I'm sorry that that has been a challenge in your life!
For discussion, I think that I should stick with: what Sara says there doesn't make me think well of her as a character, or, on this particular topic, of the writer who put those words in her mouth, though the rest of the episode is so very good. (I've never seen this script. I wonder whether the author did write the words as spoken, or whether they got changed along the way, as scripts in production often do.)
Yes, exactly, about "Last Knight!" In the same way that Natalie's choices in "Fallen Idol" (the third-season wrestling episode; Natalie injects the boy with vampire blood) look so much worse when we remember that Natalie lived through "If Looks Could Kill" (the first-season episode with the Baroness, who injects her patients with vampire blood) and should know better, Natalie's choice at the end of "Last Knight " — to "guilt" Nick into biting her — takes on a different shade when we know she lived through "I Will Repay" and what happened to her brother.
no subject
For discussion, I think that I should stick with: what Sara says there doesn't make me think well of her as a character, or, on this particular topic, of the writer who put those words in her mouth, though the rest of the episode is so very good. (I've never seen this script. I wonder whether the author did write the words as spoken, or whether they got changed along the way, as scripts in production often do.)
Yes, exactly, about "Last Knight!" In the same way that Natalie's choices in "Fallen Idol" (the third-season wrestling episode; Natalie injects the boy with vampire blood) look so much worse when we remember that Natalie lived through "If Looks Could Kill" (the first-season episode with the Baroness, who injects her patients with vampire blood) and should know better, Natalie's choice at the end of "Last Knight " — to "guilt" Nick into biting her — takes on a different shade when we know she lived through "I Will Repay" and what happened to her brother.