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S02.E06: Dreadnought


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Kate puts her best foot forward after pillow talk with Hal forces her to face hard truths, and Vice President Penn offers a blunt lesson in geopolitics.

Premiere Date: October 31, 2024      Netflix   

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I'll say upfront that yes, it is completely ridiculous that Hal managed to kill the President with his news about the VP.  It makes a great twist, but it is also very silly.  Also, by the end of the season, how much actual time has passed since Hal was blown up?  For someone who went through extremely traumatic surgery, it felt like he's almost recovered in just a couple of weeks time.

Also, is it wrong that I feel like the criticism we sometimes hear about Kate, that she is out of her depth as Ambassador, is right? 

Allison Janney was excellent.  So much scheming and she really did run rings around Kate.  I'm curious how it will work out next season.  

Edited by txhorns79
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So if Grace is now president, is Billie out? And will Kate be recalled as Ambassador? Or will Kate keep her position to buy her silence? Kate better up her game because right now both Grace and Margaret have been out maneuvering her.
 

The sight of all the Secret Service agents ( I assume) running out to protect the new President was a great visual.

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20 hours ago, txhorns79 said:

Also, is it wrong that I feel like the criticism we sometimes hear about Kate, that she is out of her depth as Ambassador, is right? 

I would have to rewatch both seasons to confirm but I also have a feeling that everything the entire US team has done to try to help has had the exact opposite effect. Having said that, I may be suffering from confirmation bias knowing that this show shares DNA with Homeland. Carrie's CIA in Homeland were experts in Making Things Worse and Carrie was the absolute vanguard of this.

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1 hour ago, dwmarch said:

I would have to rewatch both seasons to confirm but I also have a feeling that everything the entire US team has done to try to help has had the exact opposite effect.

It does feel like they are always a step behind, or being played by someone they should obviously not trust.  As a side note, I did appreciate Grace pointing out to Kate that she looked like a complete mess.  Kate needs someone to tell her every now and then that it's okay to comb her hair, and not look like she slept in her clothes.   

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Over the last few episodes, it seems like Kate bounces around to eventually agree with the person with whom she last speaks. I would like her to have more independent thought and agency next season. Unless that is a conscious character choice. I especially wish Hal wouldn’t somehow always have the right answer, which of course is different than Kate’s initial thought. As it is, she’s not that much better than Trowbridge.

ETA. Actually, I am offended by the portrayal of Kate (at least this season, maybe it was better last season). Hal seems to know everything, have all the secret facts, the right strategy, etc., and Kate eventually always does what Hal says she should do. In addition to my observation above, I think maybe I do not respect Kate, which I don’t think the show is going for. 

Edited by LaDuchesse
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On 11/3/2024 at 1:15 AM, LaDuchesse said:

Over the last few episodes, it seems like Kate bounces around to eventually agree with the person with whom she last speaks. I would like her to have more independent thought and agency next season.

At this point, I don't understand how Kate has this job at all. She is constantly being led around by the nose by someone: Eidra, Hal, Roylin, the VP, and even the PM sometimes. The only people she shows authority with are Austin, Stuart, and the PM, and they all successfully push back when they get sick of her. With Hal she says mean shit to him, but that's weakness, not power.

I really did not like seeing Austin constantly bowing to other people's will this season. Kate and embassy staff repeatedly summoned him, and the PM and his wife were so disrespectful (though they are that way with everyone). He is an important person with a big job. The PM is his boss, okay, but who TF is Kate to be giving him orders?

Also, I get that Stuart is reeling from their breakup and his injury, but he needs to give Eidra some space. Can't they talk when they're not on duty?

Edited by mrsbagnet
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22 hours ago, Mindthinkr said:

I did not expect that ending. 

Right? Someone needs to make a gif of Keri Russell's reaction at the beginning of the episode, when her character learned that the president wasn't aware of the VP's involvement in the explosion. Her WTF exclamation was perfect. And similar to the reaction I had at the end of the show.

Edited by A.Ham
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On 11/2/2024 at 12:54 AM, txhorns79 said:

I'll say upfront that yes, it is completely ridiculous that Hal managed to kill the President with his news about the VP.

Ridiculous is the only way to describe it. Like Hal told him and he just keeled over and with a few minutes they got a doctor to pronounce him dead? Not taking him to a hospital to try and resuscitate him? It's probably a good thing they didn't show it since it would make me laugh.

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I did enjoy this season (I honestly can't remember if 1st season was better since it was quite a while ago) but I also think the writing was weak.
During the whole thing, it felt like if I was watching a serious version of "Veep" or the "Thick of it" (especially every time the English PM was talking, usually insulting everything and everyone) and when  the couples were arguing I  had "Moonlighting" vibes.  And the end of the season was SO VEEP that I started giggling.

On a serious note, the  whole "its ok for you to get sacrificed when the American need to save the world" makes me puke.
And even more seriously, why everyone thinks, or rather uses the argument, that the Russians want to conquer the whole world? I just can't accept this as an excuse for anything. 

Edited by Zaffy
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On 11/2/2024 at 3:07 PM, Good Queen Jane said:

So if Grace is now president, is Billie out? And will Kate be recalled as Ambassador? Or will Kate keep her position to buy her silence? Kate better up her game because right now both Grace and Margaret have been out maneuvering her.
 

The sight of all the Secret Service agents ( I assume) running out to protect the new President was a great visual.

So many questions! Maybe Grace would want Kate to be VP (she'll need a new VP, after all!). Or maybe she's ready to dump Kate (and Hal) in favor of someone easier to control, even in England. And maybe someone will "take care" of Margaret before that story gets out.

Agree, that visual was fabulous! 

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On 11/5/2024 at 8:23 PM, Kel Varnsen said:

Ridiculous is the only way to describe it. Like Hal told him and he just keeled over and with a few minutes they got a doctor to pronounce him dead? Not taking him to a hospital to try and resuscitate him? It's probably a good thing they didn't show it since it would make me laugh.

 

We don't really know how much time elapsed though between the call, President Rayburn collapsing, his death being called, and Hal running out of the inner room of the SCIF and pounding on the glass to demand the ability to call Kate.

In the real world White House, there are doctors right there. The White House Medical Unit — which is housed in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building and is part of the White House compound — is a huge operation. They have the ability to resuscitate, right there.

It has emergency medical and trauma capability, and provides healthcare not only to the President, Vice President, and their families, but to the staff, and members of the military as well. It certainly has crash carts, defibrillators and other emergency treatment necessities. It's like an urgent care center. 

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3 hours ago, General Days said:

 

We don't really know how much time elapsed though between the call, President Rayburn collapsing, his death being called, and Hal running out of the inner room of the SCIF and pounding on the glass to demand the ability to call Kate.

In the real world White House, there are doctors right there. The White House Medical Unit — which is housed in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building and is part of the White House compound — is a huge operation. They have the ability to resuscitate, right there.

It has emergency medical and trauma capability, and provides healthcare not only to the President, Vice President, and their families, but to the staff, and members of the military as well. It certainly has crash carts, defibrillators and other emergency treatment necessities. It's like an urgent care center. 

But unless all the resuscitation stuff happened on camera how did Hal know that the president was dead before the VPs security detail. Trying to bring him back on camera makes no sense and Billie or someone calling Hal back to tell him what happened before the VP finds out makes no sense either.

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34 minutes ago, Kel Varnsen said:

But unless all the resuscitation stuff happened on camera how did Hal know that the president was dead before the VPs security detail. Trying to bring him back on camera makes no sense and Billie or someone calling Hal back to tell him what happened before the VP finds out makes no sense either.

This was more than a bit odd, but sort of still within the relm of possibilities, far-fetched though they might be. What I found perhaps even less credible (from a few episodes ago) is that the UK PM would lose all control and brutally attact a seventyish women. Though I suspect the writers may be protraying the PM as possibly of working class or middle class origin (?), how any British male politician - posh or otherwise - could attack a British women of a certain age and in that manner is beyond comprehension. This is the antithesis of having a stiff upper lip.

But points for the shocking elevation of the former VP. No one saw that coming.

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17 minutes ago, ahpny said:

This was more than a bit odd, but sort of still within the relm of possibilities, far-fetched though they might be. What I found perhaps even less credible (from a few episodes ago) is that the UK PM would lose all control and brutally attact a seventyish women. Though I suspect the writers may be protraying the PM as possibly of working class or middle class origin (?), how any British male politician - posh or otherwise - could attack a British women of a certain age and in that manner is beyond comprehension. This is the antithesis of having a stiff upper lip.

Apparently world leaders, people who must know a ton of crazy government secrets, can't handle being told shocking news. When one of them hears it, it sends him into a homicidal rage, and for another one it kills him instantly.

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3 hours ago, Kel Varnsen said:

But unless all the resuscitation stuff happened on camera how did Hal know that the president was dead before the VPs security detail. Trying to bring him back on camera makes no sense and Billie or someone calling Hal back to tell him what happened before the VP finds out makes no sense either.

We don't know when Hal finally did get a phone and got to call Kate. We don't know how long he waited in the SCIF. If someone from Oval Office called him back in the SCIF. We don't have any of those details. 

I see what you see. I just don't think we have to think that everything happened immediately. 

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12 hours ago, General Days said:

We don't know when Hal finally did get a phone and got to call Kate. We don't know how long he waited in the SCIF. If someone from Oval Office called him back in the SCIF. We don't have any of those details. 

I see what you see. I just don't think we have to think that everything happened immediately. 

But the fact that he knew at all, and knew before the VP is surprising. He didn't tell Kate that the president collapsed, he told her that the president was dead. Who would tell him that and why would they?

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2 hours ago, Kel Varnsen said:

But the fact that he knew at all, and knew before the VP is surprising. He didn't tell Kate that the president collapsed, he told her that the president was dead. Who would tell him that and why would they?

 

If you were on the phone with POTUS and he collapsed, would you hang up and go about your business while hoping for the best, or would you stay on the line as long as you could/wait for a call back, to find out what happened?

The only way I'd hang up, would be if the White House had already hung up on me. And if I had the ability, I'd probably call some deputy in the Oval and ask them to keep me apprised.

Who would tell Hal?

Billie Appiah might tell him, for one. After all Billie told Hal they were considering Kate for VP, before anyone even told Kate she was in the running. And there's a strong implication in-universe that Hal planted the idea of replacing VP Grace Penn with Kate, in the first place.

If Billie was present for Hal's call to Rayburn, and now knows that the VP was the brains behind Margaret Roylin engineering the attack on the British ship, Billie might have even told Hal to stay put until they knew President Rayburn's fate.

Why would [whoever] tell Hal?

As Kate says, Hal is "magic." He is uniquely persuasive (and when Kate's hating him, she might say "manipulative"). This is the kind of singular situation where everyone would feel stunned.

In such a state, people might be more receptive to someone who managed to say, "Keep me on the line," or "Call me back in the SCIF," with enough authority in their voice (I don't mean official authority, I mean his charisma) that the other stunned people obeyed.

Hal's been a lot of rough situations overseas. As panicked as he seemed by the time he was demanding a phone, he may well have been one of the cooler heads in the immediate aftermath of President Rayburn's collapse.

Imagine the Chaos in the Oval

The president keels. Someone discovers it (or perhaps someone like Billie was present when it happened). Maybe Hal tells them, "I need to stay on the line/need a call back, because we're in the middle of a crisis here and the Ambassador is with the VP. They need to know what's happening ASAP."

Maybe the WH staff just listened to Hal, because when they were brushing and flossing that morning, they had no idea POTUS was going drop dead before lunch, and Hal sounded like he knows what he's talking about.

All I'm saying is, we don't (yet?) know how it all played out. They gave us very little in way of action or clues as to how (and how quickly) is all happened. 

 

 

Edited by General Days
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The president's sudden death was a clever cliffhanging plot device, because who saw it coming?  Not I and not the characters.

Unless that's not what really happened....

But I love the idea of more Alison Janney on my TV. Might even make up for the wretched Palm Royale she's in.

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Can anyone explain to me who exactly is Billie?  I must have missed (or more likely, forgotten) what her role/title is.  For the longest time I thought she was the VP (until Allison Janney showed up)!
 

Also, what Billie’s connection to Stuart?   I seem to remember a conversation or two where Billie seemed to be more personally concerned about Stuart than she would for a colleague.  I got the impression they were closer in some way.  Maybe not, just curious if anyone knows.  Thanks.

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1 hour ago, LoveIsJoy said:

Can anyone explain to me who exactly is Billie?  I must have missed (or more likely, forgotten) what her role/title is.  For the longest time I thought she was the VP (until Allison Janney showed up)!
 

Also, what Billie’s connection to Stuart?   I seem to remember a conversation or two where Billie seemed to be more personally concerned about Stuart than she would for a colleague.  I got the impression they were closer in some way.  Maybe not, just curious if anyone knows.  Thanks.

Billie is the White House chief of staff, so she's closely involved with everything happening there. A Netflix fan wiki says that she and Stuart used to work on campaigns together. 

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5 hours ago, LoveIsJoy said:

Can anyone explain to me who exactly is Billie?  I must have missed (or more likely, forgotten) what her role/title is.  For the longest time I thought she was the VP (until Allison Janney showed up)!
 

Also, what Billie’s connection to Stuart?   I seem to remember a conversation or two where Billie seemed to be more personally concerned about Stuart than she would for a colleague.  I got the impression they were closer in some way.  Maybe not, just curious if anyone knows.  Thanks.

 

This is Billie, to the left of President Rayburn. 

 

The_Diplomat_101_-_Billie_and_William.webp

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There are no clear panels in SCIFs.  Hal doesn't have a clearance so there would have been someone with him.

I thought they were going to make it (blowing up the ship) Dennison's big idea, just because of Hal's reaction to Kate calling him a "good man."

Great way to end the season - no one's going to forget that while we wait 1-2 years for the next season.

 

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It’s a fun ride but this show bears little resemblance to the world.  VPs don’t run their own off-book ops.  Most presidents keep a short leash, give them a specific portfolio.

Grace wouldn’t be able to just drop in on the embassy in England impromptu, let alone conspire with foreign parties.  Yeah the president had a heart attack and died but if he didn’t, he’d fire her.

Also don’t buy that NATOs strategy vs. Russian nuclear subs rests on a single base in Scotland.

But Kate was shown to be so out of her depth, about to accuse the UK PM of the conspiracy.  Once Trowbridge learned that Kate was trying to entrap him, he wouldn’t just be cross with her.  That alone would cost her the post.

Then Grace showed how Kate was still just a “hayseed,” ignorant about the world — at least the world depicted in the show — not to mention ignorant in how to present herself if she was going to be VP.

It’s been a humbling season for Kate.  Next season she will prove that she belongs in the big leagues?

Though Kate has been going back and forth about what she wants.

”I don’t want to be VP”

”Yes I do want to be VP”

” No I wont be VP, Grace Penn should be VP”

”If the president asks me to serve my country, I will.”

 

For Keri Russell, Kate Wiler isn’t different from Felicity “Ben or Noel” Porter.

She seems to gravitate to playing women who don’t know what they want, can’t decide what they want, like the subject in The Bangles’ “If She Knew What She Wants.”

 

 

 

 

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