I know I'm a bad poet, but I'm a good man. All I ask is that... is that you try to see me—

William ,'Conversations with Dead People'


Cable Drama: Still Waiting for the Cable Guy to Show Up with the Thread Name...

To be determined... (but it's definitely [NAFDA])


§ ita § - Nov 11, 2013 2:41:57 pm PST #11218 of 11998
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Yep. Way to go to back up on all the character development, of oh...the entire seasonseries. Unless it's shown to be bogus (aren't recovered memories?) and fast, I'm so not interested. Not even with tension about when it's going to be shown bogus, if that's further in the future than next week.


-t - Nov 11, 2013 3:31:42 pm PST #11219 of 11998
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

Yeah, I'm kind of pretending it didn't happen because it doesn't make sense to me.


§ ita § - Nov 16, 2013 12:49:59 pm PST #11220 of 11998
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

White Collar was off to me again. There wasn't enough followup on what should be a huge revelation from the previous episode, and some of Neal's lines felt weirdly forced in a show that's traditionally chemistry incarnate.

It feels weird.


-t - Nov 16, 2013 6:13:18 pm PST #11221 of 11998
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

It fell in okay with my strategy of denial. Peter and El pleased me greatly. I don't think a butler would actually condone verbing butle (buttle?) like that, but that's rather beside the point.


§ ita § - Nov 16, 2013 6:24:31 pm PST #11222 of 11998
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

There were a couple points where Neal's performance felt very jarring. I think it was at the end, when he was announcing they were the law to the bad guy--it felt very...announcey. It lacked immersion in the world for me. And I had accepted the preceding car commercial, so...

But I would rather they had gone back on the revelation of the week before than ignore it.


-t - Nov 16, 2013 6:33:59 pm PST #11223 of 11998
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

I honestly had forgotten about the revelation. Because, wow, my memory is bad. I sort of remember the line you are talking about feeling off...

The car product placement was obvious to the point of being hilarious.


§ ita § - Nov 16, 2013 6:39:20 pm PST #11224 of 11998
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

At least it's a fancy car. I'll give them and Covert Affairs (which I actually watched with both eyes for a change, although while kettlebelling) credit for using Beemers and Jaguars to be poseurish, instead of world-class spies posturing in Hyundais.


Nora Deirdre - Dec 02, 2013 5:13:08 am PST #11225 of 11998
I’m responsible for my own happiness? I can’t even be responsible for my own breakfast! (Bojack Horseman)

I do not like this White Collar turn. It throws so much of the past episodes into the trash, so I hope it shows the strain within the next episode.

I just caught up with a marathon viewing of all the episodes of the new season yesterday and have been thinking about ita's comment since then.

I think this discordance actually fits in with where Neal is at - he's losing his damn mind. Close to shutting down completely due to overwhelming emotional stress and hyperanxiety.

I mean, think about it: he lost his only known family when Ellen died (violently); he found his father; went through the insane emotions about learning about him, and his own past; discovered that his father is a coward who basically framed the only person he ever trusted; he sold his soul to save that person out of tortured guilt; he continues to have to commit crimes in order to keep himself and Peter (and Mozz) safe; the person that he's sacrificed his own integrity for doesn't trust him; his new handler is murdered, and he feels responsible; and then a psycho-pharmacological mindfuck by an academic whose theories include that the guiltier a criminal feels, the more likely he is to lapse.

I think he just doesn't want to deal anymore. He's increasingly resentful of having to take care of people, and is building a wall so he can stop feeling all this horrible guilt. I think that this will be the emotional arc of the season, and the only one that can save Neal is Neal. Which I think is kind of cool, rather than another iteration of Peter saving Neal or Neal saving Peter. Or Mozz saving Neal.

He just seemed so vulnerable and tortured during the recreation of the drug induced psychiatrist thing. The fact that he went back to his childhood when confessing to Peter was telling, too - he just wants to go back to when he felt safer. Maybe even make different choices all the way back then.

Also, I think the redhead museum lady is totally playing him.

I don't know. Am I giving too much credit for emotional depth for an eye candy show?


sj - Dec 03, 2013 2:57:54 pm PST #11226 of 11998
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

I'm catching up on the second half of this season of Covert Affairs (still a couple episodes behind). Is it just me, or is Joan's pregnancy moving very fast in comparison to the timeline of everything else in the season?


-t - Dec 04, 2013 4:24:56 am PST #11227 of 11998
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

I agree with you, Nora, that museum lady is up to something.

The rest of what's going on with Neal I'm not sure about. I'm not sure what exactly is going on, and I'm not sure how I feel about it.