lmao, this thread
aTmAg said:Flag me for what? Pointing out, like many, that last episode blows? To you that is flag worthy?Zombie Jon Snow said:aTmAg said:So you are saying that your daughter predicted all along that Dany was going to go genocide on a city full of innocents, but you did not?Z said:
google it genius
You might want to learn what a joke is... or an emoticon.....
And keep talking about my daughter whackjob. Game's on now. I'll roast your entire ****ing city to the ground - odd though nobody would have called me a homicidal maniac before. I guess that's out of character for me.
I'm saying shut the **** up. Clear enough?
Can everyone please flag this *******'s every attack on the last few pages. Staff needs to take the trash out. I don't care if they take me out with him I'll take one for the team.
I'm done.
Sorry you don't agree with my opinion.
This is a great read and makes perfect sense to me. I gave up on the books near the end of #3 and my explanation is always that GRRM is an incredible world builder but good grief he needs an editor. The above thread does a much better job of articulating my sentiments and the "rush to the finish" feel of the show that so many here are feeling.clinker03 said:
I'm curious to know yalls thoughts on this - I read this earlier today and it made sense to me. TCTTS - is this common in the industry?
(What doesn't make sense is why D&D would limit themselves to so few episodes if there were all these "plants" out there that needed to be resolved....but that is a different discussion. )
This is a long twitter thread and I don't have the time to transcribe it all (sorry) so the link is below. Talks about the different approaches to writing a show and how that plays into how we are viewing the last two seasons vs the first 5. (Click on the tweet below to see the whole thread).
aTmAg said:
It's HOW they made her evil out of nowhere.
aTmAg said:So the point I am making is this: We didn't know enough about Frey to know if he was capable of wiping out the entire Stark family. When he did it, it was shocking, for sure, but it wasn't outside the limited character of Frey that we were exposed to.Champ Bailey said:aTmAg said:What ground work was laid where Frey would kill every last member of that family? I don't remember such groundwork being laid.Champ Bailey said:aTmAg said:You don't understand.. she's ALWAYS been crazy. Haven't you been watching all the groundwork they have been laying down in EVERY season to show how crazy she is? If you didn't see that coming, then you weren't paying attention.bobinator said:
Yeah, I mean that's clearly what they've decided they're going for. It just doesn't make any sense to me.
The city has surrendered. If she's that hell bent on instilling fear, accept the surrender, and then kill every single person in the city who fought to defend it.
There are a thousand steps between 'I need to instill fear' and 'I need to kill everyone in this city' and she didn't take any of them.
I just think it's lazy after seven years of all of the tiny steps her character has taken, that in her final act she's reduced to just 'well she's crazy now.'
(Nevermind, nobody else predicted that ending either.)
This is a ridiculous argument. Nobody saw Frey killing Robb, yet they laid the groundwork for it. Just because it surprised you doesn't mean the signs weren't there.
And the signs have been there.
Frey was shown as this arrogant man who was angry at constantly being looked over until he was needed. He invited the Starks and agreed to side against the Lannister's in exchange for Robb marrying his daughter, assuring a Frey in royalty in the north. Robb decided that love was more important than his honor as king, and Frey was pissed about it. He pretended to be ok with just marrying the daughter to Edmure.
Yet we have spent 8 seasons with Dany. She is one of the main characters. We know her well enough to know that he is very unlikely to go on random a civilian killing spree. So if they were going to make her do so, then they needed to show us more on why she would do it. A lot more than "well she's a Targaryen" or "it wasn't enough" (as D&D stated).
wangus12 said:Just like there is no way Arya kills Cersei, there is no way they have her kill Dany. It has to be Tyrion or Jon.OldShadeOfBlue said:The white horse signifies death. I don't know if that means the death of Arya or her revenge arc, but I believe it was coupled with her seeing the mother and daughter burned to a crisp and she feels justice needs to be served to Dany and she'll be the one to do it.Social Media Influencer said:So far, that's the least talked about Big Thing in this episode.Quote:
She had a change of heart with the hound and went completely back to her stark roots. Empathy for civilians that have nothing to do with Ned's death.
Arya fled KL in hiding after Ned's death and hadn't been back since. She returns just in time to see it burn and crumble, and again narrowly escapes. I assume they gave her the white horse to let her ride out in contrast to the way she had to sneak out last time.
aTmAg said:Go read up on Stalin, Hitler, Saddam Hussein, etc. before they genocided people. It was plain as day the type of person they were and what they were capable of.Ervin Burrell said:How is one genocidal before committing genocide?aTmAg said:I never said it was exactly like real world history. But in 100% of the cases I can think of, genocidal maniacs were obviously genocidal maniacs LONG before they actually conducted genocide.Zombie Jon Snow said:aTmAg said:
So I read all of those, and there isn't a single instance of her killing civilians for the hell of it like she did yesterday. Retribution is VASTLY different than killing civilians after the battle is over (by the million).
Lincoln executed 38 indians as retribution and lead a civil war that killed more Americans than any other war in history. Yet when the war was over, he didn't kill a million people.
lmao
yep. this is exactly like real world US history.
damn i wish i had watched Lincoln instead. what was i thinking watching a brutal fantasy show i could have watched a docudrama instead.
Quote:
But several reliable, well-informed sources confirmed the idea that Hitler's anti-Semitism was not so genuine or violent as it sounded, and that he was merely using anti-Semitic propaganda as a bait to catch masses of followers and keep them aroused, enthusiastic, and in line for the time when his organization is perfected and sufficiently powerful to be employed effectively for political purposes.
Quote:
But the main way that the press defanged Hitler was by portraying him as something of a joke. He was a "nonsensical" screecher of "wild words" whose appearance, according to Newsweek, "suggests Charlie Chaplin." His "countenance is a caricature." He was as "voluble" as he was "insecure," stated Cosmopolitan.
Quote:
When Hitler's party won influence in Parliament, and even after he was made chancellor of Germany in 1933 about a year and a half before seizing dictatorial power many American press outlets judged that he would either be outplayed by more traditional politicians or that he would have to become more moderate. Sure, he had a following, but his followers were "impressionable voters" duped by "radical doctrines and quack remedies," claimed The Washington Post. Now that Hitler actually had to operate within a government the "sober" politicians would "submerge" this movement, according to The New York Times and Christian Science Monitor. A "keen sense of dramatic instinct" was not enough. When it came to time to govern, his lack of "gravity" and "profundity of thought" would be exposed.
littlebitofhifi said:This is a great read and makes perfect sense to me. I gave up on the books near the end of #3 and my explanation is always that GRRM is an incredible world builder but good grief he needs an editor. The above thread does a much better job of articulating my sentiments and the "rush to the finish" feel of the show that so many here are feeling.clinker03 said:
I'm curious to know yalls thoughts on this - I read this earlier today and it made sense to me. TCTTS - is this common in the industry?
(What doesn't make sense is why D&D would limit themselves to so few episodes if there were all these "plants" out there that needed to be resolved....but that is a different discussion. )
This is a long twitter thread and I don't have the time to transcribe it all (sorry) so the link is below. Talks about the different approaches to writing a show and how that plays into how we are viewing the last two seasons vs the first 5. (Click on the tweet below to see the whole thread).
You must be new to the internet.PatAg said:
No one is wrong for still liking it, and we aren't wrong for not liking it
Yeah I don't disagree with that now, but I feel like that wasn't the guy he was in the first 3 or 4 seasons. My gripe isn't so much just with Season 8 Tyrion as it is the overall arc of his character from where he started.bobinator said:
I don't mind so much what they've done with Tyrion. He continually suggests paths that seem 'right,' and then he's wrong for various reasons.
He's like the oppo-Littlefinger. He continually underestimates how extreme people will be and tends to assume everyone else will think logically.
His suggestions always have perfectly well thought out logic, and because of that they often end up wrong.
AustinAg2K said:You must be new to the internet.PatAg said:
No one is wrong for still liking it, and we aren't wrong for not liking it
Good point, she was great too. I thought the actors that played Tywin Lannister and Olenna Tyrell had really strong performances as well.Fenrir said:
Michelle Fairley was amazing as Catelyn. Her speech about Jon catching the pox was one of the best acted scenes in the entire show.
Agree tyrion really regressed, mostly out of emotion...SAtxag16 said:Yeah I don't disagree with that now, but I feel like that wasn't the guy he was in the first 3 or 4 seasons. My gripe isn't so much just with Season 8 Tyrion as it is the overall arc of his character from where he started.bobinator said:
I don't mind so much what they've done with Tyrion. He continually suggests paths that seem 'right,' and then he's wrong for various reasons.
He's like the oppo-Littlefinger. He continually underestimates how extreme people will be and tends to assume everyone else will think logically.
His suggestions always have perfectly well thought out logic, and because of that they often end up wrong.
Season 3 Tyrion would have never dreamed of trusting Cersei or underestimated her ruthlessness. Didn't make sense to me for his character to regress like that over time.
AustinAg2K said:You must be new to the internet.PatAg said:
No one is wrong for still liking it, and we aren't wrong for not liking it
the character "arc" is probably the most annoying term used.SAtxag16 said:Yeah I don't disagree with that now, but I feel like that wasn't the guy he was in the first 3 or 4 seasons. My gripe isn't so much just with Season 8 Tyrion as it is the overall arc of his character from where he started.bobinator said:
I don't mind so much what they've done with Tyrion. He continually suggests paths that seem 'right,' and then he's wrong for various reasons.
He's like the oppo-Littlefinger. He continually underestimates how extreme people will be and tends to assume everyone else will think logically.
His suggestions always have perfectly well thought out logic, and because of that they often end up wrong.
Season 3 Tyrion would have never dreamed of trusting Cersei or underestimated her ruthlessness. Didn't make sense to me for his character to regress like that over time.
aTmAg said:Go read up on Stalin, Hitler, Saddam Hussein, etc. before they genocided people. It was plain as day the type of person they were and what they were capable of.Ervin Burrell said:How is one genocidal before committing genocide?aTmAg said:I never said it was exactly like real world history. But in 100% of the cases I can think of, genocidal maniacs were obviously genocidal maniacs LONG before they actually conducted genocide.Zombie Jon Snow said:aTmAg said:
So I read all of those, and there isn't a single instance of her killing civilians for the hell of it like she did yesterday. Retribution is VASTLY different than killing civilians after the battle is over (by the million).
Lincoln executed 38 indians as retribution and lead a civil war that killed more Americans than any other war in history. Yet when the war was over, he didn't kill a million people.
lmao
yep. this is exactly like real world US history.
damn i wish i had watched Lincoln instead. what was i thinking watching a brutal fantasy show i could have watched a docudrama instead.
How often do you play this card?Quote:
Can everyone please flag this *******'s every attack on the last few pages. Staff needs to take the trash out.
His suggestions are logical, the problem I have with is character is he is now trusting everyone to also make ration decisions. He basically advises Jon in the very first episode of the series that people are a-holes, and to not forget that. Tyrion has forgotten that.bobinator said:
I don't mind so much what they've done with Tyrion. He continually suggests paths that seem 'right,' and then he's wrong for various reasons.
He's like the oppo-Littlefinger. He continually underestimates how extreme people will be and tends to assume everyone else will think logically.
His suggestions always have perfectly well thought out logic, and because of that they often end up wrong.
Zombie Jon Snow said:aTmAg said:So you are saying that your daughter predicted all along that Dany was going to go genocide on a city full of innocents, but you did not?Z said:
google it genius
You might want to learn what a joke is... or an emoticon.....
And keep talking about my daughter whackjob. Game's on now. I'll roast your entire ****ing city to the ground - odd though nobody would have called me a homicidal maniac before. I guess that's out of character for me.
I'm saying shut the **** up. Clear enough?
Can everyone please flag this *******'s every attack on the last few pages. Staff needs to take the trash out. I don't care if they take me out with him I'll take one for the team.
I'm done.
why do you think she did it? I personally believe she never once intended on taking Kong's landing in one piece. I don't think she is mad either. I think she understands that she needed to completely destroy cersi and her "subjects".jtstanley4621 said:At least for me personally, I'm upset about WHY she did it, not that she actually did it. do not think that they did a good job establishing her going down this path. Yes, they beat us over the head with her losing her inner circle (Jorah, Missandei, Jon telling Sansa, etc.) but I don't feel like that is the type of subtle, slow build that we have come to know from Game of Thrones. The writing is not as tightly packed and subtle as it once was.cbr said:No way, even 4 was nowhere near that bad.daggertx said:
This show is becoming the Last Jedi bad....
I just am of the opinion that anyone hating her burning everything is just failing to understamd the entire point of the whole show.
Being upset with how it went down doesn't mean that you misunderstand the entire point of the series.
Social Media Influencer said:How often do you play this card?Quote:
Can everyone please flag this *******'s every attack on the last few pages. Staff needs to take the trash out.
You're getting to be a pretty obnoxious, over the top presence on this board yourself.
You articulated it better than I did, but this is largely what I'm trying to say.AustinAg2K said:His suggestions are logical, the problem I have with is character is he is now trusting everyone to also make ration decisions. He basically advises Jon in the very first episode of the series that people are a-holes, and to not forget that. Tyrion has forgotten that.bobinator said:
I don't mind so much what they've done with Tyrion. He continually suggests paths that seem 'right,' and then he's wrong for various reasons.
He's like the oppo-Littlefinger. He continually underestimates how extreme people will be and tends to assume everyone else will think logically.
His suggestions always have perfectly well thought out logic, and because of that they often end up wrong.
Ragoo said:why do you think she did it? I personally believe she never once intended on taking Kong's landing in one piece. I don't think she is mad either. I think she understands that she needed to completely destroy cersi and her "subjects".jtstanley4621 said:At least for me personally, I'm upset about WHY she did it, not that she actually did it. do not think that they did a good job establishing her going down this path. Yes, they beat us over the head with her losing her inner circle (Jorah, Missandei, Jon telling Sansa, etc.) but I don't feel like that is the type of subtle, slow build that we have come to know from Game of Thrones. The writing is not as tightly packed and subtle as it once was.cbr said:No way, even 4 was nowhere near that bad.daggertx said:
This show is becoming the Last Jedi bad....
I just am of the opinion that anyone hating her burning everything is just failing to understamd the entire point of the whole show.
Being upset with how it went down doesn't mean that you misunderstand the entire point of the series.
Ah don't know how I left him out. He was phenomenal.ham98 said:
Don't forget oberyn Martell
My only problem with this is the dude wrote it in twitter. He is spot on with regards to GRRM's writing style. Although GRRM does have an overall plan for a story arc, he has repeatedly said he does not create outlines for the stories. He just writes. I think that is part of why his books take so long to write. He writes a chapter, and then because he didn't plan everything out from the beginning, he has to go back and figure out if it all fits with his story. A lot of times it doesn't, so he has to scrap it and start over. Because he doesn't have hard dates for deadlines, he can follow this process even if it takes him 10 years to write a book.clinker03 said:
I'm curious to know yalls thoughts on this - I read this earlier today and it made sense to me. TCTTS - is this common in the industry?
(What doesn't make sense is why D&D would limit themselves to so few episodes if there were all these "plants" out there that needed to be resolved....but that is a different discussion. )
This is a long twitter thread and I don't have the time to transcribe it all (sorry) so the link is below. Talks about the different approaches to writing a show and how that plays into how we are viewing the last two seasons vs the first 5. (Click on the tweet below to see the whole thread).
Tyrion murdered his dad with a crossbow while he was on the ****ter and strangled the love of his life to death. Yeah, they've destroyed his character.SAtxag16 said:Yeah I don't disagree with that now, but I feel like that wasn't the guy he was in the first 3 or 4 seasons. My gripe isn't so much just with Season 8 Tyrion as it is the overall arc of his character from where he started.bobinator said:
I don't mind so much what they've done with Tyrion. He continually suggests paths that seem 'right,' and then he's wrong for various reasons.
He's like the oppo-Littlefinger. He continually underestimates how extreme people will be and tends to assume everyone else will think logically.
His suggestions always have perfectly well thought out logic, and because of that they often end up wrong.
Season 3 Tyrion would have never dreamed of trusting Cersei or underestimated her ruthlessness. Didn't make sense to me for his character to regress like that over time.
She showed restraint even after they killed Rhaegal while she was on the way to King's Landing. She said she did not intend to be the Queen of Ashes.Ragoo said:why do you think she did it? I personally believe she never once intended on taking Kong's landing in one piece. I don't think she is mad either. I think she understands that she needed to completely destroy cersi and her "subjects".jtstanley4621 said:At least for me personally, I'm upset about WHY she did it, not that she actually did it. do not think that they did a good job establishing her going down this path. Yes, they beat us over the head with her losing her inner circle (Jorah, Missandei, Jon telling Sansa, etc.) but I don't feel like that is the type of subtle, slow build that we have come to know from Game of Thrones. The writing is not as tightly packed and subtle as it once was.cbr said:No way, even 4 was nowhere near that bad.daggertx said:
This show is becoming the Last Jedi bad....
I just am of the opinion that anyone hating her burning everything is just failing to understamd the entire point of the whole show.
Being upset with how it went down doesn't mean that you misunderstand the entire point of the series.
Yea, don't forget that Vyserion tore down the ****ing wall with that dragon fire, but couldn't manage to knock over a 3 foot wall when Jon was behind it. It's so transparent now that it's silly.Joseph Parrish said:If Dragonfire was this OP in Episode 3 of this season, then Jon would have been a goner hiding behind the walls of Winterfell when Rhaegal was in the courtyard. They definitely cranked up the firepower for this last episode.smokeythebear said:
It's just so blatantly transparent that D&D don't care about overpowering one weapon a week to push the narrative instead of live within some semblance of reality.