto if he anticipated a "long guerilla war."Suharto responded that it would be "small."

And so the Americans left. The invasion of East Timor, carried out with a steady flow of American support, was swift. They waited one day. The fight lasted much longer, carrying on for nearly a quarter century. The estimated death toll: 200,000. Suharto died in 2008 after stepping down a decade earlier, following the deaths of 500 student protesters.

Taking down the Chilean government: The words"September 11" mean something very different, but just as painful, for the people of Chile. On that date in 1973, a CIA-backed coup ousted and assassinated the country's democratically-elected President Salvador Allende. The socialist was replaced with Gen. Augusto Pinochet, a right-wing thug who would rule the country as a dictator for 17 brutal years.

After Allende was elected on Sept. 4, 1970, Kissinger declared in a memo to Nixon that the vote "poses for us one of the most serious challenges ever faced in this hemisphere."

"Your decision as to what to do about it may be the most historic and difficult foreign affairs decision you will make this year," he wrote. U.S. businesses had hundreds of millions tied up in Latin America, which has been and remains a target for strategic American enemies. Kissinger decided that allowing Allende to remain in power would create an "insidious model effect." Which is to say, other countries under the American hemispheric umbrella might see that they could democratically elect a government and make decisions out from under U.S. boot heels.

Soon after the Sept. 11 coup, Kissinger was quick to order his man in Santiago to deliver to Pinochet "our strongest desires to cooperate closely and establish firm basis for cordial and most constructive relationship." He did and Kissinger's shop in Washington, D.C., working with the CIA began a long relationship with the regime. Chile's murderous National Intelligence Directorate was built by American agents.

Pinochet's military dictatorship, one of a number of right-wing juntas that dominated, degraded and bled Latin America in the 1970s and 80s, killed thousands and tortured an estimated 29,000, according to a survey conducted by a government commission. The great majority of those crimes happened in 1973, with Kissinger in close contact the whole way. After he left, his Reaganite disciples supported the regime through its demise in 1990.

So what the f**k was Henry Kissinger doing in Washington, D.C.?

On the face of it, Kissinger had been summoned to discuss foreign policy matters with the Senate Armed Services Committee. The hearing, called "Global Challenges and the U.S. National Security Strategy," was as inscrutable as the title suggests. In reality, Kissinger was on Capitol Hill because he, like so much "scum" before him, sticks to and feeds off all innocent life around him. He was invited because, to people like McCain, he represents the brand of blunt hegemonic history Americans are (or at least should be) desperate to reclaim.

But Henry Kissinger's time is past. There are new "challenges." Many of them, like President Barack Obama's drone killing program, probably make the old man smile. But some day soon, Kissinger will die. If only his legacy could be buried with him.

Source: http://mic.com/articles/109508/the-only-low-life-scum-in-the-mc-cain-hearing-was-henry-kissinger



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Friday, January 30, 2015

Shake Shack IPO vaults shares into 'nosebleed' territory



(Reuters) - Shares of Shake Shack Inc (SHAK.N) more than doubled on Friday, putting a nearly $2 billion price tag on the small cult hamburger chain, in a huge bet that its growth can match top performers in the crowded "fast-casual" dining space.

Shake Shack's debut is the latest in a string of blockbuster IPOs from trendy restaurant chains that cater to younger and more affluent diners willing to pay a bit more for fresher and higher quality food. Growth-hungry investors are hoping to replicate the red-hot run of industry darling Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG.N).

But Shake Shack's own CEO Randy Garutti cast doubt on whether it will do so, calling the chain known for decadent milkshakes and hormone- and antibiotic-free burgers a "very measured growth company."

Its IPO followed the successful listing two months ago of fellow premium burger seller Habit Restaurants (HABT.O). Other hot restaurant debuts have been followed by stock swoons, including Noodles & Co (NDLS.O) and sandwich maker Potbelly Corp (PBPB.O).

Based on 2013 earnings, the company that grew out of a hotdog cart in New York's Madison Square Park is trading at an eye-popping price-to-earnings ratio of about 325, with each restaurant valued at about $27 million.

"Seems like a nosebleed valuation," said Bob Goldin, an executive vice president at foodservice consultancy Technomic. Shake Shack would need "explosive growth for years and years" to justify its stock price, he said.

Its shares hit a session high of $52.50, a gain of 150 percent from its IPO price of $21, raising questions about whether the stock was overvalued. The stock trimmed gains slightly to close at $45.90.

"This is a valuation hurdle that is well ... shaky," said Douglas Kass, president of hedge fund Seabreeze Partners Management Inc, describing the rally as indicative of "silly season."

While the 63-unit chain boasts some of the industry's highest average annual restaurant sales, it only plans to add 10 domestic restaurants per year. Many of those new restaurants will be in lower-profit-margin markets outside New York City.

The company, which had revenue of $83.8 million in the 39 weeks to Sept. 24, eventually plans to have 450 U.S. locations. Shake Shack will also slowly expand overseas, with a store set to open in London later this year and others likely to follow, Garutti said, without providing a specific forecast.

When Chipotle went public in 2006, it had almost 500 U.S. restaurants. Shares in the chain, which now has roughly 1,700 U.S. restaurants and is known for its uncanny ability to profitably increase sales, debuted at $22 and trade at more than $710.

"We're at a point where investors are willing to give 'story' stocks the benefit of a doubt," said James Angel, associate professor of finance at Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business.

Repeating Chipotle's success has proven elusive for most restaurant operators, and it could be even harder to do in the crowded and competitive high-quality burger segment.

"If it were easy to replicate, plenty of other people would have already done it," said Angel.

Shake Shack raised $105 million from its initial public offering.

Its IPO has been bonanza for founder Daniel Meyer, whose 21 percent stake was worth about $390 million based on the stock's intraday high.

Meyer, the chef-owner of popular New York restaurants Blue Smoke, Gramercy Tavern and Union Square Cafe, opened the first Shake Shack in 2004.

J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley were lead underwriters for the IPO.

Shake Shack's customers spend roughly $30 for a meal for two, considerably more than diners spend at struggling fast-food giant McDonald's Inc (MCD.N), which this week replaced its CEO after a dismal 2014.

Sales at premium burger chains, which also include Five Guys Burgers and Fries, the Counter and Smashburger, rose 9 percent in 2013, according to Technomic, while overall sales at all burger chains including McDonald's fell 1 percent.

Some old-school operators are also riding the wave. Shares in mall-based chain Red Robin Gourmet Burgers, which went public over a decade ago, have more than doubled in the last two years.

(Additional reporting by Lisa Baertlein and David Gaffen in New York; Editing by Ted Kerr and Christian Plumb)

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/01/30/us-shake-shack-ipo-idUSKBN0L31RS20150130



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Burger mania: Shake Shack stock up 135%



Burger mania: Shake Shack stock up135%

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) Shake Shack is no longer just a cult favorite for foodies. Its now a cult stock too.

The upscale burger joints shares surged 135% Friday morning in their debut on the New York Stock Exchange.

Shake Shack priced its initial public offering at $21 a share Thursday evening above the price range Shake Shack set earlier this week. It opened at $47.21 and quickly shot above $50 a share before pulling back slightly.

The company raised $105 million from the stock sale. And at Friday mornings price of about $49, Shake Shack is worth $1.74 billion.

Shake Shack is sharing some of the wealth with customers too. To celebrate its first day as a public company, Shake Shack will be offering free breakfast sandwiches and burgers at a food truck outside the NYSE.

Restaurateur Danny Meyer, who is chairman of Shake Shack and founder of the Union Square Hospitality Group that started Shake Shack, owns a 21% stake in the company. His share is now worth nearly $365 million.

Meyer thanked employees and fans in a tweet Thursday night.

#Gratitude. Team, Guests, Community, Suppliers, and Investors. In that order. Thank you all, he wrote.

Shake Shack, which started in 2001 as a hot dog cart in New Yorks Madison Square Park, has quickly become a Big Apple icon.

Expanding but not too quickly. The company currently operates just 63 restaurants worldwide but 16 of them are in the metropolitan New York City area.

Shake Shack has already planted outposts in several global markets, such as London, Moscow, Kuwait, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates.

And the company has said that it wants to expand relatively slowly. It is targeting 10 new locations in the U.S. a year as well as more international locations.

The strategy has been extremely successful so far. Shake Shack reported revenue of $83.8 million in the first three quarters of last year, an increase of more than 40% from the same period in 2013.

Shake Shack is also profitable. But net income fell in the first nine months of 2014, primarily due to higher costs for paper, food and labor as the company opened more locations.

Profiting from the problems at Mickey Ds? Still, Shake Shack appears to be doing well at the expense of McDonalds. The CEO of McDonalds announced his retirement this week following another quarter of bleak sales.

Shake Shack bills itself as a fine casual dining chain, a play on the fast casual term popularized by Chipotle and Panera.

In addition to having the backing of star chef Meyer, Shake Shack says in its IPO filing that it prides itself on using sustainable ingredients, such as all-natural, hormone and antibiotic-free beef.

The proof is in the prices. A typical burger at Shake Shack can cost twice as much as a Big Mac.

Shake Shack also differentiates itself from other burger restaurants by selling hot dogs, beer, wine and of course frozen custard shakes.

Investors are clearly hungry for restaurant IPOs.

El Pollo Loco, Potbelly, Noodles and Zoes Kitchen have gone public in the past two years and soared on their first day of trading.

There is a lot of competition in the burger wars. But those four stocks are now well off their highs.

So is Habit, a popular California burger chain that went public last November and more than doubled in its debut.

Habit may not be as well-known to New Yorkers as Shake Shack. But its burgers were voted best in America by readers of Consumer Reports last year.

To that end, competition could prove to be the biggest risk for Shake Shack.

Even though its burgers are delicious, so are ones made by privately held Five Guys, Smashburger, Bareburger, In-N-Out and many other regional and national upstarts.

Heck, Sonic is doing really well lately thanks to strong demand for its burgers.

But pricey burgers could wind up being another culinary fad too. Krispy Kreme was a hot IPO when the doughnut chain went public in 2000. But the stock is now trading more than 60% below its all-time high.

Shake Shack has already satisfied the palates of hipster burger gourmands. But now has to deal with the fickle tastes of Wall Street traders and hedge funds too.

Source: http://wtkr.com/2015/01/30/burger-mania-shake-shack-stock-up-135/



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'Scandal' Returns to Primetime: What We Need from Olivia Pope



We've been saving our white hat, popcorn and red wine for this day. "Scandal" finally returns from its mid-season break tonight. When we last saw Olivia Pope, she had been kidnapped after pulling a "90210" and deciding to choose herself over the two lovers fighting for her affection. It may well have been the most stable and focused decision she's made during the entire series. And yet, even with that decision, our leading lady couldn't escape the drama.

A missing Olivia Pope isn't the only thing intriguing us. Here are a few things we'd like to see from "Scandal" during the second half of the season.

ABC via Getty Images

SCANDAL - ABC's "Scandal" stars Kerry Washington as Olivia Pope. (Craig Sjodin/ABC via Getty Images)

Where's Olivia?

Hopefully, the first things we learn are who kidnapped Olivia, why and how it was done so quickly. It took mere seconds. (At this point she really should know that she needs better security.)

Could it be her father holding a grudge because his only daughter tried to murder him which shouldn't be such a big deal given Papa Pope's personal history with Olivia? Is this Fitz trying to exert a power play to win back the woman who's kept his eye wandering since the series began? Or, is this the work of some new political powerhouse we have yet to meet? Our fingers are crossed that Jan. 29 will reveal all.

Kelsey McNeal / Getty Images

SCANDAL - "Where's the Black Lady?" - With Olivia still missing, the team comes together to do whatever it takes to find her and get her home safely, on "Scandal," THURSDAY FEBRUARY 5 (9:00-10:00 p.m., ET) on the ABC Television Network. (Photo by Kelsey McNeal/ABC via Getty Images)

We Need More Mellie

Even if you disliked Mellie before season four, once you saw drunk Mellie, cry-baby Mellie and smelly Mellie, there was no turning back. The fictional first lady's response to her son's death and her husband's secret suicide attempt showed viewers a side where even her most fervent detractors had to embrace her.

Just when she's getting back to normal, Mellie Grant is unknowingly dealt another blow when the audience learns her lover, the vice president, secretly is sleeping with the chairperson of the Republican National Committee. Mellie cannot seem to catch a break.

And after watching her slowly make her way back from the brink, grabbing what she wants and seemingly finding a way to be happy in the White House, she's unknowingly repaid with treachery. Andrew, why? Do you remember how she responded when Fitz squashed her relationship with the vice president? We're betting all-out crazy Mellie makes a grand entrance when she learns of Andrew's bed-hopping betrayal. Here's to hoping there's some '90s-style "Melrose Place" inspired slap fighting between Mellie and Elizabeth North.

ABC via Getty Images

SCANDAL - "The Fluffer" - Abby steps in as Olivia's proxy and takes on duties at the White House. Meanwhile, the team continues to investigate B613, and someone throws a wrench in Reston's presidential campaign, on ABC's "Scandal," THURSDAY, APRIL 3 (10:00-11:00 p.m., ET) on the ABC Television Network. (ABC/Ron Tom) JOE MORTON, KHANDI ALEXANDER, KERRY WASHINGTON

It's Time for Pope Family Reunion

Whenever Mama or Papa Pope are in a scene, they own it. Olivia seems like a shriveled flower compared to her domineering parents, who so easily grab the attention. Rowan Pope always is schooling the audience and Olivia, and Maya Lewis is just so insane you want to see more of her. A stronger Olivia meeting with her familial foes could bring the biggest bang of the season.

But now that Liv has shown she literally would shoot her father to be free of him and shown her mother no mercy, we'd love to see this trio get back together. We want it so badly, we'd even take it in a familial counseling session where surely the therapist would have to be murdered before the session's end. Problems with Popes.

ABC via Getty Images

SCANDAL - "More Cattle, Less Bull" -The team investigates Democratic Congresswoman Josie Marcus, while Olivia and Mellie have a surprising run-in during the White House Correspondents' Dinner. Meanwhile, Jake and Huck get closer to the truth about Operation Remington, which could lead to devastating results, on ABC's "Scandal," THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31 (10:00-11:00 p.m., ET) on the ABC Television Network. (Photo by Richard Cartwright/ABC via Getty Images) KERRY WASHINGTON, SCOTT FOLEY

Olivia's Fabulous Fashion

Part of "Scandal's" soapy fun is the clothing. The audience waits to see not only how'll she'll react, but also what she's wearing when she reacts. Does this meeting with a lover call for fancy dress or a more relaxed look? What kind of white outfit will she display? Even if you're over Olivia Pope and her life choices, you could never be over her look.

First published January 29 2015, 7:35 AM

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/pop-culture/tv/scandal-returns-primetime-what-we-need-olivia-pope-n283521



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Thursday, January 29, 2015

How Melissa Gilbert Feels About Going From Size DD to 'Just an Average B'



Melissa Gilbert is used to being in the spotlight.

The 50-year-old actress who, for a decade, played Laura Ingalls Wilder on the iconic TV series, Little House on the Prairie, grew up before our eyes. She's starred in a string of TV movies and even served as president of the Screen Actors Guild.

Lately, Gilbert has been making headlines for her decision to have her breast implants surgically removed earlier this month.

In an interview with ABC News, Gilbert talked about her decision to downsize from a cup size DD to a B.

Just an average B, not a big B, Gilbert said.

Gilbert said shed had implants for 20 years -- first saline, then silicone. Insecurity about her physical appearance set in long before she underwent any operations because she was a late bloomer, she said.

In her last couple of years of her time on Little House on the Prairie, Gilbert said she played an adult version of her character.

It was just an assumption that it was time to wear a padded bra, that an A-cup was not enough. I had to be a B, she said.

She was 16 then.

So you imagine the message in my head is like, OK, well, these are not right, she said.

Making matters tougher, her on-screen nemesis and off-screen friend, Alison Arngrim -- who played Nellie Oleson on the show -- was developing physically, while she wasnt, Gilbert said.

There was a huge difference," Gilbert said. "I was wearing, like, you know, Speedo one-piece bathing suits. She was wearing all these sort of sexy bikinis and stuff. I was nowhere near that, Gilbert said.

She added: She's a year older than me and she's wearing bras.

Gilbert has written on her blog that after her first son was born and she had finished breast-feeding, her then-husband made negative comments about her chest. After the divorce, she decided to have breast implants when she started dating again.

The implant surgery went well, but in 2004, she started reading how implants should be replaced every 10 to 15 years, she wrote. Hers were already 12 years old.

Removing the implants has brought benefits, said Gilbert, who appeared on season 14 of ABCs Dancing With the Stars.

Not only do I feel healthier and better, but I don't have these inappropriately large b*****s that were wrong for my body, kind of getting the way, she said. I sleep more comfortably. And the bonus is I have disc issues in my neck. And I have absolutely no pulling on my shoulders. And all the pain in my neck has completely disappeared since the surgery."

Gilbert said her third husband, actor Timothy Busfield, has backed her decision.

My husband has been so supportive and so sweet about this whole process ... He said, Do it, go. Go, she said.

Now that the removal is over, her husband seems perfectly happy, Gilbert said. I don't think he's mourning or grieving anything.

Although she removed her implants, Gilbert said shes not against them, but she hopes women who are considering such augmentation consider all the risks before going under the knife for what is major surgery.

The one thing that the medical community will admit to is that breast implants will not last forever in your body. And have to be replaced, she said. When you're getting the implants, you're making a commitment -- not just to that operation, but [to another one] every 10 to 15 years.

She agreed that women likely dont consider that aspect when theyre first considering breast enhancement.

And when they hear it, ads on the radio, like I did in the car the other day, We're having a special for $4,000 for implants, women go, Oh my gosh, $4,000 for implants, that's great. But you don't realize that 10, 15 years from now you're going to have to do it again. And again. And again, she said.

ABC News Michael Rothman contributed to this report.

Source: http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/melissa-gilbert-feels-size-dd-average/story?id%3D28564746



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Criminal Minds Season 10 Episode 13 Review: Nelson's Sparrow



This engrossing and very well written hour of TV could easily have been titled "Endings and Beginnings."

Criminal Minds Season 10 Episode 13 started off with an emotional horror: the discovery of Gideon's murdered body.

Poor Reid who apparently was the closest to him took it quite hard. It was up to Morgan to provide the three words that allowed him to begin to crawl out of the pit of his loss: we need you.

There were so many gems packed into 60 minutes that it's hard to highlight which one shone the brightest.

Hotch telling the story he'd heard from Gideon about a snowstorm, a sled and a ride down Rattlesnake Hill at top speed seems to be the best part, and not just because we actually saw that sober exterior of his crack into outright laughter.

A close runner-up might be Young Rossi and Gideon profiling each other, only to learn that both were about to become dads.

Another bit of gold was hearing Gideon ask Rossi what his middle name was (Stephen), so that he knew what to call his newborn son later on.

Man, there was so much.

As AJ Cook told us a few weeks ago, Ben Savage as Young Gideon was incredible! I agree with her too: he just was Gideon, right down to his mannerisms and speech patterns. Plus, the way he physically looked, with his facial features and mostly sober attitude, it wouldn't be too hard to imagine him as a young Mandy Patinkin.

It was so interesting to discover that this cold case was the impetus for the creation of the BAU. You could almost hear Rossi's suppressed laughter at telling Reid that the three-person unit used to be referred to as the BS Unit.

The numerous flashbacks allowed us to get a sense of the impact of Gideon's death on Rossi, so that it was easy to understand his decision to put his gun down - practically telegraphing his desire to shoot Mallick down rather than take him to prison.

Plus, the ugliness of the torture Mallick put his victims through made it tough to have any kind of sympathy for him... especially after he bragged about it, and bragged about killing Gideon as well.

This episode had the perfect mix of back story, character emphasis and case-of-the-week puzzle. No doubt this has a lot to do with the fact that Kirsten Vangsness and Erica Messer co-wrote it. You know, it wouldn't bother me a bit if the pair of them collaborated on another one or two or ten episodes.

This one was so well put together.

The only thing I didn't get was why the unsub was trying to turn his victim into a bird. We get that his aunt was a member of the bird watching club, and that she died when he was still quite young. There was just a disconnect there that never quite married the two events her death and his decision to find a young woman to replace her.

It was all creepy and as such vintage Criminal Minds but....it didn't quite make sense.

Final thoughts:

  • The song playing at the end was Edge of the Dark, by Armon Jay on the album Everything's Different, Nothing's Changed.
  • Rossi and Gideon joking about getting a private plane.
  • Hotch's quote of Euripedes at the end When a good man is hurt, all who would be called good must suffer with him was also quoted by Gideon in Season 1 Episode 5 "Broken Mirror"
  • Some of the Criminal Minds quotes are gold, especially Hotch's recollection of a story told to him by Gideon.

What are you thoughts on this episode? Do you empathize with Rossi's decision? Were there any other "gotchas" that were missed here? If you're unsure, be sure to watch Criminal Minds online and then chime in on the comments below!

Detective Kate Beckett is bad a*s. She's taken down everyone from low-life murderers to a corrupt US Senator and managed to do it in style with her amazing and highly sought after collection of outerwear but we think her wild west outfit might be her ruggedly handsome husband's favorite. We know it's one of ours.

Source: http://www.tvfanatic.com/2015/01/criminal-minds-season-10-episode-13-review-nelsons-sparrow/



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