Below Average. This show is see-sawing between the implausible and the irrelevant.
Keiko's whole story - implausible. No heterosexual male on the planet would react to a chick that hot with a knee-jerk "get lost." The whole scenario smacked of some white Hollywood liberal screenwriters inane notion of idealized LA multiculturalism. None of it rang true.
Keiko and cancer guy not hooking up - irrelevant. I had zero emotional investment in that scenario, so why does Keiko exist in this story at all (other than eye candy for the guys).
The mole turning out to be some character we'd never heard of before - irrelevant.
Janis being a bad guy - implausible, unless she turns out to be a double agent, in which case this becomes cliche. Is Braga picking up bad habits from
24?
The biggest problem here is that so much of the emotional set-up and payoff falls flat. Unless the audience cares that Keiko and cancer guy get together or whatever, there's no point to the entire plotline, since storywise it goes nowhere.
I'm watching too, such a good show. I do wonder if the show continued if it would be like heroes where the first season was so great then the remaining seasons suck because they did not know what to do with the show after the first season.
Heroes first season was far better than this!
FlashForward has never been anything but a mangled mess. In the early episodes, it was easier to be in denial about the scope of the mess, but now it's becoming too apparent to ignore. That's why the ratings have fallen through the floor. The only way this plotline - in which characters yammer about destiny and fate but then the flash forwards fail to materialize time and again, so how much were they ever "fated" anyway? - is to make the audience care a whole lot whether the visions come true, so at least it matters when they don't. But it doesn't matter because these characters are soulless mannequins being maneuvered around by the story.
Yes, an odd turn, and not in a good way. Doesn't really meet with the character we've seen so far, including in her unguarded moments. Then again, perhaps I'm biased--Janice is one of the few characters on this show I like, and I don't want to lose her to death/jail/whatever. I'm hoping there's more to this than is immediately apparent; after all, if Campos can play both sides, why not Janice?
Janis' plot twist is straight outta
24. Braga works on both shows but maybe I shouldn't blame him in particular. Anyone who watches
24 could come up with that plot twist, too (not to mention recognize it). Janis will turn out to be a double agent because it's the only way the plot twist makes any sense. Then again in a show this sloppily written, maybe it's just the writers flailing around for something to deliver cheap shocks. In a show where almost all of the characters are unsympathetic and boring, it's a very risky move to make one of the few genuinely likable characters an unmotivated villain.
Maybe that's the "Queen Sacrifice"?

The show's going down in flames, let's just pull some crazy shit while we can!