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Nichole
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Yes. Every emotion she's ever repressed is coming out to play and I love it!

Yes. Also, Jeri's downfall is her own need for power: brining that juror was about controlling the outcome of her first capital case. Can you imagine Kilgrave as a lawyer. Shudder.

Sorry!

I tend to agree. I also think Jeri's behavior was a counterpoint to the "Men and power" line. Women can be just as bad, they generally just have fewer opportunities to get there.

"Keep your goddamn feelings to yourself!" Gets a guffaw out of me every time. I love that line and I want to play it on a loop outside my office.

Ah, I remember that. But he doesn't have to be knocked out for it to wear off - it just does (unless he "reups" before then). I thought the whole point was that he couldn't maintain the control at all if knocked out with the drugs (unlike regular unconsciousness or sleep). Otherwise, why bother with it? Why avoid

I missed that explanation. When was that?

When Kilgrave is in the cage, he reminisces about meeting Jessica. We see in a flashback that they meet after she saves Malcom from muggers and he is completely taken by her strength. He tells her to come with him and she does.

I was bothered by the fact that the surgical anesthesia didn't disable Kilgrave's commands. I thought that was the whole point of the anesthesia angle - he can't maintain control once he's out. So how did the neighbor stay compelled to suicide bomb Simpson and his crew? Did I miss where this gets addressed?