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The central character, Sentaro, is a middle-aged man who manages Doraharu, a shop that sells dorayaki, a type of Japanese pancake filled with sweet bean paste, in the outskirts of Tokyo. Sentaro is a man who has lost all hope and motivation in life and is working to pay off debt.
Annie Wersching, who portrayed Tess in the video game, died on the same day; [55] the episode was altered several days later to add a dedication. [56] The episode had 6.4 million viewers in the United States on its first night, including linear viewers and streams on HBO Max—an increase of 12 percent from the previous week and 37 percent from ...
In episode four, we learn that some of the guards are harvesting the body parts of the players killed in the games to sell on the black market. They hire Byeong-gi (Player 111), a doctor, to ...
In the episode, werewolves interfere with Laszlo's topiary, causing the vampires to face them. Meanwhile, Colin Robinson meets an office co-worker, who is revealed to be an emotional vampire. According to Nielsen Media Research , the episode was seen by an estimated 0.305 million household viewers and gained a 0.11 ratings share among adults ...
The episode also marks the first appearance of recurring Baltimore police department officers Major Bobby Reed, commander of the internal investigations division (IID), and Major Stanislaus Valchek, Southeastern district commander and Prez's father-in-law. Valchek plays a major role in the second season and appears in all five seasons of the show.
In a retrospective review, Emily St. James of The A.V. Club wrote that the "[ending] montage - intercut with Tony watching Meadow sing - is one of the first moments when The Sopranos takes music and rises above its prosaic, muddy universe to become something like sublime"; St. James commented that although the episode "is a 'Let's get the plot ...
Episode 3 of Disney+’s Secret Invasion answered a burning question or two — mainly, regarding Fury’s wife Priscilla. But more notably, the final scene seemed to dispatch with another main ...
In 2013, Emily VanDerWerff of The A.V. Club graded the episode an "A−", praising its having delved into Don's character in what was only a third episode. Six years after its initial airing, VanDerWerff wrote retrospectively: [3] The task Mad Men set for itself from very early in its run was a tough one. Lacking the sorts of obvious external ...