I certainly don't think it was the NSA that wanted to feed Ballard information to keep him safe and on the trail.
Agreed.
I certainly don't think it was the NSA that wanted to feed Ballard information to keep him safe and on the trail.
We already know there are other dollhouses.
I missed that. What do we know about them?
We already know there are other dollhouses.
I missed that. What do we know about them?
Aside from being told that there are at least twenty of them, I don't know if we know anything about the other dollhouses.![]()
I certainly don't think it was the NSA that wanted to feed Ballard information to keep him safe and on the trail.
Agreed.
I missed that. What do we know about them?
Aside from being told that there are at least twenty of them, I don't know if we know anything about the other dollhouses.![]()
But I mean, are they supposedly operated by Rossum? When were they mentioned and in what context (I've missed a couple of episodes)?
Also the Dominatrix outfit at the beginning? Come on, I'm a terrible pervert but that seemed over the top.
Hell, Buffy got run through wioth a sword in the finale, and ws perfectly fine by the last scene. Not even slayers heal THAT well.
I don't actually believe anything said to Ballard at face value. It seems more like he's being given half truths to manipulate him. They could keep feeding him info via envelope, but he would always be careful about info like that. Getting info from Mellie throws him on his ass and he'll be less careful about how much he trusts it. So there's a reason for taking a huge risk and using the dolls to give info that could be passed on in a letter. I mean, it's fun TV to do it that way, but assuming the writers have thought this through, the doll info is manipulative.I certainly don't think it was the NSA that wanted to feed Ballard information to keep him safe and on the trail.
Agreed.
It's also possible, I guess, that someone in the Dollhouse just wants to protect Ballard's life - that telling him as much as he was told about the operation wasn't an attempt to help his investigation, but was necessary in order to give him an idea of how much danger he's in and how to protect himself. So maybe there's some as-yet-unrevealed connection between Ballard and one of the folks who work there.
Why? It set up the theme of the episode nicely.
Trust
So, in your opinion, what exactly was wrong with that scene?
If we've learned anything about the people working at the Dollhouse, it's that they tend to bend the definitions of terms related to moral issues. Especially Adelle seems to do that a lot.To start with, Langton's entire attitude was way off. Then there was the idea that the Dollhouse, despite the extremely questionable activities it allows its Actives to participate in, doesn't allow Actives to be submissives.
If we've learned anything about the people working at the Dollhouse, it's that they tend to bend the definitions of terms related to moral issues. Especially Adelle seems to do that a lot.To start with, Langton's entire attitude was way off. Then there was the idea that the Dollhouse, despite the extremely questionable activities it allows its Actives to participate in, doesn't allow Actives to be submissives.
Their notion of "Submission" may not be the same as yours or mine.
In fact, we have yet to see an imprint whose whole point is to behave submissively. It may have been implied in the Sierra subplot last week, but it was never stated explicitly. For all we know, Sierras imprint, when she's sent to Nolan, is that of a loving wife or girlfriend who wants to sleep with him.
So the imprint itself is not about submission, while Sierras original personality (and we the audience) would percieve it that way.
I think that's the distinction that Saunders is making there.
Of course, she is delusional in believing this. They all are. Except for Boyd, who sees the DH and his work as what it is.
"We're pimps and killers. But in a philantrophic way."
Which makes me really want to know more about his backstory.
Well, you could see it as another case of TPTB (of the DH) deluding themselves.I think we're getting our own uses of the term submissive mixed up here. I'm not talking about Sierra playing the doting wife or girlfriend. I'm not going to take this conversation down too adult a road, but I'm talking about an Active being programmed not just to allow the client to do whatever they want with them, but actively wanting them to and enjoying it, enjoying being used for someone else's sexual gratification and gaining their own from that.
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