And it's creepy how William looks like he's in a coffin.
AgLiving06 said:
I think they can use the two timelines to get everyone up to speed, but I don't think they keep it up the entire series.
PooDoo said:
Maybe MiB replayed the fortune teller bit in the barn.
If that is William in a coffin there are a hundred scenarios that could take him to that point and still be alive.
They are in a train car full of coffins and nitro filled robot corpseses.
This definitely makes sense. They're robots, so they could definitely just be sending them into a virtual reality that they would have no way of differentiating from the "real" world. My question is, how does it look to the interviewers, provided they're human.AliasMan02 said:
The more I think about it, the more I think the interview room where we see Bernard and Ford talk to Delores is digital. One of the butchers talked about VR during his break, so we know that's a thing. It also kinda lines up with the concept that "this is a dream." It solves some logistical problems as well.
Does anyone who is being physically examined do the "this is a dream" exchange? Maybe Delores in the first episode when talking to Stubbs with others in the room?
TCTTS said:
Your two main issues have already been addressed previously in this thread, and I honestly don't think either are a big deal.
Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:
Still not buying the 2 timeline theory. They demonstrate no difference between hosts of supposed 30 years prior to present day despite there being multiple mentions of how they were much less life-like previously? Present day security notices Delores is off track and send someone after her while she's with Logan and William? There is yet to be any hard evidence for the theory, only circumstantial (L&W are part of some organization looking to fund the park, MIB has a foundation and he previously helped the park, a nonspecific conversation between L&W regarding the parks finances, vague conversation between Ford and MIB, Lawrence dying with the MIB and returning to interact with L&W). Its impossible to completely rule it out, but it would be unfairly deceptive for the writers to create 2 separate timelines given what we have already seen, and would be a significant let down for that to be the case.
Yeah but that's not what the show has told you. Incremental improvement. Minor updates that over time has evolved them.AliasMan02 said:
Hosts started out very mechanical, like we saw them in flashbacks and see with Bill the bartender. They work on them for a few years before the park opens, and they get continually improved.
After a few years of ooeration, up to when MiB/William first arrive at the park, the hosts are still mechanical but very lifelike. A million perfect pieces. They are insanely expensive and the park is losing money. Logan is an exec at Delos and sent to look into investing. They (probably William after he takes over for Logan) buy in, providing the tech to create biological hosts, which is much more cost effective.
By the time we catch up with the MiB, hosts have been all biological for a generation.
Quote:
Look at Sizemore's conversation with Theresa. He says, "Do we really want realistic hosts? Is that what our guests want? You used to be able to tell the difference." You get the impression that for a while, the hosts were not that human.
TCTTS said:Quote:
Look at Sizemore's conversation with Theresa. He says, "Do we really want realistic hosts? Is that what our guests want? You used to be able to tell the difference." You get the impression that for a while, the hosts were not that human.
"You get the impression..." - except that I really don't. Your "evidence" is just as circumstantial as everyone else's on the other side of the argument. There's no definitive proof that Old Bill was actually part of the park. Ford simply says he was the second host they ever built. That doesn't mean he ever interacted with guests. And the gradual evolution of reveries doesn't mean that the hosts gradually went from robotic movements to smooth, human-like movements. The reveries they're referencing are just tiny ticks here and there that help sell the illusion better and better, an illusion that was already selling itself quite well 30 years ago. Honestly, Alias' points come across as very sound, and make perfect sense.
Needed someone smarter than you to help figure it out, huh?dlance said:
My wife and I just finished rewatching the season and there is nothing to discredit the two timeline theory. Everything that has happened so far falls right into place.