Mauve is a color. Perhaps you mean Maeve?
Mauve is a color. Perhaps you mean Maeve?
Hiding the card in a copy Slaughterhouse-Five makes total sense. Here’s why:
I think it’s that he’s going incredibly paranoid.
Good to see Teddy finally gave Delores a piece of his mind.
Lakota, even though Ghost Nation is obviously a made up tribe and not at all similar to actual Lakota.
While the episode had its flaws, this was, for me, easily the most emotionally engaging episode they have done. I thought it was beautiful - a rare episode that can really stand on its own.
I’m fairly sure that’s the most any Native American language has been spoken in an hour of television, ever. Major kudos to Westworld for having so much of that subtitled.
Last year episode 6 gave us Maeve in one of the most wrenching moments in WestWorld, her walk through the facility with Felix.
So I hate to be “red herring” guy, but I think we’ve been handed a few here. A couple of critical moments and lines made last night that weigh heavily into the issue of perspective, narrator and “fidelity.”
If he heads back to the last safe room with the type writer there’s probably some green herbs in the storage chest.
My head-canon is that Arnold and Ford really liked Westerns, so they created the fantastically expensive Westworld.
I’m 100% ready for Felix to ride in and heal Maeve, cause hes basically the only good human
I’m 100% ready for Felix to ride in and heal Maeve, cause hes basically the only good human
The Redemption Of Lee Sizemore:
Given that current iterations of the hosts are basically organic (with the exception of their brains) it makes sense that the technology to restore their bodies would also work on humans.
And I equally loved Maeve, still stuck on that gurney, taking a little of the smugness out of Dolores by pointing out that what she did to Teddy was just as immoral as what the humans did.
Dolores has not been my favorite character this season, but I think I love her for wiping that perma-smirk off Hale’s face, if only for a little while.
As someone who grew up while they were alive they sure seemed popular and well liked by many. I never knew too many Biggie songs but Tupac had a shit ton of great ones. I honestly don’t know how you can come to the conclusion that it was their deaths that made them popular. As for Kurt Cobain, once again growing up…
“That’s because, despite the title and everything suggested by its marketing, this show isn’t actually about Biggie and Tupac”
Too many of these networks don’t realize that the popularity of Serial/American Crime Story isn’t because the public decided they like true crime, it’s the innovation that a genre that had been relegated to Lifetime movies could be done really well and could be more than the sum of its timeline of events.