- I watched this show because of Olivia Williams. A few minutes into the ep, I realized it's not my cup of tea, but whatevs. The cast includes Donal Logue, Michael Raymond James (from True Blood?), and Laura Allen (4400)
- Anywhoo, it's a good show, witty and well, had a lot of Olivia in it. Olivia, as usual, is excellent and most awesome. And she has an American accent. I'm not fond of it and it has it's moments (where it's obvious that's not her real accent, kinda during Fringe's pilot episode when I'd tilt my head at the screen whenever Anna Torv would talk and I'd go "not her real accent, defs.")
- The client, Olivia's husband, is kinky. And Olivia's character isn't, so she had to play along because she loves her husband (husband is a masochist, and wants her to have adulterous affairs and tell him about it). And there was sexiness and awkwardness which is all lol-worthy. looool

One of my thoughts during the ep
- I was actually afraid to watch the last few minutes of the ep for the fear that Olivia's character would be killed by her husband. I was wrong because the husband killed himself (he had psychological problems and Olivia's character knows about this because she was his doctor). Which then made me think that "ooh, maybe Olivia's character drove him to suicide because she'd rather have him dead than her leaving him and she's actually having an orgy in her house when Donal Logue's character arrives to give his condolences, but no. She really did love the (sick) husband.
- The ending of the ep was a bit of a wtf for me. It was intriguing and really, wtf-was-that-kind of moment (the start of the plotty arcs. I see you).
- To summarize this episode: it is awesome because Olivia Williams is awesome; Never-nudes; Reed Diamond should be paired up with Olivia Williams always (unless it's Pierce Brosnan and Ewan MacGregor. Together); Joss Whedon and JJ Abrams has fucked me up, storytelling-wise.
ETA:
- I counted my Olivia caps. It's a staggering 419 items. :S