But are you part of the United States?Well, New Mexico, actually, but we honestly get that a lot.![]()
But are you part of the United States?Well, New Mexico, actually, but we honestly get that a lot.![]()
Lots of reviewers are saying this was the best episode of the series so far, and I can see why, but for me it's had the counterintuitive effect of totally putting me off the show's pace. This was a real straw-meet-camel episode for me.
Pluribus is a weird show. The way it's generates its ongoing conflict is pretty unusual: if it weren't for Carol digging in her heels, there would be no show. How do you write ongoing conflict when one "character" is so nice, so passive, so damned agreeable that they can't resist or pose any real threat? (You might, say, introduce a ticking clock element, first with the conversion threat and then with the reveal that the Joined will (eventually) starve to death. But both of those are pretty abstract, the first with no timetable and the second with a timetable of a decade. And then they wrote out that first ticking clock entirely, at least for now...)
I wondered after the second episode how on earth they would get multiple seasons out of this premise, and unfortunately the answer seems to be by padding the episodes. I call it the "Mike disassembling a car in the desert" approach, because Gilligan et al did this during BCS too, where material that any other team would have trimmed or cut is shown in excruciating detail.
But, fine, Carol is carrying the whole thing so I'll cut them some slack here. Except, now..maybe she isn't and I can't.
Based on where this episode left things, suddenly we have the potential for Carol to have internal conflict. And for her to have real, meaningful ongoing conflict with another character (Manousos.) This is much better! And, to me...it just makes the rest of the show look so, so much worse. I don't need or want to watch five minutes of Manousos hiking and saying the same mantra over and over when the potential for better, more engaging storytelling is over the horizon. It feels like the writing has its head up its own ass.
Based on Gilligan's interviews about the show and just the general sense of the show, I would be very surprised if we ever see whoever sent the transmission. Hell, I would be surprised if we learn even basic facts about them.It's always possible that whoever sent the transmission shows up (I doubt it, but you never know)
I don't think submariners were addressed but I seem to recall some mention of Antarctic early on. As for how the ISS get the virus, I'm sure it was the same way the most of the world got it: Telecommunications. The same would be true for submariners...unless they were operating on radio silence...I can't remember but did they say what happened to people on board submarines or in the Antarctic? I remember them talking about the ISS (how the hell'd they get the virus up there?)
I agree. We only have the Others' word on who is actually immune. I can't recall if Carol directly asked that question.I still doubt there's only 13 immune people. One way or other any show that lasts more than a season tends to have a way of introducing new characters (take the Talies in Lost)
Of course if that were to happen whilst you get more independent characters you have to address the issue that if the Hive do know how to reverse the virus then why wouldn't a severed former member know? Unless you only have access to the hive mind when part of the hive?
Based on Gilligan's interviews about the show and just the general sense of the show, I would be very surprised if we ever see whoever sent the transmission. Hell, I would be surprised if we learn even basic facts about them.
I thought the virus was distributed via contaminated food and drink, kissing and aerosol not radio waves?Based on Gilligan's interviews about the show and just the general sense of the show, I would be very surprised if we ever see whoever sent the transmission. Hell, I would be surprised if we learn even basic facts about them.
I don't think submariners were addressed but I seem to recall some mention of Antarctic early on. As for how the ISS get the virus, I'm sure it was the same way the most of the world got it: Telecommunications. The same would be true for submariners...unless they were operating on radio silence...
I agree. We only have the Others' word on who is actually immune. I can't recall if Carol directly asked that question.
And I think I may have stumbled on where we might get new characters, although it raises the question if such submariners have some means of blocking the transmission if they were surface (which they would have to do eventually).
Good point.Knowing it can be cured and being able to implement a cure are two completely different buckets of fish.
Actually, you're right. I was conflating the original radio signal that transmitted the RNA sequence with the way the virus spread. What I think I was confusing is how the virus was spread on a global scale, thinking it was done through people's mobile devices but it was actually done by aerial dispersal of aerosols.I thought the virus was distributed via contaminated food and drink, kissing and aerosol not radio waves?
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