Really? I thought Annie's incessant making of tea and doing dishes and whatnot slid her into the OCD slot. Either way, I'm glad my subconscious isn't just making things up.
'Objects In Space'
Boxed Set, Vol. V: Just a Hint of Denial and a Dash of Retcon
A topic for the discussion of Doctor Who, Arrow, and The Flash. Beware possible invasions of iZombie, Sleepy Hollow, or pretty much any other "genre" (read: sci fi, superhero, or fantasy) show that captures our fancy. Expect adult content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
Marvel superheroes are discussed over at the MCU thread.
Whitefont all unaired in the U.S. ep discussion, identifying it as such, and including the show and ep title in blackfont.
Blackfont is allowed after the show has aired on the east coast.
This is NOT a general TV discussion thread.
I could have them switched, but that's how I remember it. And it's just where the idea started, I believe, I don't know how important it remained as the characters went supernatural and developed personalities
Right, originally George was supposed to be OCD and Annie was supposed to haev self-esteem issues. I think the former was a little clearer in the pilot, though I suppose Annie's vulnerability to Owen may indicate lowered self-esteem, even if it was lowered by concerted bullying and manipulation.
I think self-esteem issues and invisibility (to most people) are a decent parallel.
Uh-oh. (a girl is fading away in front of the lockers, Buffy goes up to her) Hey, shy girl, don't do this. Oh... (Buffy slaps the girl)
Of course in the real world slapping someone who already has low self-esteem probably wouldn't really help.
I had very little patience with Artie's initial behaviour in this episode. Perhaps there are reasons for him to be wary, but I don't think he sold his case very well and came off callous and dismissive, especially since we knew that it was the real Myka in there.
Creepy Alice was creepy.
Original songs were coolly used.
Pete McClintock continues to be a cutie. Poochie was even more useless than in Eureka. I read on TWOP that Joe Flanigan was disappointed with how little they had him do in his episode, and he had way more than Erica or whatsisname.
Of course, next week is Joe Morton. No one wastes Joe, right?
It gave me a weird feeling, because I kept thinking Poochie and Erica were their Eureka characters.
Artie is seriously like the worst boss EVER. Only with a boss like Mrs. Whatzit would he get to be in charge of all those toys....
ita,
I had very little patience with Artie's initial behaviour in this episode. Perhaps there are reasons for him to be wary, but I don't think he sold his case very well and came off callous and dismissive, especially since we knew that it was the real Myka in there.
I completely agree. WTF was up with his behavior. I thought it was completely stupid - for someone who is reportedly so intelligent. It would have been better for him to be initially cautious (not dismissive), but take more time to figure out that it was really her. It might have relied on her partner's acting skills a bit, but it might have been helpful for him to be a bit suspicious earlier on.
The little bits that i caught I got the impression that Artie had made a mistake with the mirror and gotten burned badly, and so was overcompensating.
I got the impression that Artie had made a mistake with the mirror and gotten burned badly, and so was overcompensating
I don't disagree, but I think this validates accusations of stupidity. For a supposedly rational man, a lot of his behavior is driven by emotional reaction to past trauma. When Myka told the psychic that "that is his problem" she is right in the sense that it should be his problem and not his employees. Then again I've never liked Artie. He has always been rude, dismissive from the beginning, and made a habit from day one of not supplying his employees with enough information.
BTW, did anyone else guess as soon as it was clear that this was a Dodson related artifact story that at some point in the ep that they play "White Rabbit"?