For the youth of today, there are "No Stars."
For the youth of today, there are "No Stars."
People are possibly experiencing different timelines with slightly different histories, aka "The Mandela Effect."
Hope springs eternal.
Up until Part 15, I was sure that Audrey was in the "real world" of the show, but now I think the Audrey-in-a-coma people had it right all along, and I know, I know, it’s really serious.
No, he's still listed on the credits as "Drunk."
I also love that they established how the Convenience Store exists in another phase of reality, and exists in no one location. Maybe this is the fake "convenience store" that was set up in the dummy town on the Trinity test site, and it now moves from place to place. Some buildings in our reality, such as Big Ed's…
They are such a great send-up of Tarantino's shtick, and the banality of their evil is truly unnerving.
Dressed just like a woodsman, too, which is what Steven and Gersten seem to see.
If anyone has been caught in an endless cycle of pain, it's Ed and Norma, who will, no doubt, have their love tragically snatched away again after reestablishing it. We've been here before. Those clouds looked really weird, too.
That character is none other than Cecil B. DeMille playing himself, actually on the set of Samson and Delilah (1949) at the time. I always figured that Lynch named his character Gordon Cole as an homage to his friend, Billy Wilder, and as a little dig on the innate cruelty of Hollywood.
There is a very brief shot of him on the phone when he rings up Norma Desmond. Sunset Blvd. is absolutely one of the best movies ever, and there are more than a dozen subtle little references to the movie in Twin Peaks.
"She's got LEGS" (L-EGGS), and she "knows how to use them." Clearly a reference to "Mother."
Besides Dougie, maybe Mr. C created a small army of Tulpas to run his network. Otis, Ray, Hutch, Red, Duncan, Sam, Charlie, Ike, etc., could all potentially be one.
I think the word is, "woketyuppetiest."
It is funny just how many things the show keeps hovering just on the edge of clarity- Richard's parentage, for example. But, there are at least some strong clues to suggest that, whereas we only have our hunches regarding the "something" that happened to Sarah.
Looking again at the girl in White Sands, I think she definitely could have been as young as 11.
What happened to the "Truck You" guy was very much a direct reflection of the violence he was projecting onto her, so I'm not even sure that his death was entirely her doing. She warned him to back off, too, three times.
It has been established that there are inconsistencies between the show and the book, which is a collection of different sources, so that would be expected.
That was my first thought, too, that it was Sarah who swallowed the mutant frogsect in Part 8, although I'm not sure why I thought that. But, "Secret History" puts the year of Sarah's birth as 1945. So, if that's correct, she would have been 11 during the 1956 Woodsmen incident in White Sands, New Mexico.
In another twist, the second text Diane received was not in all caps and appeared like this: "Las Vegas?"