And check out some highlights from the discussion below. Listen to the complete interview with Rafael Jordan, Erin Lindsey, and Ruairi Carroll in Episode 372 of Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy (above). “To sit down on a Friday night, have a glass of wine, and just try to work this stuff out, I love every minute of it,” he says.
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But TV reporter Ruairi Carroll says that makes the show feel more intimate and exclusive. “There are a lot of moving pieces to this, which makes me feel that it’s a mistake to commit to any particular theory at this point.”ĭark definitely isn’t for everyone, and despite its high quality it hasn’t turned into a cultural phenomenon like Stranger Things. “One of the things that I think is really interesting about this is that there’s what characters say that they want, but it’s very clear that you can’t take that at face value,” she says. Fantasy author Erin Lindsey notes that even after 18 episodes, many of the show’s characters remain completely mysterious. Hopefully that level of meticulous plotting will continue in the show’s third season, which was recently greenlit by Netflix. “But they obviously had this whole season-it seems to me at least-planned out from the very beginning.” “I was really concerned that there would be a sophomore slump, and that a lot of the mysteries from Season 1 would not have satisfying explanations, and it would be like the last episode of Lost or Battlestar Galactica,” he says. But he thinks the second season is, if anything, even stronger than the first. The Unforgivable star then urged those who are considering adoption to go through with it.Given all that complexity, Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy host David Barr Kirtley expected the show to go off the rails at some point. Though Bullock said the process made her "feel really scared" and question if she was "enough," she hopes her children, specifically Laila - whom she revealed was in three different foster care placements by 2½ - can "show what exists within that system." RELATED: Sandra Bullock 'Sometimes' Wishes She 'Matched' Her Kids' Skin: 'Easier on How People Approach Us'
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Never miss a story - sign up for PEOPLE 's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. You're just going, if I don't answer this right, I'm not fit." I got halfway through it and I said, I can't do this."įor more on Sandra Bullock's Red Table Talk interview and other top stories, listen below to our daily podcast on PEOPLE Every Day.īullock continued, "It was an out-of-body experience in that they literally sit down and they ask you, so what do you think is the worst kind of abuse? What is the worst kind of drug, or alcohol? I go, I don't know, they're all bad. "When I first went through the process myself, you have to prove that you are a capable parent. It gets deep and it gets dark," she shared of the foster care system. "It's a system that exists and people don't know about it because it's a difficult thing to talk about. The actress, 57, appeared on Wednesday's episode of Red Table Talk alongside Willow Smith, Jada Pinkett Smith and her mother, Adrienne Banfield-Norris, and opened up about the "dark" process she had to go through before welcoming her children Louis, 11, and Laila, 8.
Sandra Bullock is reflecting on her "incredibly hard" experience with adoption and the foster care system.