Yes, I agree with all of your criticisms above. But, I quite enjoyed the episode anyway. The story was very nice and even a bit inspiring. They definitely whitewashed some of the history.I've been liking the way this show challenged conventional narratives of history and offered more of a look at the subaltern perspective, but this week's Alamo episode dropped the ball. It made a passing mention of the fact that the state the Alamo defenders were fighting to achieve would be a slave state while Mexico was free, but it ignores the fact that people like Travis and Bowie were themselves slaveowners and, in Bowie's case, an actual slave smuggler. It mostly clings to the conventional, romanticized view of the siege instead of acknowledging the ambiguities and tough questions as previous episodes have done. So I'm disappointed.
There were other problems, like plot points being telegraphed. As soon as they mentioned the need to open up the aqueduct, I immediately remembered the grenades they'd called attention to earlier, but Rufus inexplicably forgot about them long enough to generate dramatic tension. And, come on, having Flynn mention that he's a father in the same episode where Lucy presses her mother about the identity of her biological father? Could it be more obvious that he's Vader to her Luke? And yet for some reason they contrived to delay the reveal by having her put it on a folded piece of paper. Why would anyone do that? Why not just tell her the name?
So yes to genetics if the result is to just take random tissue samples at the end, but no in that there's a massive butterfly effect being ignored, and the further back you go, the bigger the hurricane in the present...
Does anyone one know what know how the ratings are for Timeless? I'm hoping it'll be around for awhile. However, I'm afraid that it'll get canned. It just doesn't feel like the type of show that'll draw in mass audiences. Hopefully, I'm wrong about that!
But, the huge butterfly effect in the non-genetics area is enormous. Small changes will get magnified over time. The further back, the great the magnification of the changes in the present day.
Still think we're talking past each other. Yes, many BIG moments may happen regardless, or maybe that one person being different does lead to a drastically different outcome, both are certainly possible. The names, faces, and personalities of the people involved in those events should be massively changing every time they sneeze (more or less). people are in different places at different times, impacting other lives differently, having different (or more/less) children, next generation has more changes from original timeline resulting from different starting points, etc. At a macro level, maybe it's not a ton different, pot just got stirred a little differently. At the micro level, should be totally different. Different people alive or dead, different locations, new people that never existed or people that no longer exist, child conceived a moment later and the coin flip says male instead of female this time, etc.
Again, for big things, sure. Not expecting it to look like another Earth version from The Flash every week, just should be more different in the personnel department, as those would be constantly changing.
Trying your analogy: after a wave hits the beach, the beach looks pretty much the same. Another wave, same beach. If you identified each grain of sand and it's location first, though, it's a way different beach each time. Different sand in different locations, some new sand came in with the wave, some sand that was there was washed away, etc.
I agree with the last part you're talking about, not everything carries through and will sometimes just die out or not matter. Still think the distinction is that you're arguing events (which I agree more with) and I'm arguing the actual physical people involved. Change people, and the change can't fizzle out (other than it being a dead end, like messing up people a week before Hiroshima or something).
I don't know why you keep getting hung up on the genetics part of that, as I keep repeatedly saying it has nothing to do with my point.
I just don't believe that if I go back a couple hundred years and start making changes, that when I come back, there would always be the exact same Christopher to take a genetic sample from in the first place. Sometimes sure, sometimes maybe it's a Christine instead, decent amount of the time I'm just arguing with someone else entirely that shares no common ancestors with you.
Wow, BTTF2 was only off by a year in predicting that? That's actually pretty good.
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