Where's the praising and extolling of my virtues? Where's the love?

Host ,'Not Fade Away'


Lovesick, my Ass!  

[NAFDA] Discussion of all Wonderfalls episodes, including the unaired ones. When discussing Wonderfalls, anything goes. Safe-words and white fonting are not needed. Spoilers for other shows are verboten. Posts with offers to buy, sell, or trade copies of episodes will be deleted.


Kat - May 17, 2004 2:38:14 pm PDT #480 of 668
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

And then, I almost met ita's fate. I turned my head and Lori's foot was a centimeter from my nose. She be verra flexible.

I wonder why Lori was trying to kick on the Krav-ers?


Kat - May 17, 2004 2:39:17 pm PDT #481 of 668
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

I hardly freaked at all until about 10 miles outside Santa Clarita.

This is good. Though I wish you could have made it to your parking spot before a freak out occurred. I'm really grateful that you braved the freeway to come. Especially since it's so scary now.


Kristen - May 17, 2004 2:43:31 pm PDT #482 of 668

I think part of it is that I'm not used to how short the new car is. So it feels like they're closer to my bumper than they really are.

Though I do wish people would get the hang of slower traffic to the right. Pass on the left. If I'm going the speed limit and I'm in the right lane, you really shouldn't be zooming up on my ass.

ETA: Also, I would have been even more sad to miss the festivities completely.


Kat - May 17, 2004 2:49:22 pm PDT #483 of 668
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

yeah, the whole tailgating in the right lane is just not called for. Having a small car, for me, feels like I'm in a video game. But at first, the car was so tiny and close the ground that I could be driving 20 and have it feel like 90.

Charisse is so damned cute!


§ ita § - May 17, 2004 4:08:31 pm PDT #484 of 668
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

If I'm going the speed limit and I'm in the right lane, you really shouldn't be zooming up on my ass.

God, yes. The world can accomodate both you and me. If you're a speed freak, don't get hot under the collar about what's happening on the right side of the freeway -- should you get to speed there, you're lucky, and don't scare the natives.

However, please leave the left lane, unless you intend to exceed.


lori - May 17, 2004 10:32:03 pm PDT #485 of 668

I wonder why Lori was trying to kick on the Krav-ers?

Yeah, I wish I knew.


Kat - May 19, 2004 7:18:41 am PDT #486 of 668
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

Okay, random thoughts about the finale. And since we are in the spoiler thread, if you don't want to be spoiled, back out now.

The finale opens with a kid who is shoplifting slinkies, by putting them down his pants. Jaye gets 10% of any shoplifting recovery she makes. She and the security guard are watching the kid and they go into the store to nab him. But some stuffy convinces her to let the kid go.

My reaction: dude, slinky down the pants. shudder.

t bad recapper

The gist is this:
Sharon comes over to get Jaye to help pick out an anniversary gift for their parent's 31st wedding anniversary. Jaye loses it and confesses that Eric is going away and she's heartbroken. She tells Jaye to call Eric and to talk to him. So Jaye does, and they plan an assignation at her trailer. This might be the first time that Jaye is actually going to talk about her feelings WITH Eric. But she doesn't make it.

Eric asks Mahandra to be nice to Heidi while he goes to meet Jaye.

Sharon is at the store when a bank robber comes in and takes them hostage. The guy is actually kinda menacing. So it's Jaye, Sharon, Mouthbreather, security guy (Wade?) with aspirations to overcome rent a cop status. Whackiness ensues.

My favorite scene? When Sharon stun guns the guy. Also my most frustrating scene because a barrel bear tells Jaye to "give him heart." Jaye tries to get security Wade(?) to get the gun that the bank robber drops.

My reaction: DAMN JAYE! Pick up the freakin' GUN. And Sharon, keep the stun gun on him.

Scary shit happens (including Wade having a heart attack and Sharon eventually stun gunning his heart back to life). The chameleon (and Tim's voice) tell her where there is an exit. Robber takes Jaye as hostage. They steal a van and as he reverses he hits.... wait for it.... Heidi. He gets out of the van and is standing at the Heidi's window (and Heidi PISSED at it being a Jaye-involved vehicle that hit her). You hear sirens and.... wait for it again.... just as Robber menaces a little more the ambulance RUNS HIS ASS OVER.

The Ambulance scene was completely shocking. It got such a response. Everytime we watched it. I think I'm a terrible person because it makes me laugh and laugh and laugh like a loon.

Tearful family reunion. Mahandra is freaking out about the thought of losing Jaye. Aaron makes her feel better with big PDA smoochies. Karen looks fine with it, but Jaye has a stunned look on her face. Then she notices Eric going to Heidi.

Fade to black.

and you think it's over, right?

Except it's not. One scene left. Eric comes back to the store to return souvenirs he bought. Since they aren't doing their job to remind him of a place where he isn't (which is a callback to a teaser scene). She gives him store credit. And he says something about a reason to come back.

And they kiss.

Happy endings for those of us sappy enough to need them.

Honestly, thank you... such a lovely wedding gifty.


§ ita § - May 19, 2004 7:23:56 am PDT #487 of 668
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Also, Mahandra's being nice to Heidi seems to result in Mahandra making some peace with her and Aaron, and when Heidi sees Eric on TV (he's the one that tipped the police to something suspicious happening at the store, because when he dropped by Jaye was very weird to him (you might want to block your ears for his sappiness here)) talking about the hostage-taking, she leaves the bar, mad. Intending to dump him, we later learn.

The implication (also sappily delivered) is that the tchotchkes are getting Jaye to push Eric away so that Heidi can be in the right place at the right time to hit the escape vehicle (and save Jaye's life). And that the whole thing makes Eric realise where he stands.


Polgara - May 19, 2004 7:33:10 am PDT #488 of 668
Karma is a cat, sleeping in my lap cuz it loves me. ~TS

The tchotchkes didn't care about saving Jaye's life. If that were the case, the second the bad guy came into the store, they would've been singing out "call the police! 911!" Nope, they were more concerned with getting the bad guy smooshed so they could save the rent-a-cop's life. It was all about smooshing the bad guy.


Kat - May 19, 2004 7:34:59 am PDT #489 of 668
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

See, it's that part that I am NOT down with.

The whole push him away to get him back.

Cmon, that's a lot of conspiring, even for a universe.

The ambulance scene? Really shocking. I mean not to those of you reading now that you're spoiled (oops sorry), but it was to me. It was the same level of shock as Mal kicking a henchman into an engine.

I dunno who wrote what, but that felt like a Tim kind of thing.