So the Good Pace is the Getty art museum?
That checks.
It's free to get in, you just have to pay 15 bucks to park your car.
That checks.
It's free to get in, you just have to pay 15 bucks to park your car.
The difference is that every person bets to make their own decision, they can go through the door at any point or not at all and life in earth goes on. The judge was going to end it all right now.What's the difference between Eleanor's plan and The Judge's plan other than there's a party in the middle?
Yup, called it.The twist might be that the good place sucks, it might be torture for the people there, unintended by the good place architects but still torture. Look at how annoyingly chipper Nicole Byers good place postal worker was, or how over the top PC and supportive the Committee is, imagine living among them or in a place they think is good, it could drive people nuts.
And of course there's too much of a good thing, imagine hearing your favorite songs every time you turn on the radio, getting your favorite food all the time, always friendly people who agree with you on everything and love every idea no matter what.
Our main four were great for each other because on paper they were awful for each other, the good place would NEVER put them together.
What if next week they run into an actual good place resident and that person screams "OMG, real people! Get me out of here, this is hell!"? That would be a better twist than cheating demons. They already effectively got rid of the bad place, the finale could be about getting rid of the good place too because so far they have only redesigned half of the afterlife.
Then it's imperfect. It's like people I've heard over the years saying "A perfect partner would be boring." You're not using the word perfect correctly.
Of course, it is the GOOD place. Not the PERFECT place. By extension (and they've kind of said as much) the Bad Place isn't that bad either.
What's the difference between Eleanor's plan and The Judge's plan other than there's a party in the middle?
Then it's imperfect. It's like people I've heard over the years saying "A perfect partner would be boring." You're not using the word perfect correctly.
Of course, it is the GOOD place. Not the PERFECT place. By extension (and they've kind of said as much) the Bad Place isn't that bad either.
What's the difference between Eleanor's plan and The Judge's plan other than there's a party in the middle?
Nothing. Except they just ran around like crazy people with even the Janets united to stop the judge from causing them all to cease to exist.What would be so bad with letting them cease to exist?
It just seems to me like kind of a downer ending, I'd rather see the characters continue to exist in some form.What would be so bad with letting them cease to exist?
Yes, it is. They talked about filming there in this week's podcast. Only the exterior shots were there because of time constraints for the museum, who only allows very select productions to film there.
I’ve been thinking about whether it’s possible to craft a version of paradise you never get bored of. It’s a little paradoxical, to get as close to perfection as possible you have to not quite be perfect.
What if you introduced a little bit of conflict, and a little bit of shared community responsibility? Like everyone had some kind of job in the neighborhood that was necessary to keep the neighborhood running? But, everyone gets a job they enjoy, and only have to work slightly longer than they would choose to be? And no discrimination or office politics or crap like that? But always small problems arise that you need to work together into fix?
The kind of place that for it to be paradise, everyone has to work a little to keep it paradise.
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