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Fear the Walking Dead Season 2 discussion and spoilers.

Sooo, your argument is "yes, you're right, he does treat everyone like the hired help"? Welcome to our side. Now if we could just convince everyone else that just because he is notionally the "captain" it doesn't give him the right to treat people like slaves.
 
Sooo, your argument is "yes, you're right, he does treat everyone like the hired help"? Welcome to our side. Now if we could just convince everyone else that just because he is notionally the "captain" it doesn't give him the right to treat people like slaves.
No, he treats everyone else curtly and to the point. He doesn't socialize, he doesn't mince his words, and he doesn't mask his intentions behind feigned politeness.

And he most certainly isn't treating anyone like slaves. Travis volunteered to fix the problem, and all Strand did was make it clear that it needed to happen now. Since his entire concern for the last few episodes has been about being a sitting duck for the pirates.
 
You meed to watch that episode again. He didn't "make it clear that it needed to happen now", he ordered Travis to work faster.
 
Now all that being said, I think most of us who are very suspicious of Strand still think he's a great character for the show who brings mystery and "needed" conflict for a drama show. The actor is a great fit for the role, and I certainly hope he sticks around for a while, though I expect him to be killed at some point.

Totally agreed there. I'm not as annoyed of frustrated by the other characters as others on here are (and actually really like Nick and Daniel), but there's no denying that Strand is the most compelling character by far.

And unfortunately I don't see Travis or Maddie ever becoming all that interesting. I thought Maddie had some potential early on (and think the actress is doing a great job with what she's given), but lately it feels like the character is just sort of... there. And not really contributing all that much.
 
You meed to watch that episode again. He didn't "make it clear that it needed to happen now", he ordered Travis to work faster.
Not sure how you make something clear and that it needed to happen now more effectively than that.

And even if they did complain about it, so what? They already disliked him waaaaaaay before that scene. In fact, that scene is completely irrelevant to the main point: That the characters were suspicious and spiteful towards him before they had any logical reason to be.
 
Being grateful and taking the only avenue that was available to them doesn't mean they should stop using their own judgment and completely trust in everything Strand says and does from here on out.

What judgement?

You and the other anti-Strand members all cry that he's mysterious and is not forthcoming with information (forgetting that he's under no obligation to divulge anything). If so, any intelligent adult--particularly in a crisis situation will do one of the following things:

  1. Conclude that with no information on Strand, it would not be wise to follow him anywhere--again, especially in crisis situation where they've already witnessed civil unrest, mass death and never ending panic.
  2. If Strand is so mysterious, then the last thing any rational person will do it constantly antagonize or threaten the man who saved them, and it their only means of escape from what would have been a guaranteed death on the mainland.
About judgement, if anyone ahould not be truated, its the Travis group--they accepted the torturing of a soldier and Daniel setting a stadium full of walkers loose, which spread everywhere, thus dooming anyone (not just that base) they encountered.

For all they know, Strand could be simply using them and keeping them around for trade, or as an emergency diversion while he slips away, or for defense against other groups, and the second someone gets hurt they'll get left behind.

You have just made my point: if any of your theories are rolling around the minds of the Travis group (and up to this point, it should not), then they should have refused to follow him once reaching the house. They were not forced to follow him at all, yet create a constantly threatening environment by demanding antagonizing and threatening. I ask you davejames--is that a logical reaction to the person responsible for the Travis group being alive?


He certainly hasn't shown much concern or respect for them in any other way

Constant antagonism and threats do not earn respect.

so it's only natural that people would want to question his motives.

Its only natural that he remind them that they are merely passengers he saved from guaranteed death. If they cannot show even a moment of grateful attitude for that, then they need to get off at the next port and never see Strand again. Do you think they are saying that so far? No.

Regarding the boat, some love running around in circles: Strand had a plan from the start that involved a house he clearly had access to, and a boat he clearly had access to--and knew how to run. Whether his name is on the registration, or he's working with / for someone else who owns the boat does not matter--he is still the captain of property he owns or is entrusted to run. The Travis group have no rights to demand or alter the management of the boat or its destination whatsoever.

I would not be surprised if the producers will have the torturing barber, or magically transform Travis or Madison into overnight badasses, in order to murder Strand, and as a result, the consequence-free Travis gang moves on and the series loses its best character.
 
Not sure how you make something clear and that it needed to happen now more effectively than that.

And even if they did complain about it, so what? They already disliked him waaaaaaay before that scene. In fact, that scene is completely irrelevant to the main point: That the characters were suspicious and spiteful towards him before they had any logical reason to be.

Well said. They were hostile to Strand for no justifiable reason, and still act as if he owes them something.

There's much criticism of FTWD's characters in articles, social media, etc., which would all be avoided if the producers just said the Travis group were antiheroes, not The Waltons in Zombieland.
 
At this point it might be worth losing the best character if it leads to less obsessiveness over some perceived "King of the sea" mentality in this thread.
 
I think it is important to recognize that there are no "good guys" in this series. The Salazar and Travis families committed one of the worst acts we have seen on either of the series and they are basically incompetently dealing with encounters during the current season. Strand has not done anything as yet on par with the two families gross acts.

Perhaps it is actually brilliant writing, rather than sloppy writing, that is encouraging viewers to forgive the families and condemn Strand? Let's see how it plays out.
 
At this point it might be worth losing the best character if it leads to less obsessiveness over some perceived "King of the sea" mentality in this thread.
whOr killing off Travis & Madison.

But does anyone really think they will spend the whole season on the boat? It's going down some time soon.

We'll have something else to complain about soon enough.
 
I think it is important to recognize that there are no "good guys" in this series. The Salazar and Travis families committed one of the worst acts we have seen on either of the series and they are basically incompetently dealing with encounters during the current season. Strand has not done anything as yet on par with the two families gross acts.

You are right--and as you point out, Strand has not committed the immoral acts of the Travis group. Torturing a man, and we can only imagine how many innocent lives were lost by opening that stadium door. They were completely self-interested, with the welfare of others meaning nothing to them, which makes all of their fighting with Strand about saving people hypocritical, as they already crossed a truly deadly line in season one.

Perhaps it is actually brilliant writing, rather than sloppy writing, that is encouraging viewers to forgive the families and condemn Strand? Let's see how it plays out.

On The Walking Dead, where 6 years in, some characters are sort of in a fixed position, or if they experience a change, the meter always returns them to a familiar center (e.g. Daryl or Michonne). On the other hand, Fear the Walking Dead is early in its life, and considering the terrible acts committed by the Travis group, the producers would be taking a daring turn (for WD) by not swimming against the tide, and making them more villain than hero, as this growing nature would at least explain their behavior, when selling them as heroes does not feel natural.
 
You and the other anti-Strand members...
Christ, I and others have already said that Strand is the most interesting character, and we don't consider Travis and Maddie without fault or negative qualities; far from it (read my comments on them from earlier in the thread). It would be nice if you could discuss a character without unquestioning support of every single thing he or she (in the case of Carol, who was like your Strand 1.0) does, regardless of changing circumstances.

Its only natural that he remind them that they are merely passengers he saved from guaranteed death.
And they saved him from execution at the hands of the Army before they decided to abandon and destroy Los Angeles.

Regarding the boat, some love running around in circles: Strand had a plan from the start that involved a house he clearly had access to, and a boat he clearly had access to--and knew how to run. Whether his name is on the registration, or he's working with / for someone else who owns the boat does not matter--he is still the captain of property he owns or is entrusted to run. The Travis group have no rights to demand or alter the management of the boat or its destination whatsoever.

But again, you're appealing to those same old world rights (like property and privacy rights) that Strand has made abundantly clear don't apply anymore when it comes to rendering assistance to vessels and people in distress. You can't have it both ways and cherry pick which old world values still carry weight or not. If it's an every man for himself world, then they're just operating on his level now. You can't be outraged about a dreaded footlocker violation but consider it perfectly okay to callously condemn other people you could have helped to death.
 
And during any of that, when did Strand show up, hit Travis upside the head with his hat, and go "Ohhhhh, Gill...Travis!"? I must have missed that scene.

So, you don't know what a metaphor done for comedic effect is?

Strand doesn't treat Travis like Gilligan at all. Travis detected the problem first, and began addressing it without even telling Strand as far as we know. When Strand showed up to investigate what was going on, he saw Travis going at it and apparently having some clue about what he was doing -- far more than Strand himself did, being the rich guy he is who usually pays people to do this sort of thing (but oh yeah, some of you are of the mind that he's still not the rich guy the show has repeatedly shown him to be; my bad).

Strand was there when Travis was pouring over the manuals, which I assume Travis got from Strand rather than rummaging around the ship's bridge to find them.

Regardless of how things happened or began, though, that doesn't give Strand a pass to treat Travis like a common worker and to order him around.

Say you're outside working on your car, lawnmower, or some other piece of equipment beyond your skill-set to fix; a neighbor comes up and offers to help and immediately begins the repairs, apparently knowing what he is doing and having some expertise in what is going on. Wouldn't it be just a bit uncalled for if you were to say, "Good! Now I want this done as soon as possible, and no dilly-dallying on the job!" I mean here is someone helping you and you're bossing him around like you organized this to happen? Let's even go as far as to say whatever is going on dependent on that piece of machinery both of you count on to accomplish your goals but, ultimately, you own it. Again, you're out of your element to work on it but your companion works on it because he needs it to work too. Isn't it still a bit dickish for you to boss him around? I mean, he needs this to work too, and moreover he knows what it's going to take, and how long it's going to take, for it to be operational again.

And this isn't an argument over "changing Strand's" character or anything like that; he's acting within his character as we've seen him up to this point. And that character is kind-of a jackass.
 
The difference is that this is all Strand's deal. Aside from the unbalanced scale (in his favor) of him saving their lives from walkers and/or bombings, he's not even given the benefit of doubt. He's relentlessly criticized, disrespected, threatened and generally harassed. If Daniel was the captain of the boat and provided the only means of escape, I would say the same thing.

Avoiding biting the hand that feeds you out of the gate is just an accepted rule of basic human relationships, and that rule is only broken when one the one that fed you violates that relationship.

No more basic than avoiding biting the dozen hands that surround you. So many people are all up in arms here about the law of the sea, but that has literally nothing to do with the basis of this group. In fact, the whole problem is that this group has no basis at all. They've all wound up together mostly accidentally and they have absolutely no commonly understood system of how to work together or treat each other.

Strand - who you've repeatedly described as the only real survivor in the group - is attempting to force a system of dictatorship on them while simultaneously making decisions that openly disgust them and treating every single one of them like dirt. His only basis for this system is 'it's my boat', which is a pathetically lame reason to give for why someone should listen to you, but it doesn't even matter if it is his boat or if you think people should respect the fact that it is his boat. What matters is that this supposedly smart survivor is actively turning the entire group against himself, even though he knows they massively outnumber him. That is stupid and a major character flaw (even if he does turn out to have an understandable motivation behind it).

Or, without making pointless detours, he would have reached his destination long before the problem. Moreover, few boat captains--both pleasure and commercial never fix their own boats. It is common for owners to use boat repair/maintenance services. Millions buy cars, but the majority are not trying to fix their cars on their own, yet no one calls them "stupid" for operating a vehicle they do not repair. Are they less entitled to own and decide how their vehicle is used? How is it any different for Strand--who obviously owned the boat long before the ZA, and probably used maintenance services like endless boat and car owners?

Because I'm not talking about how he theoretically lived before the ZA. I'm talking about the fact that he turned to this boat as his only lifeline to survive and has thus far spent all his time sitting alone in the cabin worrying instead of making even the slightest effort to learn how the boat works and how to fix it if need be - and the fact that even when someone else takes it upon themselves to do so, he actively antagonizes them instead of just letting them get on with it.

Said the person who is so completely hostile to the Strand character, calling him a dictator, stupid and other insults you never use against the Travis gang.

Hmm....what was that again about the bug up the ass?

I never called anyone else a dictator because none of the other characters have acted like dictators. But your complaint about me disliking him more than the others are total bullshit. Chris, Nick, and Alicia have all been unbelievably stupid morons again and again. Madison is literally all over the place - she wants to do the right thing, but seems completely incapable of actually accomplishing it. Travis is more consistent, but also so far unable to accept the fact that some things are inevitably different. Daniel is so far the only character who has seemed even remotely intelligent with no major blind spots for most of the show, but that comes at the cost of him being basically a sociopathic mass murderer. This show isn't very good with characters, and Strand is no exception, especially right now (at this particular moment in the show - ie, for the last 2 eps or so, and potentially for the next few as well - he is easily the dumbest character they have).

The barn was not the TARDIS. It had limited space, and he was not going to keep piling endless numbers of zombies on top of zombies until the walls fell, or filling it to the point where even cracking to door meant a horde spilled out like college game day. Only using on screen evidence, Rick's group inadvertently caused the fall of the farm with that gunshot, and as a result, the Greene family were "out in the world," exposed to threats the would have never encountered if remaining on the farm.

Threats were already coming dangerously close to the farm multiple times during that season, so the idea that isolation in any way would've protected them is ridiculous. (It certainly didn't protect Morgan's mentor). And the fact that the barn had dozens of zombies in it in the first place made it pretty much inevitable that something would go wrong eventually anyway.

It seems some think the Travis group has the authority to do whatever they want.

It seems that some think Strand has the authority to do whatever he wants, but every other character should shut up and follow orders.


Right. Sure. Nobody knows about it. It's only been recognized by every seafaring nation on the planet for centuries. But otherwise it's totally obscure.

You guys do realize that the vast majority of the human race has never set foot on the ocean and doesn't know a damn thing about how boats are 'supposed' to be run outside of what they saw in Pirates of the Caribbean?

Look, the yacht carries two inflatable launches. Any time the Idiot Family thinks Strand's command must be abandoned they have the option of piling into one or both launches and striking out on their own and following whatever survivor policies they feel like. Strand might agree to that. Any attempt to forcefully remove Strand from command of the boat is illegal and immoral, no matter how untrustworthy Strand is.

A mutiny is literally nothing more than a revolution on a boat. History and the vast majority of the human race would tend to strongly disagree that revolution is always immoral - it's morality is entirely dependent on the situation. Legality of course has absolutely nothing to do with anything.

Even Caribbean pirates, who had democratic pecking orders, treated their captains as the final authority once they elected them. What you have here is a similar situation. The group, by default, elected Strand captain by following his lead to the boat, onto the boat, and out to sea with him at the helm. He's Captain. Period. They may not like how he runs his ship, but since they didn't bother to come up with a non-violent way to terminate his command, that's tough titty, kid. They can mutiny, they can abandon, or they can suck it up and keep following him. The option so many here seem to want the Idiots to take is the most violent - and illegal - one.

It's not a matter of me wanting the other characters to mutiny, it's a matter of Strand seemingly going out of his way to create one even though he knows the rest of the group mistrusts him and could easily overpower him if they chose to. And of posters then claiming that that proves he's 'smart' and the 'only real survivor' on the show.
 
So, you don't know what a metaphor done for comedic effect is?
Apparently neither do you.

Strand was there when Travis was pouring over the manuals, which I assume Travis got from Strand rather than rummaging around the ship's bridge to find them.
What's that saying about people who assume?

Regardless of how things happened or began, though, that doesn't give Strand a pass to treat Travis like a common worker and to order him around.
He was just acting the way he has acted since day one. Curt, to the point, and with no nonsense. And again -- and I can't stress this enough, no matter how much you people choose to ignore it -- those events occurred way after they had already decided to distrust him with no real reason to. Why you keep harping on this as the singular event and proof for why they do is beyond me.

And this isn't an argument over "changing Strand's" character or anything like that; he's acting within his character as we've seen him up to this point. And that character is kind-of a jackass.
Right. And your point is... what? You're kind of a jackass in this post. Does that mean I should treat you as an enemy, break into your house and rummage through your things trying to find proof to back that up, and threaten to kick you out and take over all of your possessions?

Cause that's pretty much what they've been doing practically since they met him. All based on information only the audience knows.
 
Curt, to the point, and with no nonsense.
If you think that exchange between Strand and Travis about getting the engine fixed NOW was "curt and to the point", I'd like to see you use Strand's words on someone helping you in real life. It'll get you smacked at worse and most likely you'll lose that help. There is a big difference between your "curt and to the point" and Strand's ordering Travis to "get it done".
 
If you think that exchange between Strand and Travis about getting the engine fixed NOW was "curt and to the point", I'd like to see you use Strand's words on someone helping you in real life. It'll get you smacked at worse and most likely you'll lose that help. There is a big difference between your "curt and to the point" and Strand's ordering Travis to "get it done".
As an employer, I have and I do. On a regular basis. He's the captain of the ship, it's his duty to make sure people are doing their job -- it doesn't matter that Travis essentially volunteered for that one.

And again: Please point out how it matters to the conversation at hand. How does that scene in any way, shape, or form explain their attitude towards him since day one of meeting him. It's amazing how you keep glossing over that in order to make this pointless point of yours.
 
People actually think he's the captain of the ship? :lol:

Is this because you're Trekkers and have an innate sense of... one must respect the chain of command?

He's about as much captain of that ship as Nick is chief tactical officer.

He's what the group allows him to be.
 
As an employer, I have and I do. On a regular basis. He's the captain of the ship, it's his duty to make sure people are doing their job -- it doesn't matter that Travis essentially volunteered for that one.

And again: Please point out how it matters to the conversation at hand. How does that scene in any way, shape, or form explain their attitude towards him since day one of meeting him. It's amazing how you keep glossing over that in order to make this pointless point of yours.

Yep, he's the captain of the ship and has crew of.... no one. And making sure "people are doing their job" what?! When did he employ and of these people? They're passengers. Travis was doing Strand a favor by working on the ship, again a favor that also has the benefit of helping himself but a favor none the less. He was doing something Strand could not do himself, that makes Strand a bit more indebted to Travis than the other way around and ordering Travis around like an employee isn't called for.

You don't order someone around who's doing you a favor, even if it's a favor he also benefits from.

As for everyone mistrusting Strand from what we've seen Strand has hardly been forthcoming with information and has been sort of a hardass bossing everyone around, other than Nick has he tried to make a personal connection of friendship with anyone?

You have to give and take, and in this world working together is that much more important and ordering people around is hardly a great way to get everyone to work together.

Strand's character is the most interesting of all of them, certainly, and I like his character but I can also admit that right now his character is kind of a jackass at this point and I don't believe for a moment this magical, secure, compound exists in Baja.

What's that saying about people who assume?

We see Travis rise out of bed, we next see him standing around in the main area of the ship with everyone else reading one of the ship's manuals. I don't know much about my luxury yachts but I'm guessing the manuals aren't kept in the guest staterooms, I suspect they'd be kept on the bridge. And from what we can see, been told and put together Strand has spent a good bulk of his time on the bridge. And just "knowing Travis" I doubt he'd have gotten up and helped himself to the ship's documents and likley would have gotten with Strand to work out the problem and look over the manuals.

It's called put things together from what you're given and not needing to be shown everything to know it had happened. So either Travis got up. rummaged around the ship until he found the manuals, and started poking around in them to figure out the problem and by the time he reached a conclusion everyone was watching him in the main room. Or... He got up, got in contact with Strand and worked with him to get the books and look over the trouble with the engine.
 
Yep, he's the captain of the ship and has crew of.... no one. [...]
You guys make it sound like they're paid passengers on a cruise ship or something. They're only on that boat because he invited them in a moment of crisis. They owe him everything, and he owes them absolutely nothing. They sure as heck shouldn't expect to just sit on the boat the entire time with their feet propped up sipping margaritas while he does all the work at keeping them safe and finding yet another place for them to find safety.

But I've already addressed that, as well as everything else you've brought up, several times now. Instead of repeating myself for the umpteenth time, I'll just ask the two questions I've asked previously that all of you mysteriously keep ignoring:

1. Please point out how it matters to the conversation at hand. Namely, how does that scene in any way, shape, or form explain their attitude towards him since day one of meeting him?

and

2. You were kind of a jackass in this post. Does that mean I should treat you as an enemy, break into your house and rummage through your things trying to find proof to back that up, and threaten to kick you out and take over all of your possessions? I'm sure you think I'm a jackass, too. Does that mean you have the right to do all of those things to me, too?

'Cause that's pretty much what they've been doing practically since they met him. All based on information only the audience knows, with little to no reasons of their own. Certainly not to the level of suspicion they've had right out the gate.
 
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