I get the impression that he sees the consequences for the other team's players is far worse than they are for him because he has relative privilege. That being said, the flash to Billy makes me wonder if he didn't decide to make the shot but ended up missing it anyway. The whole thing had a somewhat ambiguous feel.So, I'm a little confused. Why exactly did Tyrone throw the big game?
That being said, the flash to Billy makes me wonder if he didn't decide to make the shot but ended up missing it anyway. The whole thing had a somewhat ambiguous feel.
Tyrone's secretive little smile after missing the shot tells me he did it on purpose.
Ahhh...thanks for clarifying on that point. I was also confused.I'm not certain, but I think his "fear touch" of the referee revealed that the ref had been paid/threatened by criminal elements to make sure that Tyrone's school won the game, which is why he was giving unfair calls in St. Sebastian's favor. Tyrone also saw that a few of the opposing players were really, really afraid of the consequences of losing, like maybe they'd be beaten by their parents or coach for it or something. So I think it was both to stymie the cheating ref and as an act of compassion to the rival players, who needed the victory more than he did. But I'm not sure if my reading is accurate.
Yup.Thanks. Sounds like the basic idea of fear and hope from the two was already there, but the overt visions are original to the show. Is that right?
I love the show's origin for Tyrone's cloak. I'm relatively new to Mardi Gras Indians, having first learned about them David Simon's excellent Treme, so I'm happy to see more of them in this show and how that relates to Tyrone's family and history. I'm guessing that this particular aspect to the character is new to the show and not from the comics?
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