When Indira's husband turned his focus of blame onto her, that just seemed on the nose. Of course that useless shlub now has to blame his wife for his glaringly obvious lack of skill and talent. And I loved when he complained how she doesn't meet his needs. I very much doubt he meets hers either, can't even have a realistic conversation about their debt.
And the twins wanting to watch cartoons was funny. Illustrates how so many people try to force their views/opinions/hobbies onto their kids who couldn't care less, and convince themselves that the kids are all in just as much as they are.
When Indira's husband turned his focus of blame onto her, that just seemed on the nose. Of course that useless shlub now has to blame his wife for his glaringly obvious lack of skill and talent. And I loved when he complained how she doesn't meet his needs. I very much doubt he meets hers either, can't even have a realistic conversation about their debt.
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SOMEBODY'S meeting his needs. Note how he put on cologne before going off to his meeting with his "physical therapist." So this guy's all the bad he's written about in that scene WITH his wife and...revealed as worse, later. A cheater.
He's a very on the nose character, and there are more like him this season. Easy to hate. Hoping for them all to die -- likely killing each other. "Easy to hate" is good for "action TV" villains (the cop's husband, Jon Hamm slapping his woman and beating his earlier wife, Hamm's son torturing the wrong man, Jennifer Jason Lee's heartless destroyer of her lessers in wealth), but its not a very sophisticated season. And well beneath the intelligence level of the movie "Fargo" that birthed it.
That Ole Munch guy is about the only nuanced character in the whole thing. And that includes the plucky heroine with Frances McDormand's accent.