Is this the story of the little girl who lived down the lane?
Luckily she doesn't have a Martin Sheen character to worry about.Is this the story of the little girl who lived down the lane?
Luckily she doesn't have a Martin Sheen character to worry about.
Ahh, that's in my backlog, I really need to get to that one someday. I only know the old Jodie Foster movie for that title.That was meant to be a Twin Peaks reference.![]()
Steve is more progressive that he lets on.You know, I find it more believable that some Russians build a secret base under a mall in the middle of America, rather than a boy who grew up in a small provincial town in the mid-80s is so ok in front of a girl (who he likes) that comes out...
You know, I find it more believable that some Russians build a secret base under a mall in the middle of America, rather than a boy who grew up in a small provincial town in the mid-80s is so ok in front of a girl (who he likes) that comes out...
I had just assumed she over did it, and it was going to take her a while to recharge now.
Steve is more progressive that he lets on.
I think his reaction was supposed to have been influenced by the drugs--so we see his true feelings rather than the "feelings" he might have shown if he hadn't been drugged.
Steve is more progressive that he lets on.
To quote Khan "I know something of those years". I lived through the 80's as an adult progressive male. So I'm calling bullshit on that.There was no such thing as "progressive" in the 1980s man
I'm kind of hoping for this as well, but I suspect that's not what the Duffer brothers are planning.It would be sort of brave of the series to have Eleven actually lose her powers permanently, so now she has to not only deal with the threats like everyone else, but its a good way to ease the character into a normal future assuming the show will end in S4 or 5. In that way, the entire fantasy element takes on a "long ago" vibe, and its not magical hi-jinks going into her adult years.
To quote Khan "I know something of those years". I lived through the 80's as an adult progressive male. So I'm calling bullshit on that.![]()
It would've been a big deal, would it have been a big deal to *everyone*, I'm not sure. Steve had lived through monsters, special powers, Russian bases, and his own personal failures to launch, he just might be a bit open to the idea of someone liking girls.
I still think Lucas and Max's casual relationship in a small town would be a bigger stink if we're going to talk about realism.
No one said it was "no big deal" or that it was easy for the person or their friends and family. I'm was countering your assertion that 'There was no such thing as "progressive" in the 1980s man." Which I still say is bullshitI was around in the 80s too and if you are tryna tell me someone coming out back then was no big deal to damn near anyone then you are looking back through some seriously thick rose tinted glasses
I would not agree with that. He's still from a Not-West-or-East-Coast town in the mid 1980s--the Reagan 1980s--and to that end, Robin would have likely remain closeted until she moved away, knowing the culture of that region.
The Duffers seem to pick and choose when realism is to be used; in season 2, Billy was the voice of racism, but he was an outsider. It appeared none of the longtime townsfolk blinked an eye at Lucas and Max's romance not from the Snowball, all the way through the end of season three, which--as you point out--would have been an issue for someone other than Billy, who again, was not a local, so his behavior makes no comment about town perceptions of race.
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