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natyxg

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Posts posted by natyxg

  1. 1 hour ago, LilyD said:

    I fully agree with your observation here. It probably didn’t happen overnight. It’s more like a gradual process where he slowly lost control over his wives and kids; something he couldn’t handle. Kody needs to feel in control and he needs to be “loved” and “worshipped”.
    The big turning point was the move to Flagstaff. The older kids didn’t follow him which was a blow to his ego. The wives spread over town, so he couldn’t control them as easily as he had. He was forced to spend more time in their houses  if he visited them because they were so much further apart. (In Vegas he could simply pop in for a short visit and pretend he was involved) The wives became more independent and discovered they didn’t really need him, which annoyed the heck out of him. And eventually, they all abandoned HIM. 
    He literally felt how his control and influence waning, together with the respect and love he always took for granted. He couldn’t handle that, which turned him into an angry and very nasty monster…


     

    I don't even watch this show really, but occasionally watch clips and I genuinely wonder if he got a midlife crisis and is taking steroids of some kind that are making him crazy. He reminds me of this SNL sketch.

     

    • Like 1
    • LOL 10
  2. On 2/14/2022 at 9:25 AM, LisaM said:

    Late to the party - I binged the entire series tonight on Peacock. I thought it was quite good but was prepared for a twist at the end which never came. 

    I've never seen Suranne Jones in anything before (turned off Scott & Bailey during 1st episode) and thought she was terrific. I wouldn't mind seeing a sequel with Jones and Rose Leslie continuing in their detective roles - on land this time. :)

    You're in luck! Season Two is coming out this year (on BBC, don't know about Peacock). This time the mystery has to do with the air force.

    https://twitter.com/bbcpress/status/1702592961857384657

     

    • Like 1
    • Applause 1
  3. 19 hours ago, kwnyc said:

    Now you've got me thinking about that 9-1-1 episode where a pregnant woman was on her way to the hospital and the car was struck by lightning or something and the baby POPPED out, and they had to find the baby, cut the cord, and get the woman out of the crushed car! Oh, and Buck got struck by lightning and died, but only for 3 minutes, and it turned him into a math genius. 

    🤯🤯🤯

     

    • Like 1
    • LOL 1
  4. What a dumb car accident. What the hell?

    I found the wedding underwhelming. Like it was trying very hard to be many things, but it all felt superficial and not truly emotive. I wanted to feel happier for Trixie than I did. Maybe it's the Matthew effect, I don't know.

    • Like 3
    • Applause 1
  5. 10 hours ago, LtKelley said:

    I mean, you're not wrong :)

    And its not helped that his every storyline is Matthew in sad circumstances. He's having a baby, but his lovely wife is DYING. He's rich but had NO IDEA his wealth was destroying the lives of the people. He tries to be nice to the squatting hippies and then has to help deliver a freaky outside intestines baby. He's just stopping by to see his ex alkie girlfriend, and there's a giant train disaster. His dad comes to visit, and is a total ass monkey to him, and then DIES. 

    He's got the name Matthew, he's rich and a lord and I completely expect him to die in a car wreck the very day Trixie has a baby. 

    🤣 True, but even in happy moments it's like his eyes are dead and his voice is sad. It's such a pity because on paper I love him for Trixie, but he's super miscast.

    8 hours ago, libgirl2 said:

    he was not as much as the swinging vicar on Agatha Raisin. 

    He was on Agatha Raisin? I have no recollection whatsoever.

    *runs to google*

  6. On 3/21/2023 at 8:00 PM, Badger said:

    Dr. Turner said the kind of breast cancer she had would not have responded to surgery.

    I thought that was very weird and maybe a nod to the fact that they're in the 1960s and they might not know enough about it. But inflammatory breast cancer (which she obviously had) is VERY rare and also VERY aggressive, with a very low survival rate (iirc). So of course the breast is removed and fast, I imagine.

    Anyway, they kind of turned it around a little towards the end by making it a visit to her family what made Lucille leave instead of something worse and I was glad for that, but man what a depressing story they were giving her up until that point.

    • Like 5
  7. On 3/19/2023 at 8:24 PM, debraran said:

    I admit I never liked the Trixie love affair, so predictable etc. Am I the only one who thinks they don't have any chemistry?

    I like Trixie and Mathew on paper, but I agree that they don't have any chemistry. I think it's the actor who plays Mathew. I think he's handsome, but very lifeless. I keep wondering if the show wants me to believe that they're doomed or if they're really meant to be a great love story, but Mathew just cancels out everything with his dead energy.

    • Like 3
    • Useful 1
  8. 2 hours ago, kaygeeret said:

    Since the writing in this episode seemed 'off' to me, has the show changed showrunners, writers or... ????

    If they don't seem to be able to pull it together, as it were, AND Lucille and Cyril leave......I may have to put the show on the back burner.

    Never thought I would feel this way about the show.

     

     

    I felt the same way. I think I've never actively disliked an episode of Call the midwife before. There were way too many plots happening, so nothing really came together and everything felt rushed. I find Lucille's story very depressing all of the sudden, both her depression post miscarriage and the sudden race stuff that they threw in there. Sorry, but after I don't know how many years of Lucille and Cyril there with very little or no problems (as well as tons of immigrants featured in the show over the years), all of that felt forced and awkward. It will be very sad if Lucille and Cyril end up leaving the show in this depressing way (I hope they don't). Then there was the suddenly racist woman giving birth who just as suddenly stopped being racist... really, it was all very badly done. There was also the weird story of the lying nun that... everyone is okay with her being a liar and she's gonna keep lying? That's weird. It was also weird to spend the whole episode going on about Trixie meeting Mathews parents, and then... we don't see the actual meeting? Wat?

    The one story I liked a bit was the one about the lesbians, but it felt lost in the middle of this mess. I was surprised we didn't even get to see the one with cancer actually die.

    • Like 7
  9. Well, this season was a bunch of pretentious bullshit. It's been a while since I've hated a character as much as I hated Jamie. By episode 4 whenever he started speaking I wanted someone to just kill him already. I enjoyed reading some of the threads here, I laughed out loud for real.

    I tried, genuinely tried, to follow along Jamie's interminable speeches and incoherent actions to try to understand what the fuck was his deal, how the hell was he supposed to make sense. The only thing that I ultimately understood about him was his loneliness and his desire to connect with someone who "got it". Besides that, I felt that he made no sense. His existential questions about life and death were understandable, but his reactions made no sense, specially the part about him becoming a serial killer. Even if there is no God to stop you and punish you, empathy should stop people from hurting others. And what exactly did his sadism change in terms of there being "nothing but THIS"? What does it have to do with anything? How do you go from "oh there is nothing but death awaiting us" to "I'm gonna go kill some people?" He also called Nick because he hated his life and was struggling, but then later he held on to his old life desperately, so I guess he did like it after all, eh?  I don't mean when he was afraid to die, but when he tried to keep his job and marriage and carry on like nothing happened.

    And then, after ALL of that, when he's dying he shits his pants just like everyone else, so his entire story, the murders, the thrill seeking, the interminable speeches led nowhere and could've been skipped... maybe, just maybe you psycho person, if you had just let things well enough alone you might have had decades of life left. And the people you killed were also afraid when you killed them, so 🖕you!

    Augh! Angry Hate GIF

    On top of Jamie's pretentious bs, there was also everyone acting like a moron just to keep pushing this pretentious bs.

    I had planned to finish the last two seasons of this show, but after this one I don't know if I want to.

  10. On 3/1/2020 at 11:38 AM, Lady of nod said:

    Did anyone else want Jamie to just jump off the damn building? 

    Yes!

    Anyway, Jamie is insufferable. Some of his stuff about the meaninglessness of life or thinking about what the point of it all is and fearing that nothing happens when we die are not completely off the mark. I think they're things that people do worry about at times. They're things we do fear. Maybe not everyone, but I wouldn't think that it's as completely outside of the scope of the average human experience as he seems to. I imagine it's a crisis of faith that a lot of people have when, for example, they get ill. So for that reason I thought this might be an interesting season, because it seemed to be interested in a dark topic that we tend to avoid, but that IS in the back of our minds. What if there's nothing more? What if we just die and there's nothing? What's the point of anything, then? Etc, etc. 

    But the guy will just not. shut. up. On and on and on with the speeches. Dude, you're so obsessed with death, then just jump off the damn building and be done with it. Spare us. By now he's not compelling, he's repetitive and tedious.

    I also don't see how one goes from those feelings to KILLING PEOPLE. Jamie and Nick are just psychopaths who think they're better than other people, and who lack empathy. The stuff about the meaningless of life is just an excuse to do bad things with impunity, things that give them a rush. It's one thing to give yourself near death experiences, which seems to be what Jamie was gonna do when the dug the grave (I think that's what they did in college together). It's another thing TO KILL PEOPLE. Wtf does that have to do with anything?

    Harry spending the whole night chasing Jamie then deciding at that very moment to take a pain pill that he knew would make him sleep (he had even said so in a previous episode) was contrived and ridiculous.

  11. Well, so that's the end of TWD (sorta). I thought it was okay. About as good as one can expect from this show, though not truly good or truly satisfying, I guess.

    The story stops simply because the writers decided to leave it there, so they scrambled to try to create a sense of completion and tried to give things some sort of meaning. But at this point I can't help but think that there's no reason why this should feel like an ending. There's no reason why the Commonwealth might not collapse, or for the same thing that always happened to happen again. I guess, theoretically, that's true of every story, but with this one I feel it much more keenly. You spend 11 seasons highlighting the horrors of human nature, well, hard to believe that was solved by the end.

    In general, I thought the entire plot of the Commonwealth was beyond dumb.

    It was dumb that Lance was obsessed with getting Alexandria, Hilltop and Oceanside when he literally had the entire empty world at his disposal. If he wanted to create new communities for the Commonwealth all he had to do was pick a spot, clean it up and get people there. The end.

    Trying to tell some sort of revolution plot for the Commonwealth to me also didn't work because while the Miltons were corrupt and harmful to some people, for most of the 50,000 people there life would've been normal life. Flawed perhaps, but the alternative was ZOMBIES. I rolled my eyes so hard at people caring so much about some random people being disappeared by the government and being willing to REVOLT about it when there are ZOMBIES out there. If they wanted to tell that story, at least show starving people and show a totalitarian government that people are genuinely afraid of. Instead, it seemed like using the Commonwealth was an allegory to criticize OUR world, I guess? But again... THE ZOMBIES out there make it just not work.

    Another problem I had with this season, although I guess it could apply to most seasons, is the fact that our "heroes" don't really have a real moral compass to follow (only "survive"). The show just pretends that they do in order to paint the villain of the season as the bad ones. But most of what Pamela did I could see our heroes do as well, with perhaps the exception of bringing the horde to the city as a distraction (and her actions after that). But it bothered me to see them kill so many people this season, then act all indignant at the Commonwealth. Those soldiers they killed without remorse or doubt had families too, for example. Carol obsessed over killing Alpha when she killed Henry, and got people killed in the process (right? iirc). Is what Pamela wanted to do with Eugene all that different? I always had the same problem with the Negan/Maggie interminable plot from hell. Everyone lost people in the apocalypse, and it was grating to me how Glen was given so much more importance. Maggie herself did similar things to what Negan did, and the beef with Negan started with them killing a bunch of sleeping saviors who hadn't done anything to them (yet). But somehow killing Glen was a bigger sin than all the other sins and we must pretend that Maggie's grief is somehow bigger and more important that everyone else's. It is, but just because the writers chose to, and it grates (to me).

    I was glad to see Lydia survive. I really liked that actress, even though she got little to do after Alpha. Aaron was a nice dude, and I wish he had found a new husband. Maybe they could've thrown him a bone in the last episode. If they're in a 50,000 people city there's more chances of finding other gay men there. Glad to see Magna and Miko (I think they were called?) reconcile. Poor Rosita, but I guess someone big had to die.

    I never would've thought that Eugene and Gabriel were gonna have the most comprehensive character arcs of the show, but here were are. Heh.

    I understand that Michonne leaving her children behind was because the actress left, but boy do I think badly of her whenever they remind me that she's out there looking for Rick, lol.

    • Like 3
  12. I enjoyed the episode. I specially liked that Trixie and Matthew finally happened. It was telegraphed from the moment when his wife died, but I liked that they stretched it out for a respectable amount of time and tried to tell a good story about Matthew the rich guy becoming a better man thanks to her.

    Now let's see if they actually do make it to the altar.

    • Like 9
  13. 8 hours ago, maxmama said:

    Kody is becoming unhinged and bizarre.

    I don't really watch this show. I only watched the first season or two back when it came out, but lately clips from it have shown up on my social media and I've become curious. So I've watched some clips. I've found Kody quite shocking. I remember him being slimy back in the beginning, but now he looks legit insane. And the scary type of insane. Is he on drugs or something? Maybe roid rage or something? Yikes!

    • Like 8
    • Applause 6
    • LOL 2
    • Love 3
  14. Quote

    Why didn't Ben or Michaela try to grab the sapphire from Angelina while she was distracted in the Calling with Cal? 

    YES! I almost yelled at my tv. 🤬

    Quote

    Did Cal actually help anything since Angelina apparently now has the sapphire embedded in her hand, now?

    I thought the whole point of that was to make Cal and Angelina both living sapphires, basically. Though I don't really know how the scar meant that Cal had sapphire inside of him or whatever. But I assume that's the idea.

    • Like 1
  15. Quote

    You know the show is not perfect and has some issues, but I enjoyed it.  It is some fast-paced popcorn fun that has embraced its craziness.  The cast also really meshes together well.  In interviews, the cast says how much they enjoy each other and feels like family, and I think that actually might be more than the normal PR.  There is something genuine about the chemistry between the characters and how they seem to care about each other.

    I like the characters and the actors, but have always felt the real heart of the show is, or should be, the people drama (using the extraordinary situation as context for the people drama). My favorite scene from season one was Grace and Olive running through the parking lot to get to Ben and Cal after they came back. I thought it was such an emotional and wild situation, someone you loved coming back from the dead, after everything Grace and Olive had suffered during those five years. On the other hand, the whole mystery is just a convoluted mess and I don't even bother following it.

    So I liked the first few episodes when we were dealing more with Ben's grief and his obsession with getting Eden back. I thought that was quite emotional. I liked the scattered flashbacks, too. Then halfway through the season we got sent back full time into "the mystery" and meh. Hard to get invested when you know that they're just pulling everything out of their ass right at that moment, and they will keep coming up with stuff to doom the day and then to save it, whenever needed. It reminds me of Lost Girl in that regard.

    • Like 1
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