ALIENS! Yes, given the expanse of the universe, it is just as probable that aliens exist as Tim Riggins exists. Coach Taylor would have been so proud.īut, whoa, turns out that finding a father figure is the least of his worries, there are aliens in this Naval battle. He even dramatically interrupts Admiral Liam Neeson by finishing a quote from Homer. As his mother in True Detective says, “All the girls are nice to you.” Other themes, like flirting with alcoholism and making the wrong decision for the right reasons and interrupting authority figures. His sex appeal gets him both into trouble and out of trouble. Tim Riggins, in every setting, always has a stroke of bad luck and always gets lucky. And I'm only familiar with goddamn Tim Riggins. There, as in FNL, he is contending with his beautiful hair in his eyes, an obnoxious older brother trying to tell him how to live, the lure of a job in construction, and the distraction of confident, strutting babes. With his big frame and tousled hair, Lawson gives off a real Tim Riggins from Friday Night Lights vibe. Oh, Tim Riggins went to California and worked as a true detective and everyone wanted to have sex with him.įrom New York, Riggins decamps for Hawaii, hoping another beach will sooth his soul and his hard-drinking will heal his emotional wounds. Oh, Tim Riggins went to army and then started a pot farm in California and everyone wanted to have sex with him. Oh, Tim Riggins went to army and everyone wanted to have sex with him. Kitsch’s roles following Tim Riggins could be best described as: oh, Tim Riggins went to army. Every character Kitsch has played since Friday Night Lights, conceivably, is a grown-up Tim Riggins. It was a part characterized by Kitsch's long hair, long eyelashes, and longing looks. Starting in 2006, Canadian actor Taylor Kitsch played American high school football player Tim Riggins in a television show called Friday Night Lights. This could be a song about the faceless ubiquity of evil, but actually it’s a song about the character that Taylor Kitsch has never successfully jettisoned. In the moody song that opens True Detective Season Two, Leonard Cohen growls, “I live among you, well-disguised I had to leave my life behind… I have a name, but never mind.”
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