Cousin Greg tattoo.
DannyDuberstein said:
I think the only issue I had with this episode was that the interaction Greg saw which drove him to "i think she's having an affair" was a little bit innocuous. I wish they'd made it a little more obvious/egregious. I was trying to recall if Greg has witnessed anything previous in order for it to be more of a putting 2+2 together thing, but nothing came to mind right away.
Because its not always fun to watch a bunch of ****ty people just be ****ty people. You review movies for a living and don't understand why nearly all story telling has a protagonist? You don't understand why 99 percent of all stories follow this model?TCTTS said:
I've never understood why a "good" person is needed to keep someone engaged. As long as the story, characterizations, and the writing is good, I could not care less how "good" the characters are.
What makes a story compelling though?TCTTS said:
I root for a story to be told compellingly. That's it.
I mean, its the single most relevant thing though. Which is why its classic. That being said, something here is making me tune in. I just don't know what the hell it is.TCTTS said:
Sure, someone to root for goes a long way in making something compelling. But it's not essential, which is my only point.
Quote:
Kendall getting played by Sandy and Stewy. Frank didn't tell anyone. The reporter/leak is made-up to take advantage of the timing with Logan out of the country and distracted.
Was about to make this same point.DannyDuberstein said:
How about Breaking Bad? Basically all of them were terrible people doing terrible things, but they were entertaining and compelling to follow. But nothing was entirely black-and-white. You found yourself rooting for awful people, or maybe more accurately, people at different points on the awful scale.
Not sure entirely, but Furness should now have about $3.2 billion of their stock and Kendall has about half a billion. They would then use that $4ish billion as collateral to borrow $$$ to make an offer to buy significant additional stake in the company (+ any additional that Furness may want to put in and anything else they could borrow). Between what they can raise and what they can borrow, I assume they have line of sight to offer a price that the other (non-family) shareholders would find enticing, allowing them to acquire the shares necessary to take over control and push Logan/family out. With someone that isn't prepared to go down with the ship like Logan, just making the move and showing you can do it could be enough to get them to the table to sell out enough to surrender control.Brian Earl Spilner said:
I think I have to rewatch the episode, can someone recap what exactly the plan is for the takeover? And why exactly Kendall is needed?
Once it's over, they can push him out, right?