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S02.E01: Ovaltine


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On 1/19/2025 at 3:10 PM, aghst said:

People like amenities at work, like Aeron chairs and a couple of 30-inch color flat screens for their work station, fancy coffee and snacks provided gratis, not doled out by a boss with the fake smile, only as rewards for Pavlovian performance.

The innies don't really know what nice stuff is! They've never even had any coffee besides what Lumon provides.

(You've just got to not think too hard about this. The idea that severance erases all personal history of the outie's life from the innie's memory but not their core competencies and basic knowledge of less personal stuff like language, math, etc, feels like there must be a ton of stuff in a gray area that isn't 100% personal but isn't 100% "impersonal" knowledge either.)

On 1/20/2025 at 6:12 PM, aghst said:

Worth it or could they have used that time for other things? Or maybe finish this season and have it become available a couple of months sooner?

Stiller and Scott broke it down: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VOeFQ2ghR3U

It's not that it took 5 months of time. It's that over the course of shooting s2, the sets were moved around (walls removed from the hallways and such). The opening sequence was planned out from the start and then they scheduled shots to take place as the set was reconfigured. So the ten shots were gradually accomplished during the (five month?) shooting of s2. But sure, the rehearsal time and work with the different camera rigs probably did eat some some extra time.

But yes, worth it IMO. It's a hell of a sequence and I found it compelling.

Last thing: that opening run ends with a guy in the background looking at Mark S while Mark contemplates the now-missing Wellness room. I've seen various speculation elsewhere about who that might be, but in the credits he's listed as "Man in Hallway" and was played by Adam Jepsen. Presumably he'll be in focus and closer to the camera in some future episode.

 

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6 hours ago, arc said:

(You've just got to not think too hard about this. The idea that severance erases all personal history of the outie's life from the innie's memory but not their core competencies and basic knowledge of less personal stuff like language, math, etc, feels like there must be a ton of stuff in a gray area that isn't 100% personal but isn't 100% "impersonal" knowledge either.)

An earlier version of the pilot (someone linked to it here in the Season 1 thread) discusses this a little bit. Basically, the innies are deliberately left with "general world knowledge" and programmed to understand how to use the Lumon computers. Which raises even MORE questions, honestly!

But yes -- you just have to accept the premise of the show and run with it.

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(edited)
7 hours ago, arc said:

You've just got to not think too hard about this. The idea that severance erases all personal history of the outie's life from the innie's memory but not their core competencies and basic knowledge of less personal stuff like language, math, etc, feels like there must be a ton of stuff in a gray area that isn't 100% personal but isn't 100% "impersonal" knowledge either.

Yeah, innie Irving miraculously knew how to drive! At night, even. 

Edited by AstridM
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19 hours ago, Kirbyrun said:

An interesting conundrum — what if Innie Dylan says, “I quit,” but Outie Dylan doesn’t respect that decision and goes back to work anyway? Whose decision would Lumon respect? Technically the employment contract is with the Outie, who gets paid, right?

This is where I struggle with the premise, because I can't wrap my head around the Innie/Outie being one person. If you are severed, do you wake up as an Innie? Or do you just go on with your life as an Outie with big blank spots eight hours a day? I can't quite grasp the concept of "self" in this situation. It seems like you'd become one or the other.

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2 hours ago, iMonrey said:

This is where I struggle with the premise, because I can't wrap my head around the Innie/Outie being one person. If you are severed, do you wake up as an Innie? Or do you just go on with your life as an Outie with big blank spots eight hours a day? I can't quite grasp the concept of "self" in this situation. It seems like you'd become one or the other.

The premise doesn't posit the existence of a separate organ of consciousness, just separate sets of memories that presumably inform the same fundamental consciousness. In a basic Cartesian sense it's the same "self," in the same way that a person with amnesia doesn't become a different person because they don't remember their former life. The same person/mind/soul/whatever that was remembering is now not-remembering.

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(edited)

Well, the innies have been building their own new memories, limited as they may be. So in a sense, they are developing into slightly different persons.

Didn't Mark say something along the lines of, "We're the same persons... -ish"?

PS: I wanted to respond to a post I can't find right now. It said something like, "What are they, 5 years old?!" Well, yes! Or rather, I think some are younger. Hasn't Mark been severed for 2 years? And Helly is practically a newborn. Not in terms of cognitive/ physical abilities, but in terms of experiences. They haven't been disappointed about 500 times like any person their real age, so of course they'll be more gullibe and naive. It's part of what makes them endearing to me.

PPS: Bring back Bert!

Edited by ofmd
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5 hours ago, iMonrey said:

This is where I struggle with the premise, because I can't wrap my head around the Innie/Outie being one person. If you are severed, do you wake up as an Innie? Or do you just go on with your life as an Outie with big blank spots eight hours a day? I can't quite grasp the concept of "self" in this situation. It seems like you'd become one or the other.

It’s like a much more extreme version of those situations where one does something and then later has no conscious memory of it. It’s somewhat common for people to experience driving home in a fugue state, for example.

from the outie’s POV, they enter a down elevator at the start of their work day and then a perceptual moment later the elevator opens back up on the ground floor and it’s about eight hours later.

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Do all the Innies know about reintegration or reversal of severance?

Does Innie Mark know Petey on the outside, that Petey tried to re-integrate and died, maybe because of the reintegration procedure or maybe not?

Because if any of them know that reintegration is a possibility, some may be interested in pursuing it or at least finding out about it.

That interest would reflect that they don't like severance, their work inside.

Also, we don't know how well they're paid,  Maybe money isn't a motivation for them.  For instance, Mark opted to try because he was depressed or not dealing with the loss of Gemma.

But it's interesting that all the rewards Milchick offers are non-monetary.  In every other workplace, people do care about things like bonuses, raises, etc.

The little perks are nice, maybe office parties, maybe  them giving you nice coffee and snacks, maybe the quality of the cafeteria.

But most workers prioritize monetary compensation above all else.  So it's interesting that Milchick only ever gives them non-monetary.  The pineapple bobbing makes for a fun animation but most workers would think that it's some BS substitute for bonuses or raises.

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1 hour ago, Kirbyrun said:

Because the innies have no use for money. There’s nowhere to spend it. The outies get to spend money, money earned by the innies. But the innies are only motivated by what they can experience while at work. 

That's perfect for Lumon.

But they have to have some incentive to continue with that work, which is drudgery defined, staring at those depressing screens all day.

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7 hours ago, ofmd said:

Never watched Yellowjackets for some reason.

Don't!

5 hours ago, arc said:

from the outie’s POV, they enter a down elevator at the start of their work day and then a perceptual moment later the elevator opens back up on the ground floor and it’s about eight hours later.

For the Outie it's basically business as usual except that they skip forward in time eight hours every day. I can see the motivation for that for some. For the Innie it's one long, monotonous and weird day that never ends. That sounds awful. You'd think the Outie would want to know what's happening to them before agreeing to that. And I still can't quite grasp being both rather than one or the other. It seems like you would "wake up" after the severance procedure as one or the other. I'd be terrified of waking up and finding myself trapped at work forever.

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