Outright killing other competitors would just shut the game down too easily
This may be true. But then why give Wendy a loaded gun in an envelope with the dictate to kill another competitor?
Granted, that's not how it played out. But it doesn't seem that killing, or manipulating players into killing each other, is out of the realm of believability.
Seriously, though, if at the end of the series, we are treated to a pull back with two kids playing with matchbox cars and that's what is going on, I'm going to feel St. Elsewhere-Snow Globed.
Seriously, though, if at the end of the series, we are treated to a pull back with two kids playing with matchbox cars and that's what is going on, I'm going to feel St. Elsewhere-Snow Globed.
That might explain the glorious mountains of Florida though.
I wouldn't be surprised if the different sponsors had different motives as well as the contestants.
Even assuming the other car in the Corinna's parents crash was a competitor, who knows what they were told would be the consequences of not winning. The vibe I get is that people not in the race aren't allowed (or whatever) to hurt racers directly, but are perfectly happy to manipulate the racers in any way they can think of. I mean, like with what's her name and the gun. In theory, that would have accomplished both killing Taryn Manning AND making Melanie Lynsky into a killer, which would have given them (Them) an even bigger hold on her.
Seriously, though, if at the end of the series, we are treated to a pull back with two kids playing with matchbox cars and that's what is going on, I'm going to feel St. Elsewhere-Snow Globed.
This would be such a disappointment. Although the whole show does have a sort of "kids playing with Matchbox cars" feel to it.
So if Katie Finneran is Mal's sister, who was the cop is Nebreaska. I know him but I can't place him
The one investigating Alex's wife's disappearance is Richard Brooks, whose Minear-resume is Jubal Early in Firefly, and who is probably best known as Robinette in the first three seasons of Law & Order.
And to a small but loyal following, as one of the demon-hunting characters on
Good Vs. Evil.
Thank you! I had totally forgotten about Jubal Early and was trying to place him as a demon in Buffy or something.
This may be true. But then why give Wendy a loaded gun in an envelope with the dictate to kill another competitor?
they didn't tell Wendy to kill her. They just gave her a gun, which was one method. That's the kind of mindfuck that people who have too much money might enjoy.
And to a small but loyal following, as one of the demon-hunting characters on Good Vs. Evil.
LOVED Henry and his volvo
Also, it looks like giving Wendy the gun was done by the people who run the race as a penalty, not by a sponsor. What a sponsor can do is probably very different from what the people running the race can do.
And I agree there has to be a "no direct violence by sponsors against racers" rule. Because otherwise the race would be a very short one. I suspect that racers use of violence against one another has limitations: otherwise a sponsor would win a race by sponsoring a really skilled killer, and the next race would consist entirely of skill and talented killers--which does not seem to be the game they are playing.
Also, I still say there is something more than a game going on, or at least more than just who wins and who loses. Some of the racers seem to have zero chance. I don't think Daughter&DyingDad have a shot. But you know, even horse races have prizes besides first. I'll bet there lots of sub-bets going on, as to whether A or B does better, even if "better" is 28th and 29th. Of course winning such a bet for a sponsor does nothing for the racer; but hey obviously this race is all about screwing with the racers. They are game pieces, not players. They are horses, not jockeys.
I was wondering if the man who posed as Wendy's husband had once been a contestant in an earlier race. He seemed to have a strong association with what being last would entail.