Is Keith a good father?
I want to say no, because of what he lets Veronica get away with, but the show is set in such a weird reality, it's hard to say.
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Is Keith a good father?
I want to say no, because of what he lets Veronica get away with, but the show is set in such a weird reality, it's hard to say.
He walked through fire, man!
I want to say no, because of what he lets Veronica get away with, but the show is set in such a weird reality, it's hard to say.
By show reality terms, yes.
He's like a sweet and tubby Spy Daddy.
Neptune needs an ethics teacher.
This is what made me stop watching the show during the regular season. Veronica's utter lack of respect for anyone else's privacy was bugging the shit out of me. Enough people were enjoying the show that I gave it another shot, and I am very glad I did, but she herself is still on my don't like list.
This is what made me stop watching the show during the regular season. Veronica's utter lack of respect for anyone else's privacy was bugging the shit out of me. Enough people were enjoying the show that I gave it another shot, and I am very glad I did, but she herself is still on my don't like list.
I didn't like VM until late in the season, although I've enjoyed earlier eps on rerun. I wasn't sure why I didn't like it, though. It just squicked me. I think perhaps the privacy thing may be it, as I find that really troublesome. I guess I find it troublesome not only that she invades others privacy, but that she doesn't seem to have even a vague hint that anything is wrong with it. For me, this lack of moral ambiguity in her perception makes her character seem immature. Once I got that figured out, I can enjoy her immature character, but before that there was a disconnect.
Re-reading this, I'm not sure if it makes any sense, but I don't know how to write it any better, so here goes!
the finale leaves me cold in a lot of respects because suddenly, even Veronica loses her agency and falls in need of rescue. She gets damseled and along comes daddy. This does not please, when your gender issues alerts are ringing.
But you gotta love the fact that she was *literally* the Woman in the Refrigerator.
I love Veronica but there are lots and LOTS of times on the show when she frankly needs someone to chew out her ass. The lines she crosses are big, fat ones, and there should be consequences, which is why I did the little dance of joy when Alicia finds out about the bugged plant from Wiedman. I kind of wish that Alicia/Keith took longer to reconciliate due to this, although what with Keith being burned alive and all, I couldn't really begrudge him the comfort of Alicia's presence by his bedside in the season finale.
Above doesn't really diminish my love for the show though, because I like that everyone in Neptune, including out protagonist, is so fucking gray.
But you gotta love the fact that she was *literally* the Woman in the Refrigerator.
Snerk! Yeah. Though, unlike Alex, not in pieces (curse you, Ron Marz). Which is probably good, being as the show's not called Veronica Mars' Body.
Above doesn't really diminish my love for the show though, because I like that everyone in Neptune, including out protagonist, is so fucking gray.
Seriously. Ethics teacher.
I'm also mildly wigged that it was somehow okay for her to date Leo, in a way that I wasn't wigged by Buffy and her Really Really a Lot Older men.
I'm also mildly wigged that it was somehow okay for her to date Leo, in a way that I wasn't wigged by Buffy and her Really Really a Lot Older men.
I think that brings us back to the reality/fantasy divide. Where Buffy is the Chosen slayer of vampires in a universe of vampires, and Angel is the emotionally-stuck-at-17 vampire, the romance doesn't seem all that implausible.
But the closer to our reality you get, the more our social understanding and moral qualms impinge on the story. Veronica dating Leo felt off to me from the beginning (although Leo was sweet and kinda dumb and that made it fractionally more acceptable to me). Which is why Veronica doing shady things on VM strikes us as more ethically questionable than if Willow did them on BTVS.
Also? Buffy saved the world. Veronica found one killer. Okay, and saved a guy from death row. We're likely to cut more slack for a situation where the stakes are higher, and the motivation clearer.
A great deal of Veronica's motivations in VM are tied to her desire to prove herself (and her father) right, and Them wrong. It's for justice, but it's also for validation and revenge; she's got rather less altruism going than Buffy does. (Although granted, it's not like Buffy has a choice, and Veronica totally chooses to obsess.)
Veronica sees the world as a research project.
Isn't Leo supposed to be a mere 22? 17-22 isn't a big squicky stretch for me.