If the purpose of that sequence was to illustrate how dangerous the gap is instead of staying true to the character and the plot, that is by definition a plot contrivance. It pulled me out of the show because Manousos appears to be too intelligent to mindlessly wander into that situation. I don’t really see the “teaching moment” as relevant or needed in this show. |
I’m not even sure about the collective knowledge. The show said the card game Spit originated in the UK in the 80s, but I was definitely playing that game in my 6th grade classroom in the late 70s in the US, every time we had indoor recess. Other than that, the whole living in isolation thing really resonates with me. That’s been me for a few years now. Having the ability to do anything isn’t as much fun of an idea when there’s no one you really want to do anything with. Having the ability to do anything also somehow detracts from the appeal of things to the point where you often feel paralyzed to make a choice, and end up doing … nothing I can see how billionaires and monarchs start to become a little squirrely |
Hmm. Maybe Galaga? Trying to think of something that really relies on muscle memory and/or the thing that some people are just weirdly good at which doesn’t depend on acquired knowledge. Obviously trivial pursuit would be a disaster! I guess she could also just ask, but it seems the hive is a little evasive when asked questions that might point out their weaknesses. |
DP. Yes, it only occurred to me as part of the plot to show how determined he is, or maybe so he would need the hive’s help. I doubt most Americans are even going to make the connection about migrants. |
Watch the latest episode. They do exactly that, but Zosia’s skiing ability isn’t shown or discussed. |
Yep. I turned to someone and said, "I was playing Spit in the US in the 1970s." |
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Just caught up with the show and read this thread.
- The people complaining about pacing are going to have to deal with it. Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul both had similar aspects, leaning heavily on showing repetition and “setting” shots that intend to immerse you in the world of the characters. It paid off immensely in those shows snd I hope it does so here too. - Up until the Darien Gap, Manousos was “paying” for gas and other items. The idea that he would have stolen a boat at that point would have felt like a character break. - I am also wondering how they are going to deal with procreation. Especially knowing that starvation is likely. That’s the topic that does make it seem more like an alien invasion where they use resources and then move on (not in the physical sense, but beaming their way of life). |
On the last point, if it’s like a virus that wants to repllicate, a virus only “cares” about killing its hosts if that means it can’t spread. So if the goal is just to have humans send the virus code out to additional planets (which they presumably are doing), the hive might not care much about human extinction/proceeation. The question carol never seems to ask which is driving me nuts is … if you weren’t skiing in aspen with me, what would you be doing? It seems like none of them have individual desires/intetests. So do they just work and then stare at the wall? And how do they decide who does what work since they are all equally capable? Why isn’t the ditch digger asking for a turn at a desk job? Who is allocating the resources? Even the proletariat needed a vanguard. A hive has a queen bee. It’s not 8 billion people coming to instantaneous consensus over how to organize each little task every day, is it? This is what seems to make procreation problematic. No one has an individual urges so ….. basically they would only have sex if/when the hive decides to allocate those resources in that direction??? PS they should inseminstr carols eggs to manouses — presumably their babies would be immune to the virus? |
A virus doesn't want to do anything. It just keeps replicating, like a little machine, until it runs out of resources or is killed. The hive mind does seem to want to procreate, but to the stars. The entire population is working toward the goal of sending out the signal. After it starts sending, there will be less demand for workers, just a maintenance crew. I expect the population to decline significantly before procreation is necessary. The hive mind is already running low on food. |
+1 |
SAME! |
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The Darian gap as social commentary I think feeds into the ai/sameness social commentary. The whole scene with the indigenous girl kind of choosing to let go of her individuality and that immediately ending her people’s culture was so disturbing/interesting. Young people walking away from tradition does erase this type of cultural life.
Then Carol goes on this eat pray love journey (notably very different to what she chose to do when left to her own bored devices (golden girls, golf, Georgia o’keefe). She’s in this Instagram reality and still finds something lacking. This two exceptionally curmudgeonly people refusing to give up what makes them them being beautiful despite them being aholes I think makes it even more interesting. My question after this last episode is about the rules. They will give her an atom bomb but I assume not her own stem cells. Why? Did she just not think to demand that? And why will they give her an atom bomb despite that largely being very destructive to their goals as well. Why do they feel love for their missing pieces, this is the most inexplicable question. Putting make scientific research development into the conversion of these twelve people is inefficient and somewhat inexplicable. They cannot lie so they do believe she will be happy but why is the happiness important? Can’t believe that was just end of the season! |
100% agree. DP |
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I have to wonder if when Carol and Zosia are having sex, is the entire hive right there with them, thinking their thoughts? Doesn't seem like there would be much privacy in a relationship with one of the hive.
In that vein, is Zosia really attracted to Carol or is she just going along with it as her "chaperone"? I'm so confused about their relationship, especially when none of the other hive member have relationships with one another. I'm also very curious about what Manousos discovered with the radio frequency and how it helps to calm the hive when they have their seizures. He seems extraordinarily intelligent. |
This was the point of the whole introduction with the indigenous girl. They surrounded her with love and affection and performed their rituals to make her feel as if those things are still part of them and the second she joined they all stopped, packed up, and left. They are good at and intentionally manipulating the survivors into joining. Zosia is the full history of humanity’s knowledge on how to manipulate someone. They clearly have no qualms about misleading even if they can’t lie |