Dial K For Killow - General Hospital Commentary for the week ending January 23, 2026. Former Soap Central Two Scoops columnist Liz Masters shares her opinions and editorial on General Hospital in her a new home: DanJKroll.com
Dial K For Killow - General Hospital Commentary | Image by Dan J Kroll

General Hospital Commentary: Dial K for Killow

Folks, it was quite an exciting week on General Hospital. I love a good twist and seeing characters get what they deserve. We had that and more. Let’s kick things off with our resident good girl turned lunatic – Willow.

I guess we now know why Willow was late getting to court to hear the jury’s verdict. It appears she made a quick stop at General Hospital to pick up some medicine and a syringe as a special thank you to Drew. After jabbing Drew with the syringe, she disposed of it at the hospital. Hopefully, a security camera caught her. We shall see. First, someone has to figure out that Drew didn’t just have a massive stroke out of the blue.

A couple of weeks ago, a ringtone revealed Willow as the shooter. Several people know, so it’s only a matter of time before the past catches up with Willow, but she will likely be protected from prosecution because of double jeopardy. Luckily for us, she made a second attempt on Drew’s life. This time she injected him in the neck with a stroke inducing substance. I don’t know if the intention was to kill Drew this time around, but it doesn’t really matter. What Willow did could have resulted in Drew’s death, so she will likely face another attempted murder charge when her dirty little secret comes to light. And it will because this is a soap opera and people are onto Willow.

From weeping to homicidal

I just wish the writers had made an effort to explain this homicidal shift in Willow because all of this seems so out of character for the woman we were first introduced to back in 2018. For the longest time I attributed Willow’s horrible choices to falling under Drew’s spell. But I no longer believe that to be the case. I’m beginning to see shades of Nelle in Willow, which means Willow was always capable of the things she’s done in recent months.

If that’s the case, then I’m afraid there’s no redemption for Willow.

A watershed moment

I also get the strong sense that General Hospital is setting Nina up for full-circle moment with her daughter.

For years, we’ve heard Nina lament about all the missed opportunities with Nelle, and how Nina could have saved Nelle if only Nina had been given a chance to be a mother to her beloved daughter. It’s hogwash of course. A mother’s love is powerful, but it doesn’t magically fix a broken psyche. Nelle murdered Zachary Grant for breaking off their engagement long before she showed up in Port Charles with the intention of making Carly pay for Frank Benson’s greedy choices.

I suspect Nina will figure out what Willow has done — or maybe Willow will confess — and Nina will be faced with a choice: cover up the crime or get Willow the help she needs. Sadly, I don’t think Nina will do the right thing and turn her daughter in. If she does, I will happily admit that I was wrong. But Nina has a pattern when it comes to Willow, so she’s far more likely to make excuses and work to hide Willow’s crimes. Willow of course will continue to choose violence to deal with her problems and spiral into madness and mayhem.

While I do think Drew deserves everything he’s getting, I don’t want to see Willow get away with what she’s done. Wiley and Amelia are not safe in the care of a woman who thinks murder is a solution.

The root of Willow — and Nelle’s — evil

I’ve always believed that Nelle was damaged since birth because of that drug that Madeline Reeves gave Nina to trigger a miscarriage. However, we can’t completely discount Nina’s history. Nina struggled with her mental health too, and it’s ultimately what led to her rushed marriage to Silas Clay during Nina’s college years. But, as a couple of people pointed out to me in recent weeks, Madeline herself was homicidal and her sister – Liesl – is a reformed supervillain. But wait, there’s more.

Santania1980 posted on X (formerly Twitter) that the Clays don’t get a free pass either. Silas’ brother, serial killer Stephen Clay, had delusions of being a vampire named Caleb Morely.

Dawn of Day

Did being raised in a cult give Willow the tools to hide her true nature behind a meek facade? I suddenly see everything I thought I knew about Willow through a different lens. Instead of seeing the survivor, I remember how she pretty much stalked Brad and Lucas because she believed their newly adopted son was her biological baby. She easily wormed her way into their lives in large part because she presented as a sweet innocent waif. Was she — or was she a skilled manipulator?

Later, when Michael was revealed to be Wiley’s father, Willow gravitated toward him, and soon he was asking her to adopt his son. The rest, as they say, is history.

That brings me to DetectivePatrolman Harrison Chase. What an insufferable, self-righteous fool he’s been. I have no pity for him. In fact, I hope Brook Lynn kicks him to the curb, and he joins Finn and Violet far away from Port Charles. It’s not that he thinks Willow is innocent, but rather how determined he is to pin the crime on Michael with less evidence than there was against Willow.

Willow versus Michael

I have no idea why Chase is so adamant that Willow couldn’t possibly have shot Drew. Chase has caught her sneaking onto the Quartermaine property twice, once with the sole intention of defying a court order. He also ignores how she lied to the police twice. Once by letting Nina give her a false alibi and the second time by hiding the fact that Willow had been on Drew’s street at the time of the shooting. Yes, it looked suspicious when the gun was found after Michael paid Willow a visit at Liz’s house, but there was no evidence that Michael planted it. It was Willow’s word against Michael’s, and Willow had good reason to lie. Keep in mind that neither Michael nor Willow knew the police were going to show up at Liz’s with a search warrant. Until then, the police had been focused on Michael alone.

Alexis made a good circumstantial case against Michael, but much of it applied to Willow too. Beyond that, why would Michael suddenly decide to shoot Drew when Michael has continually prevailed in court against both Drew and Willow? Willow, on the other hand, had plenty of reason to want Drew dead. Her affair with him destroyed her marriage, cost her custody of her children, and she’d recently learned that he had slept with her mother while he’d been seducing Willow. Every time Drew tried to “help” Willow, he made things worse.

A history of bad judgment

Let’s face it, Chase sucks at reading people. He defended Nelle with the same vigor that he now defends her twin. It took Nelle plotting to kill him for him to finally see her for who she really was. I really wish someone in Chase’s life would point that out to him.

Willow has lied to and betrayed Chase enough times that I would think he would at least recognize that she isn’t always truthful. Instead, he’s so convinced that Willow didn’t shoot Drew that he not only risked his career but accused friends of what he himself was doing — ignored evidence that made Willow look guilty. It’s shameful for a detective to act the way that Chase did, especially without a shred of evidence to support his alternate theory.

It’s Chase’s lack of professionalism and inability to be objective that really bothers me. He downright belligerent in his defense of Willow. He twists everything to fit his narrative, which is not what a good detective does. They follow the evidence. It also bugs me how he acts like Willow’s acquittal is irrefutable proof that she’s innocent, and he was right. No, it’s not. Guilty people (👀 at Sonny and Jason) get off all the time.

Why isn’t Portia making an appointment with an attorney? Changing a patient’s test results to keep them locked up behind bars isn’t just an ethical violation. It’s a criminal act. They call that tampering with evidence in a legal proceeding.

I was a bit surprised that Portia is more concerned about getting her job back at General Hospital rather than the legal consequences for the crime she committed. Justine doesn’t strike me as the kind of acting district attorney who’s going to give a person a free pass on that even if Portia is pregnant. She might be open to a plea deal with a light sentence given the extenuating circumstances, but it’s public knowledge. Justine can’t ignore that.

There’s also the matter of the plot to drug Drew with Ketamine, but it looks like Nina, Brad, and Jacinda have no plans to reveal the details of that little bombshell any time soon. Still, Portia should be proactive. It’s only a matter of time before the rest of her crimes come to light. Afterall, this is General Hospital

The truth shall set you free

I’m equally disappointed in Trina and Kai’s decision to keep quiet about Willow’s attempted murder. They should have never gone to Alexis of all people to tell her about their discovery. Alexis’ job was to keep Willow from being convicted not to ensure that justice was served. It was such an imbecilic move and another example of how they have dumbed down Trina since her relationship with Kai.

Trina and Kai should have asked to talk to Diane and – with Diane – gone to Justine. Putting themselves at the scene of the crime wouldn’t have done anything except make them witnesses because the gun used to shoot Drew was found in Willow’s possession. It’s true that Kai’s fingerprints were on the bat, but Drew was shot not clubbed with a bat. If anything, that bat was proof that Kai grabbed it to protect himself in case he encountered the shooter.

The argument that Trina and Kai could have been charged with breaking and entering was also laughable. Kai is Drew’s assistant and he has a key to the house, which means there’s implied consent for him to enter the premises. 


My biggest pet-peeve with General Hospital is how they treat the audience like we don’t have two brain cells to rub together.

But his children are another matter. Britt and Nathan recently returned from the dead, and now Peter is back in the form of a hallucination thanks to whatever trickery Cullum and Sidwell are using to control what Anna sees.

I’m still on the fence about Nathan. Is he a part of this plot or not? I need answers. Real answers. Where was Nathan all this time? Who saved him from certain death when Faison shot him in the chest? How and why did he turn up on the back roads of Port Charles? More importantly, why isn’t Nathan asking any of those questions and searching for answers? It can’t be a coincidence that Britt and Nathan showed up in Port Charles at the same time. However, at present Nathan seems to be doing good things, so I’m willing to wait. But not for too long.

Trouble brews at General Hospital

Britt is a different story. I’ve grown tired of her secrets and inability to trust anyone, including Liesl who could really help Britt with her Sidwell problem. Britt is behaving like an idiot and getting herself deeper and deeper into trouble. Worse, she’s now endangering others, including sweet Rocco.

I’m also really frustrated with Liesl and Britt acting like they have any right to be a part of Rocco’s life. It was Dante and Lulu’s right to choose a surrogate to carry their son, and to decide when to go forward with the pregnancy. They are Rocco’s parents, not Britt. She was an incubator who tried to use the pregnancy to trap a man into a relationship that he didn’t want. What Britt and Liesl did was a crime, and it’s so unrealistic that Rocco just brushes over that.

A bad romance

I’m also over the Britt/Jason romance. There was a time that I loved their chemistry and rooted for them. Then Jason died, Britt died, and life moved on. Now, Britt has returned to General Hospital, but the magic between her and Jason hasn’t. Not for me. What I loved about them in the past is gone. Britt is no longer vulnerable and open with Jason – except when she’s drunk – and she certainly doesn’t trust or respect him.

Britt has reverted back to “The Britch.” The liar and self-destructive woman who blames everyone for her problems and poor choices. The manipulator who stole Lulu and Dante’s embryo and passed it off as her own. All the personal growth she made before her fateful encounter with Heather has vanished.

As much as I loathe Willow, I’m delighted that she let Scout temporarily move in with Alexis. Hopefully, Willow — whom Drew named as Scout’s guardian if anything should happen to him — will decide to sign over full custody of Scout to Alexis if Drew should succumb to this latest attempt on his life. That way Alexis can drop that ridiculous restraining order against Danny and let the two siblings spend time together.

Alas, I don’t think Drew will die. As soon as Lucas mentioned the possibility of Locked-in Syndrome, I realized where things were headed with the congressman, at least for a time. I won’t feel the least bit sorry for him if that should come to pass because Drew has been an awful human being since he was beat up in jail. He deserves every bit of misery headed his way for how he weaponized his grieving daughter and Danny in his war with Jason.

I do hope the writers use this situation as a reset for Drew, but I won’t hold my breath.

Some quick thoughts about other things going on in and around Port Charles.

The spy who knows me

I’m confused. If Jack knew that Pascal was on Spoon Island, why bother to deactivate Josslyn now? Jack knows that Colette Moreau was in league with Pascal, which means Colette would have passed along the intel that Brennan had recruited Josslyn Jacks to the WSB. Do the writers expect us to believe that Cullum hasn’t paid Colette a visit for a debriefing?

Stolen goods

Now that Drew is in General Hospital, Tracy should ask Willow to return the Quartermaine boxes he stole.

World travels

Did I understand Liz correctly? Is Aiden now living with Lucky? That makes zero sense. Aiden had a life – and a boyfriend – in Port Charles. Cameron and Jake are adults, but Aiden is still a teenager in high school. I hate how the writers rehabbed Deadbeat Lucky without doing any of the work and at the cost of Liz suddenly having an empty nest.

Fashion victim of the week

What in the world was Liz wearing during Thursday’s episode when she went to visit Laura? That raggedy beige skirt was hideous and looked way too big for someone as petite Becky, especially paired with that bulky cream sweater.

Performer of the week

Michael’s smolder!

That scene between Michael and Chase when Michael pushed Chase’s buttons was intense. Rory Gibson was incredible, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the camera had scorch marks from the fire he emanated during that confrontation. Michael reminds me of Pride and Prejudice’s Mr. Darcy. Intelligent, somewhat arrogant, and standoffish. He plays things close to the vest and is often misunderstood, but he’s honorable, kind, and deeply loyal to his loved ones.

Best special appearance

I absolutely loved the city view of Port Charles at the beginning of Monday’s episode. Way to elevate the show. More of that please!

We love reading what other fans have to say about the show, so please scroll down to the Comments section and share your thoughts. It’s at the bottom of this (and every) column.

Line of the Week: Brad talking about All the Things Jason will put before Britt (paraphrased):
“…Carly…Carly’s Hairdresser… that Cute Bowl of Moss in Carly’s kitchen…” HA! Good One
. — Missez Premise

I still don’t get Willow’s motivation for shooting Drew at that time. Why would the murder of Judge Heron tigger Willow to shoot Drew? The judge saw through Willows’ act and a new judge on the custody case was actually beneficial to Willow. — JDF

What occurs to me re: Kai: Spencer was far from perfect. But he stepped up for justice at Trina’s trial and admitted to being where he wasn’t supposed to be at the sacrifice of his freedom. Exactly the opposite of what Kai is doing. — Kathie

Be sure to click on the link to read Dan Kroll’s latest Beyond The Gates commentary, The End of Apology Season.

Happy viewing,

Liz

25 Comments

  1. Ryan

    As usual, your post is spot on. However, I wouldn’t say that Michael is standoffish. I actually think that Michael is a very warm person. He’s only cold when he’s dealing with people who have been awful to him.

    • Liz Masters

      He is, but initially, he’s guarded. It takes time to get to know the real Michael. So, yes, he’s polite and warm, it’s just good manners.

  2. JDF

    Really good points about Willow. I had forgotten how she “stalked” Brad and Lucas when she thought their baby was her’s and how she pivoted to Michael and Wiley soon after.

    I’m waiting for the other shoe to drop where Nathan is concerned. They can’t possibly leave his return unquestioned.

    • SFan

      I think the writers are waiting for Maxie to come out of her coma next month before we get any clue about Nathan.

  3. JDF

    It was so funny watching Drew after the verdict. Everyone was giving Alexis the credit for getting Willow off and Drew is standing there perplexed, wondering why aren’t they giving him all the credit. It’s even funnier that he actually believes that he deserves the credit for Willow being acquited.
    I often criticize the writers, but when Willow stuck that syringe into Drews’ neck, I did not see that coming at all. It was the first time in ages that we’ve seen something so unpredictable on GH. For those who were wondering if they were going to rehabilitate Willow or go the more mayhem route, we got our answer pretty quickly. Willow is crazy, but not that kind of crazy. She’s Faison like crazy.

    Nina definitely knew that Willow was crying crocodile tears at the hospital.

    That was a freaking big needle that Willow shoved into Drew’s neck. It’s inconceivable to me that Lucas wouldn’t notice a needle mark. Someone had to see Willow dispose of the syringe. It doesn’t make sense to me that she would wait until she got to GH to get rid of it where she could possibly be seen by someone or a camera. The writers did this for a reason.

    • Humor Me

      @JDF – none of us saw the syringe to the neck coming!
      That was the beauty of the moment: Willow had tipped her hand to NIna that she was not done with Drew yet and we all took it at face value: she would publicly embarress him with his own behavior, and then leave him. Not that she would actually kill him within an hour of returning home post not guilty verdict. Willow is one angry woman; she hid it well.

  4. JDF

    It’s time to get rid of the WSB. Who the heck are these guys who run around threatening people with treason and incarceration if they don’t do as told? This “Faison’s last project’ story is just ridiculous. I’ve posted before that it’s just not believable that they need Britt to do this cold fusion or whatever reasearch. She’s an OBGYN. So what if she got a degree in physics or chemistry 20 years ago.
    Then there’s her illness. I don’t believe that she is really sick. I think she was poisoned somehow and her “medicine” is a temporary antidote. If Britt is such a “brilliant” researcher why hasn’t she tried to analyze her “medicine” or asked Liesl, who is also a brilliant scientist to anayze it? Heck, I bet even Brad could do it. That would be a good way to make use of Brad.

    In what world does someone as arrogant and insubordinate as Josslyn keep her job? The Spy Who Won’t Shut Up or Take Orders. She’s snooping around Wyndemere for all of 15 seconds before Ava catches her in the act.
    Joss as a spy just isn’t working.

    • Kathie

      I found Cullum’s threats regarding Rocco confusing. He threatened to claim Rocco saw top secret information. But isn’t Dalton’s research, um, secret? The WSB supposedly doesn’t know what Dalton was working on. Cullum doesn’t want anyone to know about it either. So would he really draw attention to it? Seemed like an empty threat.

      I think Britt and the medication is one of those things that doesn’t make sense but keeps going because otherwise it would end the storyline. I agree about Josslyn not being a credible spy–on a number of levels. I don’t think that’s necessarily an insult. Some of her problems–discomfort with killing and dishonesty, inability to ignore that people she cares about are in trouble–are not negative characteristics. Once the current storyline is over, I hope they move her into another profession.

      • JDF

        The other problem with Cullums threat towards Rocco about Dalton’s research is that Dalton was working for Sidwell, not the WSB. The WSB doesn’t know what exactly Dalton’s research was and Cullum would expose himself by saying Rocco saw classified information.

        • Kathie

          This is what I meant but you said it better.

          Reason this is annoying is we’ve had a number of characters be blackmailed in the last year alone. In most cases, they probably could have called the blackmailer’s bluff. And either likely would have worked through the difficulties the exposure would have caused without too much damage. Or the blackmailer would have implicated themselves as well so would have kept quiet.

          Then there’s Brennan who likes to threaten people with treason or jail charges. But Nina totally played him–got what she wanted and didn’t give him anything. Yet Brennan has seemingly forgotten that he hasn’t seen any results from her.

  5. Humor Me

    Dear LIz – I love your column and exchanges on twitter! Thank you.
    I would love to see a column on what made Nelle the way she was and what is causing Willow to go “dark”.
    I have parsed this topic ad nausem on a message board: nature versus nuture with a dollop of bad people creating other bad people. That is what I believe made Nelle so delightly …evil. We did see a glimpse of her recognizing what Frank Benson did to her and her thought processes, but the damage was done.
    Willow on the other hand – has been a slow descent into “madness”. Do I think she is crazy – well, she was crazy like a fox to pull off that second assault on Drew. Willow begin like Nelle as a victim of her environment: the cult, and being a people pleaser. She never received mental health threatment for what she has gone through over the past 7 years since moving to PC. And it has manifested in her loosing the two people that she thought identified her: the children. So she broke and took it out on the one person who she percieved failed her: Drew.

    Nelle was never loved as a child – she was used by Frank. Willow however was loved by Harmony. She talked about the good times they had. I am not excusing anything about Harmony – but the difference between the two girls is that – Love.

    and then there is NIna – who believe that “blood” magically ties everyone, forgives everything, and creates a HEA ini her warped mind. Nina is a narcissist – she always had been. She was that way before Madelaine’s assault and the resulting coma. NIna, like Madelaine, like Liesl, does not have the natural ability to Nuture A Child: exhibit A – Charlotte. Exhibit B – all the behaviors and advice directed to the adult Willow upon learning their relationship. Nina does not have it in her to do what Willow needs – intense threrapy to become her own person, acknowledging what she has thought and done. Nina is unable to do that for herself. She still sees herself as a victim, and that is getting old.

    The Willow/ Nelle/ NIna story is a sad one. But it had the potenial for a beautiful positive relationship for two of them IF NIna had wanted to do better for her surviving daughter. It still has that potential – but NIna needs to become selfless, and Willow needs help.

    • Panhandlerann

      Harmony’s so-called “love” for Willow was of the strangest kind I can imagine: she pimped her out to a cult-leader!

  6. Panhandlerann

    MARK Darcy? The P&P character’s name is Fitzwilliam Darcy.

    • Kathie

      If I recall correctly, Mark Darcy is the name of the character from Bridget Jones’s diary that was based on Jane Austen’s Mr Darcy. Apparently, Helen Fielding thinks the ideal is still to have a man who solves all of your problems.

      • Liz Masters

        I never saw it that way in part because both Elizabeth Bennet and Bridget Jones were strong, independent women. Oh, they had their issues — Elizabeth was stubborn and opinionated, Bridget was a bit of a lush and poor judge of character — but overall, they both stood up for what they believed in even when society frowned on them.

        • Kathie

          Off topic from GH, but: I have no problem with Elizabeth Bennet. As you say, she was an intelligent, independent minded character who wasn’t going to do anything she didn’t want to do (aided in that last part by a sympathetic father; without that, you can take a stand but may very well end up like Richardson’s Clarissa). Due to her time, her power was limited by her gender, lack of money and societal mores. If she needed help (which she didn’t ask for) to sort out a problem beyond her means to solve, I have no issue with that. I’m sure it’s a debt she would find a way to pay back in one way or another.

          Bridget Jones’s Diary was entertaining enough, maybe the problem that Darcy solved at the end necessitated his expertise–I don’t remember the specifics–so OK. I thought the movie was funny as well. It was the second book that lost me. It was Bridget getting into one mess after another that her boyfriend had to fix for her. I think the point that did it for me was when someone sent her a bullet, she thought it was lipstick and Darcy had to explain it to her and work out whatever the response was. The second movie got poor reviews, and I was done. I believe there have been more books and movies since then; so if they’ve corrected the ding-dong who can’t figure anything out problem, my bad.

          Possibly controversial opinion: I think the idea of Mr. Darcy as a heartthrob is based on the charisma of the actors who have played him on film. I think that, save for Bailey, he’s the least interesting character in P&P. Developed only as much as he needed to be for the framework of the story Jane Austen was trying to tell. Which was a dissection of her times primarily via satire.

    • Liz Masters

      OMG! You are right! Curse you, Colin Firth! LOL (Truly, I love him)

      Two of my all-time favorite movies are Bridget Jones’ Diary and the BBC Pride and Prejudice (1995). Colin Firth played Mark Darcy in BJD, which was based on his role in P&P.
      My apologies for the confusion. I have corrected and changed it back to what my notes read — Mr. Darcy.

  7. Missez Premise

    Hey Liz!
    Thanks for the Shout-Out!
    Well, Monday’s Episode was fun!
    Anna: “You can’t be Faison! You’re dead! Your Brain is in a Jar!”
    Faison’s Fake Voice: “I Got Better!”

    So what is Suzanne’s actual Job Title?
    Brown Noser?

    Good job stabbing Drew, Willow!!
    I actually applauded and had to rewatch that scene a few times!
    What was in that syringe?
    You got one for Chase?
    Oh, great, Mikey’s going to be blamed for this as well.
    Nelle II the Sequel, indeed!!
    Black Widow Willow.

    Ack!! Tuesday’s Episode was Pre-Empted by the White House!
    Don’t get me started….

    Chase is Evidently Port Charles’ Latest Village Idiot.
    It used to be Cody, but Harrison Chase has Far Surpassed Cody’s, and Most Folks, Idiocy.
    Idiot Of The Year Award goes to Chase.
    And if BLQ doesn’t Smack some Sense into Chases’ Pea Brain, she’s next on the Idiot Parade.
    Or, she should just dump him.
    ~~~
    Not that anyone cares, but I think GH should FIRE Porthole’s Derriere, and make Terry Full Time CNO, or COO, or CEO, or Whatever the Frig she is.
    Better yet, make Britt Co-Chief with Terry.
    Just get Terry back on the screen!!
    ~~~
    So old Wax Face Cullum (I guess he was the “C”?) is going to ruin the Relationship between Stone Cold and The Britch before it even gets started?
    Right.
    The Writers Hate Us and We Can’t Have Nice Things.
    ~~~
    Speaking of Nice Things.
    So, Willow injected What? Pro-Stroke Medicine? into EwDrew’s Carotid Artery?
    Did they do a CT Scan?
    So, are they going to give him TPA?
    Tenecteplase?
    Is it a Bleeding Stroke?
    At least Willow did one smart thing, she got rid of the Evidence in the Sharps container.
    ~~~
    I Absolutely LOVE Liz’s Skirt she wore on Thursday.
    I would have liked it better with a different sweater, though.
    Perhaps the same sweater in a darker color.
    ~~~
    Agent Barbie is being put on the WSB Back Burner?
    You think she’s be happy, kinda like I was when the Judge finally dismissed me from Jury Duty!!

    Well, the look on Ninny’s face when Wallow said to her, “I just want to make sure my Husband gets the Treatment he Deserves!” says it all.
    She knows Black Widow Willow is the Root of EwDrew’s Downfall,
    ~~~~
    Nice Prison Cot Anna has there. At least they could have given her a Queen Sized Cot.
    UnDead Peter! Heiney! Whatever!!
    I was waiting for this.
    (Is it Real? Or is it Memorex?)
    Only the Writers (Who Hate Us, BTW) Know for Sure!
    And, because of this (The Writers Hating Us Thing), Britt is forced to reject Jason, loudly, and Waxy Cullum wasn’t even in earshot.
    ::Sigh::
    Nice Thing for Tony Geary they stuck in there.
    I would rather have more of that, and WAY less Undead Heiney.
    And Weeping Anna.
    Less of that, please….
    Geez, who will they dig up next?

    • Liz Masters

      You’re welcome! I always enjoy reading what you have to say every week. 🙂

  8. Kathie

    I think we have some medical professionals who read this column/comments; I’m wondering if anyone knows if air injected in the blood stream can cause a stroke? Or can an embolism present as a stroke?

    If yes, I’m thinking that would have been a good strategy for Willow. She would not have had to steal anything to inject Drew with (other than the syringe which may not be tracked) and no toxins to show up in the bloodstream. It also might explain why she called for help instead of waiting for Drew to die. A doctor would be focused on treatment before causation whereas a coroner would not have that distraction. Now that injection spot on his neck is healing up while he’s lying in the hospital bed. Unless Drew dies before it disappears or she did inject him with something that will show up in a tox screen, it will be very hard to prove what Willow did. Much like the games with Daisy.

    We’ll just have to wait for her luck to run out in whatever her next diabolical steps are. Which, eventually, it will. Most likely not before she lays waste to Chase’s life though.

  9. Kam

    Tracy doesn’t need to ask Willow for the Quartermaine heirlooms back that Drew stole. Tracy already got a court order saying that Drew had to give it back. Even though Drew and Martin told Tracy they would fight it, now that Drew’s incapacitated, the court order would stay in effect since he’s not around to fight it.

    I’m glad somebody else brought up Liz’s outfit on Thursday’s episode. It would have been better if they just had her in her hospital scrubs with a jacket or a sweater over it to show that she would eventually be going back to work later.

    • Liz Masters

      I meant as in, showing up with a truck and asking Willow to let her team inside to fetch them. At least, I presume he has them hidden in the basement. If they are in a storage unit then asking for the key/combo.

      That skirt was hideous, wasn’t it? The more I looked at it the more I became convinced that someone in wardrobe was mad at Becky.

  10. CeeGee

    Here’s what I don’t get about Willow giving Drew a stroke, assuming that she knew it wouldn’t kill him: If he’s incapacitated hasn’t she just tied herself forever to this albatross who will need constant care and sympathy? She can’t very well divorce him/abandon him after testifying under oath (and treating everyone to her public displays of anguish) about how deeply she loves him. And she’s a trained nurse so a bit difficult to sell shipping him off for someone else to take care of…

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