This week on Taking It Down, the hosts get into the emotional finale of HBO's 'Somebody Somewhere,' in broad ways in the non-spoiler section to begin the episode (1:08). Additionally, they discuss the second season of Apple TV+'s 'Silo,' as they now have mixed feelings on the show (5:48).
For the weekly spoiler section, they recount 'Somebody Somewhere' and its run on HBO with talk about its poignancy, grief, and trust of friendship (11:57). Then for more spoilers, it's a conversation on the the pacing, writing, and acting of the Apple TV+ series 'Silo,' where Adam questions if he should continue and why (34:33). To end the spoiler section, Blaine and Donovan quickly discuss the sixth and final season of 'What We Do in the Shadows' to set up its final episode next week (44:48).
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For more from the podcast and the entire Alabama Take family, visit it here: https://www.thealabamatake.com
Hey everyone.
BlaineIt is taking it down the TV and streaming podcast for the Alabama Take website and production company.
BlaineWe're going to be talking about three things.
BlaineThe ending of Somebody somewhere.
BlaineWe'll talk about a few of the episodes from this season of Silo on Apple tv.
BlainePlus we'll also talk about the penultimate episode of what we do in the Shadows from FX and Hulu.
BlaineBut you don't have to run off just yet because we discuss things.
BlaineSpoiler Free to begin.
Speaker BAlabama Take projection.
BlaineSo abortion.
Speaker BSurprisingly underrated.
BlaineIt's exciting to be here this week because the Alabama Take was nominated for best Indie website of the year 2024.
BlaineAnd I just got word that doesn't exist because I just made it up.
Speaker BBreaking news Self nomination.
BlaineI'm still excited to be with Adam and Donovan.
BlaineNo spoilers in this part.
BlaineInstead, we'll say goodbye briefly here and then more thoroughly later to the HBO series Somebody Somewhere, which ended its third and final season last Sunday.
BlaineWhere does season land for you?
BlaineAnd then you can even talk about where it stands for you as an entire three season show.
Speaker BWell, my rating of this season is are you made of stone?
Speaker BAnd one of the things I did like about this season and the whole thing is it really took.
Speaker BIt was kind of a moving forward story, but it was also like a part of someone's life, part of several someone's life in three distinct chunks.
Speaker BSo I really didn't feel like it was like it's a three season show, but I didn't really feel like it was like a beginning, middle and ending show.
Speaker BI mean obviously the end, the first season kind of has to do some setup.
Speaker BYeah, I don't know if that makes sense.
Speaker BIt was almost like three chapters in a book as opposed to like we're starting and going up and down and this is, this is not a criticism, by the way.
Speaker BI thought that was the kind of like easy naturalism of that really worked for me.
DonovanYeah, I'll piggyback on that and say that as it rounded the corner and we knew that the plane was about to land, it really became clear that the strength of the show is that I think if we went back to season one and watched episode one, two, whatever, we would be shocked at the difference in the relationships that everybody has.
DonovanAnd at no point do you feel like major breakthroughs or bust ups.
DonovanIt's just a real life.
DonovanThese people moved along and we were there with them.
DonovanI suppose that if you wanted more traditional drama from a show, you may have complaints about season three, but if this show is for you.
DonovanAnd I'm with Donovan, meaning if you are not made of stone, then I think that this was a very successful landing of the plane.
Speaker BI assume that the writers are working on the spin off show where Fred Rococo becomes Ken State, Kent State, Kansas State's defensive coordinator.
DonovanFantastic.
BlaineHe got to go in the field.
Speaker BI think he'd be good at it.
DonovanThat going on the field bit, we praise the perfect realism and nods to like the environments that we grew up in.
DonovanBut how many people do you know who lived their entire lives in, say, Tuscaloosa?
DonovanAnd they got to go on like a patch of grass that has been within five miles of them at almost all points in their life.
DonovanAnd it's like it is the mountaintop.
BlaineYou know, if it was during or right after a game, it's the mountaintop.
Speaker BYeah, he just delivered that line.
Speaker BSo to briefly praise some of the actors.
Speaker BHe just delivered that line so perfectly where it's just like, you see, like, yeah, this is like the players are like warming up or whatever.
Speaker BThis is the biggest day of Free Fred Rococo's life.
BlaineMurray Hill's got great energy as an actor.
Speaker BHilarious guy.
BlaineI've watched his.
BlaineSome of his, I guess you call it stand up.
BlaineHe kind of just puts on a performance or show.
BlaineI watched a few minutes of that on YouTube.
BlaineIt's.
BlaineIt's entertaining and put.
BlainePut a smile on your face for sure.
BlaineDonovan mentioned, said the word naturalism.
BlaineWhat a great way of thinking about this show.
BlaineAnd it goes hand in hand with what Adam was saying about how if you watch the first episode, there might be some relationships you might not recognize.
BlaineAnd let's do that for a second.
BlaineDo you guys remember when Sam comes back to town, she.
BlaineShe gets back on her feet by working at like an act grade, essay grading.
BlaineAnd that's how she meets Joel.
Speaker BYeah, it's how she meets Joel.
BlaineIt just cracks me up because I give the act at our school every.
BlaineIt's like six times a year.
BlaineAnd I just gave it yesterday.
BlaineAnd it's just so funny to.
BlaineAnd I also teach, so I have to like score these essays sometimes just on my own.
BlaineBut like, that was like a mini thing.
BlaineAnd it was such a.
BlaineI say mini thing.
BlaineThat was a job for her.
BlaineAnd it's truly a job.
BlaineYou just don't keep forever.
BlaineProbably if you're Sam, you don't.
Speaker BThe only type of person who keeps that forever is like the supervisor in that first season, you know, where it's like, there might be something kind of wrong with you if you've made this your career.
BlaineIt's a very special kind of show.
BlaineIt really hit for me this season especially.
BlaineAnd we'll get into why on the.
Speaker BYeah.
BlaineOn the.
BlaineAfter the spoiler, because I guess I have to pinpoint a few things to explain myself.
BlaineWe'll also get into the Apple TV plus series that's currently airing its second season every Friday.
BlaineI think that's Silo.
BlaineThis show is based off of a trilogy of books and stories by Hugh Howie about a future society that's forced into silos underground due to circumstances with the earth.
BlaineThe air's inhospitable to mankind.
BlaineOr something like that's happening.
BlaineShoot.
BlaineYeah.
Speaker BYou don't say.
BlaineI kid you not.
Speaker BWhat does it do to everyone's butt?
BlaineThat's a really fine question that's yet to be explored.
DonovanI feel like we're gonna find out pretty soon with all these drones.
BlaineShow stars Rebecca Ferguson is a mechanic from the lower part of the silo and Tim Robbins as the mayor in charge of the whole shebang.
BlaineI almost said Tim Robinson and boy and boy.
BlaineWould that be a different show?
Speaker BA very different show.
BlaineNo.
BlaineI don't know how to drive.
BlaineI don't know what any of this shit is, and I'm fucking scared.
BlaineAdam, is there anything you want to mention here with no spoilers about the show second season, or do you want to kind of just wait?
DonovanI'll say that this show has a habit of boring me and making me feel like we're out to sea and then suddenly pulling me back and I have to see the next episode.
BlaineWow, that's so well said.
BlaineThat's funny you said that.
DonovanBecause I think that a lot and it frustrates me.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineOkay.
DonovanAnd I think this may be a problem with other Apple shows.
DonovanI started thinking about it specifically with Silo and sort of kind of going through my.
DonovanPreviously watched on Apple tv and there's a lot that I only made it two, three, four episodes into and then bailed on and I don't know what it is.
BlaineWell, okay.
BlaineYeah, I don't know either.
BlaineBut what is it about Apple TV show that it's not nearly as good in its second season?
DonovanHmm.
BlaineTed Lasso kind of dipped.
BlaineNot horribly, but it did.
DonovanYou're really scared, Lane.
DonovanBecause I'm really excited about severance.
BlaineWell, that's what I'm saying now we got severance.
BlaineI was building to that.
BlaineYeah.
Speaker BGotta be worried.
BlaineIt's interesting.
BlaineBut, you know, Silo in particular, not the other ones.
BlaineAs much?
BlaineWell, shrinking.
BlaineBut that's a odd comparison.
BlaineHere's what I'm getting at.
BlaineIt's a.
BlaineIt's a rush bit of TV for our age.
BlaineIn a way, it's almost like how TV shows used to be.
BlaineYou get a new season almost a year to the day that the first season started.
BlaineSilo did that.
BlaineAnd that might be what's causing a few problems with this show.
BlaineIn particular, it has to be an expensive series to produce.
BlaineIt looks really realistic.
BlaineWhen we started discussion about Silo earlier five weeks ago, I compared it to how a couple of Disney plus series.
BlaineIt's hard to sometimes settle in and believe what's happening because the sets look so cheaply made at times.
BlaineBut that's not the case with Silo.
BlaineI believe I'm in a Silo or, you know, underground, whatever.
BlaineIt's well done, it's well produced, the sets look great.
BlaineBut what's the dip?
BlaineIs it the.
BlaineMaybe the writing has to be rushed and that could affect the acting, which is something I think we'll get into a little bit with this.
BlaineSome particular scenes on in the spoiler section, but anything else, I'll bite my tongue.
DonovanUntil then, I suppose.
BlaineLet's do that.
BlaineAlso.
BlaineLater, Donovan and I will get into what we do in the Shadows, as it too is winding down its television run with its sixth and final season.
BlaineI only have a couple questions there, really, to set up the finale, because we are.
BlaineWe just watched the penultimate episode, so there's probably nothing new I will say here about the FX Hulu comedy what We do in the Shadows, other than.
BlaineI have been still been recommending this.
BlaineI just recommended it yesterday to someone who had no idea.
BlaineI've been trying to get my wife to watch it as well.
BlaineSo that's two people recently.
BlaineAnd I've been like, you know, it's funny.
BlaineDon't be bothered by the premise that it's vampires.
Speaker BNo, it's not.
Speaker BIt's not that kind of show.
BlaineIt's not that kind of show.
BlaineAlthough if you got any knowledge of the tropes of vampires, that'll.
BlaineThat'll tickle you.
Speaker BIt'll make you laugh.
Speaker BI've been pleased with it.
Speaker BI think even in this last season, it's been keeping up, like, the quality of what it was, you know, not that, like, it's never been.
Speaker BLike, every episode's a knock out of the park.
Speaker BBut it's usually been consistently good.
Speaker BAnd I think this one is still consistently good.
Speaker BWe've had some.
BlaineI'll get into some of my thoughts.
BlaineOnce again, shame on me.
BlaineI should be able to talk about something without spoiling it, but there's some specifics I want to bring up.
Speaker BWell, you get.
Speaker BYou get so deep into something, you've kind of said everything.
Speaker BNon spoiler.
Speaker BYou can stay for after a minute.
Speaker BRight.
BlaineThat's fair.
DonovanI feel like FX has used all of the advertising budget for what we do in the shadows that they should have used over these seasons, like in the last three weeks.
DonovanI see commercials for that everywhere.
BlaineI mean, you should watch it.
BlaineDon't be slighted by the vampire stuff.
BlaineIt's.
BlaineIt's almost the.
BlaineIn the vein.
BlaineNot almost.
BlaineIt is in the vein of the Office, this fake documentary.
BlaineBut they're just filming these three vampires who are also roommates, and they have a human helper who.
BlaineHe's the guy who gives the side eye to the camera.
BlaineLike these fucking idiots.
DonovanPlaying a straight man.
BlaineYeah, he's a straight man and he is.
BlaineWhich it's funny because he's gay and.
Speaker BYeah.
BlaineAnyway, that's another little joke.
BlaineBut it's so funny.
Speaker BIt is good.
Speaker BIt is good.
Speaker BThey get good guest stars too, weirdly.
BlaineOh, they do.
BlaineGood point.
Speaker BYeah.
BlaineOkay, this podcast, taking it down in our home site, the Alabama Taker.
BlaineThrilled to use the script if you have a podcaster.
BlaineIf you're thinking about starting one, but you're worried about the time commitment, you're worried about editing.
BlaineWorry not.
BlaineGive Descript a try with the link in the show notes.
BlaineNot only does Descript give you a trustworthy platform to record your episodes, but it makes editing a breeze.
BlaineIt takes each speaker's audio and video and transforms that into a Word document, which you can edit.
BlaineIt also provides the WAV files.
BlaineYou can make yourself happy with a lot less time spent, but no dip in quality with the script.
BlaineUse the link in the show notes and you'll be helping yourself as well as supporting taking it down.
BlaineAll right, we're going to talk about the last two episodes of Somebody Somewhere of season three, likely its final season.
BlaineThere has been questions pop up online.
BlaineIs it truly the last season?
BlaineWill it get resurrected somewhere else?
BlaineIt just seems to be its last.
BlaineLet's just treat it as such.
Speaker BI'm of the school of thought that it's okay for things to end.
BlaineSo am I.
Speaker BEspecially when it seems like it's on the creator's timelines, you know, where it fits.
Speaker BDoes that make sense?
BlaineYeah.
BlaineAnd I've gotta be honest here, that I'm not 100% sure exactly how it came to be.
BlaineDid they know it was ending very much along the way of doing the third season?
BlaineLike, they already had everything written and then it just sort of worked out.
BlaineThat will be fine for a season and series finale both.
BlaineBut HBO decided that that would be its last season.
BlaineI don't think it was the creators 100%.
Speaker BIt seems like it's working for him, though.
Speaker BOr.
Speaker BSorry.
Speaker BThey're working with it, I guess, is what I really mean.
BlaineThat's very true.
BlaineAnd.
BlaineBut because they do something very wise, their last episode of any season could serve as an end to the story they're telling.
BlaineAnd that's probably how most television series should be.
Speaker BYeah.
BlaineIt's like, you know, this could be the end of this part.
BlaineYou can imagine what happens next.
BlaineAnd I think that works here, too.
Speaker BI think so, too.
Speaker BI think that's almost kind of.
Speaker BYou said it, Blaine.
Speaker BThat's one of the strengths of what they've done is it just puts you in that space where it's like, I don't have to answer all the questions, but I can imagine maybe what would happen.
Speaker BI can hope or not hope, whatever.
BlaineWe sat on the penultimate episode on purpose because we knew we'd devote quite a bit of time to the show.
BlaineI think we all loved it.
BlaineWould you.
BlaineAm I using too strong of a word here for the two of you?
DonovanIt was really good.
DonovanI will struggle to remember individual episodes.
BlaineSure.
DonovanMaybe not individual moments.
DonovanCause there were some truly.
DonovanWe work blue.
DonovanWe're talking poop humor here.
DonovanThere's a lot of good quality shitter humor going on in this program and some poignant moments as well.
DonovanIt's almost like a feeling that you take from the show instead of, like, individual beats where, you know, when you're talking about.
DonovanI think it's in your words, it's okay for shows to end.
DonovanAnd I agree.
DonovanObviously, there's some outliers where, you know, if they had cut Game of Thrones off early, there would have been pitchforks in the street, that sort of thing.
DonovanBut that's such a.
DonovanThis is the opposite of that.
DonovanYou know, this is plot driven, but in the way that, like, literary fiction is plot driven.
DonovanThat's a long answer to say, did I love this show?
DonovanI mean, yeah.
DonovanI mean, I think it's one of the better shows.
DonovanIt almost takes time to, like, settle the dust on, say, the last five years of television and say, this was one of the better shows in that.
DonovanThat time period.
BlaineI can't think of a show that will replicate the feeling this show gives me when I watch it.
BlaineAnd shortly after I've watched it, I can't think of one that does it.
BlaineSome movies do, but not.
BlaineNot a show.
Speaker BIt's really great in being vibes based.
Speaker BWell, not just like running on vibes, if that makes any kind of sense.
Speaker BLike there's actual substance there.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineWell said.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineIf we may, I'd like to pull back a full episode.
BlaineStart with the penultimate of the season and series.
BlaineIt was titled.
BlaineAs much as I like not feeling so.
BlaineYou might remember that line too.
BlaineThe plot.
Speaker BI think we all feel that way.
BlaineYeah.
Speaker BLove it.
BlaineThe plot's more or less about Joel and his attempt to figure out his own mini breakdown after.
BlaineThank.
BlaineThat perfect Thanksgiving episode, his reconnection with Sam and Sam's walk with the Icelandic fellow who has such a deep voice.
BlaineWe get more.
BlaineMore lines from him than ever in that one.
BlaineIs this the first time we've ever seen anybody listen to a podcast on a show?
BlaineA specific one at that.
BlaineLike we get the top.
BlaineIt's one I know of.
BlaineMy wife listens to it some.
BlaineJoel backs into the car and like.
BlaineBecause he was listening to a podcast.
Speaker BThat was funny.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineIt propels him to come to Sam.
BlaineLike I had this breakdown.
BlaineI've.
BlaineAnd it also has built up to me that I've had this wreck.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineThis fender bender.
DonovanCan I insert here the physical humor that is Joel crying.
Speaker BYes.
DonovanLike obviously that's the double edged sword of the show.
DonovanRight.
DonovanIs like this.
DonovanIt can be funny and kind of not tragic, but important, emotionally important at the same time.
Speaker BLike it's so relatable.
Speaker BWho hasn't?
Speaker BYou know, you got your shot of adrenaline.
Speaker BBut his whole freaking out after the accident and like being mad at the little old lady and then she calls him like he does.
Speaker BHe does such a good.
Speaker BLike you're laughing the whole time.
Speaker BHe does such a good job.
BlaineThis is the episode that gives Fred Rocco 3 minutes of screen time and he kills it where he says single line.
BlaineSometimes I want to be a bad, bad boy because he's eating the hamburger.
Speaker BInstead of the salad.
Speaker BHe lied that he was getting.
BlaineYeah, he was lying about it.
DonovanI love it.
Speaker BSo good.
BlaineHow many times have I done that?
BlaineA ton.
BlaineThe music in this series wows me on how perfect it slots into what's going on.
BlaineIt's designed by Amanda Jones and there's a one I can name in this episode between the scene where Trisha advises Sam to.
BlaineTo change before seeing the Icelandic guy and she's yeah.
BlaineShe's trying to figure out, is this going to work?
BlaineDoes it fit well?
BlaineAnd there's a, like a five note, maybe four note piano figure, and that's it.
BlaineAnd it melted my heart.
BlaineIt warmed me simultaneously somehow.
BlaineAnyway.
BlaineIt just set me up to.
BlaineTo really feel and see Sam's nervousness that created her indecision there on what to wear.
BlaineI 100% have made a list of conversations, especially for the phone back in the day.
BlaineOh, yeah, when you had to talk on the phone, I would have a list, a little post it note and be like, oh, yeah, I want to.
BlaineAnd sometimes it was like, I don't want to forget to say.
BlaineBut sometimes it was like, okay, it's a girl I like.
BlaineI'm going to call her.
BlaineWhat.
BlaineWhat can I talk about?
DonovanTalking points.
BlaineTalking points.
BlaineYes, of course.
BlaineI'm so glad that was portrayed on screen.
BlaineHer list, though, brings me to, like, this balance, which is a good word for this show, for what it.
BlaineWhat it gives us.
BlaineIt helps me forget that she's been through turmoil, grief, and that juxtaposes her hotspot and so many other facets of her life.
BlaineShe's the woman who's gonna rub her boobs in your face, but then she is also nervous and grief stricken.
Speaker BYeah, I agree.
Speaker BIt is a great job of someone who uses, like, humor and theatricality and has a big, outsized personality, but is also, you know, like.
Speaker BLike many of us is like, has parts that they're deeply, deeply insecure about.
Speaker BAnd I think, like, you know, in some ways, the whole show's kind of been about, like, Sam being brave.
Speaker BBrave enough to.
Speaker BTo let those more vulnerable parts be touched or touch others.
DonovanI think they did a really nice thing.
DonovanAnd I know that we'll probably talk about this relationship specifically as we continue on, but the sisters learning from each other in this way, that's one of the relationships that I thought of at the top of the show that you could almost hardly believe how these two relate to each other in the final episode compared to episode one, two, three.
DonovanDonovan, you saying kind of balancing the grief and with the bluster, so to speak.
DonovanWhereas her sister is so pragmatic and I'm sure thought that, oh, Sam, that's the one who does all the artsy stuff, you know, whatever.
DonovanAnd by the end, they kind of grow towards each other in this really nice way that those parts of the personality start to balance out a bit or at least are appreciated by the other.
Speaker BI loved for the two just how they were able to like, kind of something like we said with Joel in the Thanksgiving episode, just like articulate the things that they appreciated about each other.
BlaineYeah.
Speaker BAnd that's.
Speaker BThat's.
Speaker BI don't.
Speaker BI mean, it's.
Speaker BIt's cool, it's powerful.
BlaineAnd that happens a couple of times with the characters, which makes it a nice period on the end of this series is sentence.
Speaker BYes.
BlaineThe Icelandic guy says, I don't like how you always put yourself down.
BlaineI liked how that was given a full beat.
Speaker BI guess you could say it was.
Speaker BYeah, it was really good.
BlaineThat scene also gave me two other things that I found very, very nice and well done.
BlaineUsed the phrase emotional infrastructure.
BlaineWhat a phrase.
BlaineAfter she got.
BlaineShe gets kissed.
BlaineBut then it sets them up to be as far apart in the frame as possible.
BlaineIt's beautiful shot because you get this Winterfield behind them and, you know, she's debating on leaving.
BlaineAnd I just love it when you get these compositions that also either help tell the story or also tell the story.
BlaineSo if you sent that in an image, you could probably guess some of the emotions that are happening there.
DonovanHe's been an interesting guy this last season.
DonovanNot talking a lot.
DonovanIt's what's not said.
DonovanIt's.
DonovanYou know, you're picking up these little details and it's.
DonovanAs we're talking now, I'm kind of thinking about, you know, Sam arrives in town.
DonovanDo you guys remember where she came from?
DonovanBecause she's coming back from somewhere.
BlaineNew York, right?
DonovanWas it New York?
DonovanHas she come back from New York to kind of tend to the family business?
BlaineI want to say that's right.
DonovanShe comes back a bit through blown by the waves of circumstance, you know, whereas he displays this emotional intelligence to say something like, I don't like how you put yourself down.
DonovanIt's also there for completely solid reasons.
DonovanLike, he's made a decision to be where he is.
DonovanHe's gone there to study agriculture.
DonovanNow he's doing this thing.
DonovanAnd there's, you know, Fred has his own through line of like, soil study and all of this stuff that's, you know, for the nerds.
DonovanI'm raising my hand here amongst fun to follow.
DonovanBut she runs across this guy who just seems more grounded than her in so many ways.
DonovanAnd they do such a good job of that with saying so little.
DonovanLike, for such a.
DonovanHe is like a literal large presence on screen, but he also just seems completely comfortable in his skin.
BlaineIt's funny you say he's grounded and he works with the ground, as does Fred Rococo.
BlaineWho's also pretty grounded too.
DonovanYeah.
DonovanAnd there's just a level of intention where the other characters are.
DonovanMaybe they stuck around somewhere where they already, you know, they grew up there.
DonovanThey've just learned to make it work.
DonovanAnd he has made a decision to be there.
DonovanI feel like that has to mean something.
BlaineYeah, it does.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI would completely agree with what Adam said.
Speaker BI don't know if I can articulate it well, but it worked for me.
Speaker BProbably sympathizing more with the one who tends to bluster.
Speaker BI liked that Iceland has the like for Sam.
Speaker BIt's probably kind of really scary to get to reach out and try and get to know him because he doesn't seem like he needs anything.
Speaker BNo, he, you know, you're.
Speaker BYou're kind of vulnerable when you're dealing with someone who doesn't really need anything.
DonovanWell.
DonovanAnd everybody in her life is kind of like a sparring partner conversationally.
Speaker BYeah.
DonovanYou know, and like they're obviously everybody's very intelligent.
DonovanThey're talking to each other both like wit and empathy.
DonovanAnd he, he just doesn't seem as interested in the constant one liners, you know?
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
BlaineYes.
BlaineWhich made him in the first episode seem like he might be an antagonist type figure.
BlaineI remember first episode of season three, I thought, oh, this guy may not be very nice, but no, he's just kind of quiet and self assured.
Speaker BYep.
BlaineI love the Debussy call back at the end of the episode.
BlaineIt's my favorite classical piece of music.
BlaineOne of the few I can recognize and say, oh, that's debut.
BlaineSay, probably a lot of people can.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineI started this third and final season about a month and a half after my dad's death.
BlaineAnd I saw those frank conversations Trisha and Sam have about Holly as the most real ground.
BlaineYou know, that fear that you have that you might forget somebody is so visceral.
Speaker BYeah.
BlaineI still have my dad's voice in my ear.
BlaineWhen I, when I used to call him, the first thing he would say was he would answer the phone.
BlaineHey, son.
BlaineThat was his line.
BlaineAnd I still hear it and I hang on to it.
BlaineAnd when they get into the last episode when they start talking about Trisha mainly, who's very concerned she.
BlaineThat her grief isn't up to par.
BlaineAnd it reminded me so much that this show is as much about grief as it is friendship.
BlaineAnd I love that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI liked that scene with the sisters very much.
Speaker BI've never had anyone as personal as like a parent die, but even just folks in my life who have died.
Speaker BLike, I felt.
Speaker BI guess it must be universal, right?
Speaker BLike, the fear of, like, I'm forgetting you, I'm going to forget you.
Speaker BAnd, like, you get to the point where you're like, oop, I had a good moment and didn't think about how I was sad.
Speaker BThat's.
Speaker BThat's on me.
Speaker BThat was a bad thing I did.
DonovanTo me, that conversation felt like the.
DonovanIf you wanted the typical HBO swing for the fences kind of end of a season, end of a show moment.
DonovanThat was the heart, the meat of the whole thing to me, because they.
DonovanI mean, do they talk about their sister in the third season otherwise?
Speaker BHardly.
Speaker BHardly.
BlaineNot much.
Speaker BShe's alluded, I mean, sort of alluded to where, you know, Trish starts to.
Speaker BAnd I think this actually, like, perfectly sets up this scene where Trish is like, no family should have to go through that.
Speaker BTalking about cancer fundraisers.
Speaker BShe's like, well, you know, almost like she's forgotten that.
Speaker BOf course, Sam knows.
Speaker BWe both know.
Speaker BAnd I thought that was really a good setup for this.
DonovanIt does set up her position really well, too, because there's a level of Remove from her own emotions when she says that, because she's clearly not identifying it as the same thing that others go through.
DonovanI mean, I know that's obvious, but it's such a nice prelude to what I, Again, I think is kind of the most important conversation in season three.
BlaineYeah, we're shifting into the final episode, and there's such, to me.
BlaineProfundity, I suppose.
BlaineIs that the word?
BlaineWhen Sam says the sadness isn't her.
BlaineYeah, that was meant to get one.
BlaineThat was moving and what I perfectly well said, and I needed to hear that.
BlaineAnd I bet there's a lot of people out there that needed to hear that.
BlaineIt's a show about grief and loss and what to do about that, how to move on from that.
BlaineBut it's also tied into how friends are there for you, whether in the form of your sister or your.
BlaineOr just friends that aren't family.
BlaineSam walking Joel to Church in that final episode reminded me of, you know, she's not into that in the least, but she still takes time to walk him there.
Speaker BWe've kind of alluded to it.
Speaker BMaybe one day I'll really figure out how to talk about it.
Speaker BBut I've loved the portrayal of Church in this show through Joel and Brad.
Speaker BThat was one of the moments in this last episode where it just felt really profoundly not that everything's gonna be okay, but that you can move forward.
Speaker BLike, you can move forward.
Speaker BYou can say the things that are important to people.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BLike when Sam leads him in there and he sees the pastor, it kind of reminded me of the parable of the prodigal son.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBecause in the parable of the prodigal son, he runs away.
Speaker BHe spends all his money.
Speaker BWell, he doesn't run away.
Speaker BHe leaves and spends all his money.
Speaker BAnd he's there and he's like, oh, I'm so miserable.
Speaker BWhy am I eating dirt?
Speaker BI could go and work for my dad again and be a servant and have better than this.
Speaker BWe're told that as the son comes to the house, the father sees him from a long way.
Speaker BSo the son's rehearsing what he's going to say to apologize, basically, and the father sees him from a long way off and runs out to him.
Speaker BAnd I just thought that was exactly that with Joel, because it was like he's in his head, and she's like, I just missed you so much.
Speaker BI missed you.
Speaker BI missed you and the person you are.
Speaker BI don't need your apology.
Speaker BThat's not what this is about.
Speaker BAnd I thought that was just like, it's not a big scene, but it just really, really solidly worked for me.
DonovanYeah, it put a.
DonovanAn institutional face on kind of the feeling of the whole thing of, like, finding your people and that there are.
DonovanSometimes you just know.
DonovanYou know, and that relationship the two of them had and he had to.
DonovanThat church just encapsulated that, like, of course you're supposed to come back where you been.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThis is where you belong.
DonovanYeah.
Speaker BJust that kind of return.
Speaker BNot that it's like, oh, I came back and everything's reset, but in the.
Speaker BLike, I went through what I went through, and I'm.
Speaker BAnd I'm back here and I'm.
Speaker BThat I'm the person who went through what I went through.
DonovanEven.
Speaker BNot even big.
Speaker BBig field, just life.
Speaker BAnd, you know, you lived your life, too, and now we're, you know, we're stronger.
BlaineThe actor who plays Brad had some.
Speaker BReally great sport, good sport award.
BlaineYes.
BlaineHe had some really nice acting moments that were very small but wonderful.
BlaineFirst of all, of course, Brad grades at home.
Speaker BYes.
BlaineYou know, that's what a nice.
Speaker BAs someone who is married to someone who grades at home, because where else do you grade?
Speaker BI was like, this is very familiar to me, this scenario where one person has to grade and the other person doesn't.
DonovanBlaine, do you grade at all?
BlaineThere is one time a year where I Have to.
BlaineAnd the rest of the time, I have made it a vow not to do that.
DonovanVery interesting.
BlaineYep.
BlaineIt's tough.
BlaineBut the.
BlaineBut Brad's grading, and he looks up and Joel tells him about going to see Pastor Deb.
BlaineAnd he has.
BlaineThe actor who plays Brad has this moment in his eyes.
BlaineI think his eyebrows lift up like almost a blend of, oh, that's great.
BlaineAnd, oh, what's coming next.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BThis whole series has been a bunch of actors who should have been in more stuff already.
BlaineOh, yeah.
BlaineAnd maybe they will be.
Speaker BIt's great.
Speaker BI hope so.
Speaker BEveryone has just been so good.
BlaineBut I applaud the show loudly for never resorting to flashbacks of Holly.
BlaineAnd yet it still hit the emotional beats, I think, with that part incredibly well.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineI thought that this episode, this final episode really works well.
BlaineI will say.
BlaineI will say that the.
BlaineI will say the penultimate episode, for me, might have been the best of the series.
BlaineI'll throw out some notes here that I think makes it a wonderful ending.
BlaineThe Jeep upgrade felt like a nod to everything's going to be all right and no longer dealing with this Ford Ranger.
BlaineNot that it was a plot point, but you.
BlaineYou can almost see it coming.
DonovanWell, it's also like an acceptance of my sister can help me.
DonovanI will let her.
BlaineYeah.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BYeah.
DonovanI don't have to.
DonovanNot that she was paying a penance by driving the little old truck, but she's got a little more luxury in her life now.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd just the.
Speaker BLike, I can move forward.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BLike, I can.
Speaker BThat's okay.
Speaker BI'm not gonna explode.
BlaineShe phone calls her dad.
BlaineIt was almost an acknowledgement that Sam's going to.
BlaineIt's another acknowledgement that she's gonna make it, that she is doing well, and it allows you to say goodbye to these characters.
BlaineAnd then the final one was.
BlaineI thought it was a really intelligent move to have Sam volunteer to sing, rather than all these other times where she was asked to and she put it off or him and haunt about not wanting to sing or someone made her.
BlaineThere's a nice progression there to say, I think I'll sing for y'all.
Speaker BFelt like a gift she was giving, too.
DonovanSome of the vibe around the last one, I was worried that she had gotten bad news from a doctor.
DonovanI know that this is a weird pull, but, like, you know how, like, you're dealing with.
DonovanFred is dealing with health things.
DonovanAnd then her doctor tells her, you got to get in shape or waiting for more of your blood work to come back.
DonovanBlah, blah, blah.
DonovanBecause there was an element of.
DonovanShe got some closure with her sister.
DonovanShe got to tell Joel how much he means to her, all these things.
DonovanAnd then she sings the song.
DonovanIt's like, is she.
DonovanIs she about to go to the hospital to start chemo or something?
BlaineOh, wow.
DonovanI don't know why I felt.
DonovanBecause this would not be that show at all, you know?
BlaineNo, I don't think so.
DonovanI don't know why that was in my head.
Speaker BI think we kind of alluded to this, right?
BlaineWe did, yeah.
Speaker BWe worried that the brug's gonna get yanked out from under.
Speaker BYou're afraid you're Charlie Brown with the football because this has happened to you before.
BlaineYeah, yeah.
Speaker BThis show has really just been.
Speaker BThis is what it's like to, like, live a life in the background of all this stuff that's going on.
Speaker BLike, yeah, you still have arthritis.
Speaker BYeah, you need to lose weight.
Speaker BYe.
Speaker BThere's unresolved stuff with, you know, Fred's wife and things like that.
Speaker BThat's what life is, right?
Speaker BLike, it never wraps up.
Speaker BThere's always something.
BlaineYeah, that's true.
BlaineAre we going to Varsity Donuts?
BlaineAre we driving to Kansas?
BlaineManhattan, Kansas.
Speaker BThe Little Apple.
BlaineAdam, have you ever been to Manhattan, Kansas?
BlaineYou're.
BlaineYou're the traveling musician.
DonovanLike, I have this.
DonovanI feel bad that I'm going to say probably, but I don't.
DonovanThere are places that we just, like, stopped, you know, for a night or something.
DonovanI've never played there.
DonovanI know that.
BlaineOh, okay.
BlaineWell, then, okay, that's fine.
BlaineIf you've never played there and you.
BlaineAnd you don't remember, I think that's fair.
Speaker BYou know, I'd like some donuts.
Speaker BBut even more than that, I'd like to be on the field while the team warms up.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineI thought you were going to say, I'd like to be a part of catch club.
Speaker BI would break my neck.
Speaker BI'm about Joel's level of athletic ability.
Speaker BJoel is a very good sport about it.
BlaineYou and I would fit right in with their catch club.
Speaker BCatch club is so funny with, like, Frederic Coco just absolutely taking the dad role.
Speaker BWe're like, all right, good hustle.
Speaker BLet's go.
Speaker BSo good.
BlaineLet's get into just a little of Silo this second season.
BlaineAdam messaged me last night that he had problems with Silo the second season.
BlaineAnd, I mean, I'm interested.
DonovanIt's not even Festivus yet.
DonovanWe're getting close.
BlaineBut I'm interested to hear what you.
BlaineWhat problems you have you said it was bad acting was one of them?
BlaineAnd first of all, I think I want to ask really broadly, what is bad acting for you?
BlaineLike, can you differentiate between bad directing and bad acting?
BlaineBecause sometimes I am curious on if I'm getting it right.
DonovanThat's a tough.
DonovanI mean, the short answer is no, I'm not qualified enough to tell the difference.
DonovanBut the longer answer and what I would throw in is bad writing or hurried writing or any of these things.
DonovanHow many episodes are out now?
DonovanFive.
BlaineFive total.
BlaineMm.
DonovanI'm complaining about episode two.
DonovanSo we're right back to what I said about the top.
DonovanAt the top of the show about we do the whole song and dance of we have the plate of food, it's dinner time, what are we gonna watch?
DonovanThis show rarely scraps to the top of the heap, especially since we've had somebody somewhere and say nothing and all this going on.
DonovanSo we finally watched episode two and looked at each other and we're just like, what this is.
DonovanIt has never been this.
DonovanIt's that old cliche of, like, almost every character you thought the actor was saying, I am going to act in this scene.
DonovanYou know, just kind of overdone and didn't have the same grounding that it's had in the past.
DonovanAnd especially after episode one being kind of a one woman show.
DonovanRight.
DonovanOf her going through.
DonovanAnd I thought she did a really good job of that.
DonovanAnd I'm intrigued by all of the world building and the mechanics and the big story.
BlaineYeah.
DonovanAnd then it just kind of.
DonovanI don't know.
DonovanI didn't buy the beats in episode two.
BlaineEpisode two was the one that did not have Juliet in it.
DonovanShe's not in it at all.
BlaineThat might have been the problem, you think?
DonovanI don't know, because the question's there.
DonovanSo now both plot lines in and out of the silo have interesting realities to deal with.
DonovanYou know, like, I think it's fascinating how power works because the implication from the show is that for society to function, someone has to be in charge and make decisions for the collective good.
DonovanAnd at some point, you know, spoiler, the collective good decision was, we're gonna lock that door and create whatever myth we need to keep you from going outside, because it really will kill you.
DonovanBut they're not leveling with the people about all of the details.
DonovanYou end up with this inquisition into how much nuance the public can deal with and how much information the public can deal with, which I think is 2024 going into 25 is an excellent time to ask these questions.
BlaineYeah, it really is.
DonovanAnd I think that there's a huge opportunity there.
DonovanAnd then of course, you're dealing with.
DonovanWith her, it's pure discovery, you know, that she is getting concrete answers.
DonovanSo there's like both a story, scientific world building set of questions and a sociological set.
BlaineYes.
BlaineAnd socioeconomical because there are the levels which are blatantly there to represent class.
BlaineThe mechanical are the lower class and they have to do the shit work.
BlaineBut at the same time they're keeping the silo running.
DonovanRight.
DonovanAnd you wonder too, like, did they build the silo this way or does.
DonovanI mean, obviously they did build it.
DonovanYou put the engine room in the bottom.
DonovanBut like over time you're giving more powerful people better housing, better whatever.
DonovanLike, was it more egalitarian to begin with?
DonovanAre the things that I wonder.
BlaineSo do you remember with that second episode exactly who or was it everyone?
BlaineYou felt like this is kind of bad acting.
BlaineThis is bad writing.
BlaineYeah, I was just curious.
BlaineI'm sorry, what?
DonovanThroughout.
DonovanYeah, yeah.
BlaineEven Tim Robbins, because I feel like he does a pretty good job in anything.
DonovanIt pained me to say that I think there was bad acting in this because I like Tim Robbins so much.
BlaineI find him interesting on screen, even as a.
BlaineHe's very, in this role, almost too straightforward of a villain.
BlaineLike, where's the nuance with this guy?
BlaineSaying that might be some of it.
DonovanIt could be.
DonovanBut I would give him more of a benefit of the doubt on the character, you know, that he's playing within certain guidelines.
DonovanWhereas like Common, I think is just.
BlaineOkay, you want to talk about him?
BlaineBecause he, since day one, since episode one of this series, he has not been good.
BlaineAnd I've just never found him to be that good of an actor.
BlaineI find it interesting that he's chosen to be almost exclusively an actor because he may need more acting classes.
BlaineSo he's not great.
DonovanWell, he's asked to do a lot in this show.
BlaineYeah, he is.
BlaineAnd he.
BlaineAnd he just can't hold his ground with the rest of these.
BlaineHe's a very one note, maybe two note kind of actor anyway.
DonovanYeah, I don't know, maybe.
DonovanMaybe I should shift some blame to the writing.
DonovanI felt like the stuff in the.
DonovanThe little almost Spartacus kind of scene in the engine room or in the mechanical level was kind of like.
DonovanI don't want to complain too much, only having seen the two episodes and it's hilarious that I am voicing an opinion at all here in public about two episodes of a season when there are five out.
DonovanSo obviously, I'm not an actual informed viewer.
BlaineNo, it's fair.
BlaineI think, you know, we're limited on time.
BlaineWe can only watch what we watch.
BlaineAnd I don't think you're wrong.
BlaineAnd I'm seeing some of this in episode 5.
BlaineThough I will say I think it gets a little better.
BlaineMy issues are what you said much more succinctly at the beginning of our episode today.
BlaineEvery episode feels like three or four episodes at once in a bad way.
BlaineLike, there are many threads that they've decided to toss out there, and for that to be confined to a silo, it's a little overwhelming.
BlaineAnd every episode seems to be about 10 minutes too long.
DonovanYeah, I agree with that.
BlaineIts pace is a little dilatory at times.
BlaineIt's just.
BlaineNow, I get that Juliet is going to take time to do what she's got to do, but at the same time, you're thinking you're not telling me much about her or the story where she is in the time you're given.
BlaineBut I find the story very interesting, mainly because of, you know, what.
BlaineWhat are they trying to hide?
BlaineWhat are they trying to.
BlaineWhy are they trying to maintain control in.
BlaineIn the Orwellian sense that they're doing?
BlaineWhat's wrong with just being open and honest?
BlaineBecause that seems.
BlaineThat would definitely control me, you know, hey, Blaine, don't go outside, because the air will kill you.
BlaineOkay, then you're in charge.
BlaineTell me what to do next.
BlaineBut.
BlaineBut there's something else going on we're not getting.
BlaineAnd we know who you voted for.
BlaineThat's funny because.
BlaineNo, that's funny.
BlaineYou got me there.
BlaineI.
BlaineI can still breathe outside, thank you.
DonovanYou can now.
BlaineNo, you know, it's a pretty Orwellian story, and how I'm interested.
BlaineIt's not a vital piece of television for me, but we all live in.
DonovanSilos of our own making.
BlaineThey have siloed people off in this show, that's for sure.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BLet me tell you about my mind silo.
DonovanAnyway, let's talk about disclosure and if humanity is going to be able to handle it.
DonovanYou got simple question.
DonovanThis is similar to what we do at the top, where you say, should we watch this show, Blaine?
DonovanShould I keep watching?
BlaineYeah, I think so.
DonovanI think I'm going to.
BlaineYeah, but you're gonna get the.
BlaineI mean, this is not a spoiler for you.
BlaineEverybody who's watched up through the five episodes won't be spoiled either.
BlaineYou're Gonna get the Steve Son character.
DonovanHe's just dangling out there like a damn carrot.
BlaineWell, they haven't shown him to you.
BlaineYou get the.
BlaineYeah, you get the hint of him at the end of episode one.
BlaineYou don't return to Juliet in episode two.
BlaineYou're gonna get a lot of him.
BlaineAnd I think that he's got a story to tell.
DonovanHe always does, doesn't he?
BlaineYeah, well, he's playing a very Steve Zahn kind of character, but at the same time, it's.
BlaineThat's a little different.
BlaineI think you'll see.
BlaineYou'll see.
BlaineEspecially in episode five, the one I watched last night.
BlaineI was thinking about his character and what he's gone through and why he's saying what he's saying.
BlaineI don't know.
BlaineThere's some interest there.
DonovanSee, that's another.
DonovanThey open the door of this character who has chose not to go out right.
DonovanWith the rest of his silo stayed behind.
DonovanAnd then it's like we talked about it after episode one.
DonovanIt's a question of human endurance in some way.
DonovanLike the will to live when.
DonovanLike, why.
DonovanWhy are you living other than a natural desire to not die?
BlaineYeah, I think about that a lot with this show.
DonovanI mean, that's kind of the basic motivation, which seems like a, well, duh kind of statement, but especially somebody's isolated underground for potentially years.
DonovanSo I, yeah, I want to hang out with Steve Zahn and instead I had to hang out with Common.
BlaineGood point.
Speaker BWhat a terrible party that would be.
DonovanYou know that he's holding court on the other side of the room, but you're stuck over here with.
DonovanHe's like the column I just finished Derry Girls.
DonovanHe's the Common is the column of the situation.
Speaker BRight.
BlaineDonovan.
BlaineI know.
BlaineWe'll discuss what we do in the shadows next week because by then it will have aired its final episode of the series.
Speaker BIt'll be all.
Speaker BAll over.
BlaineTurn out the lights.
BlaineThe party's over.
BlaineSo this may be more of a compare and contrast bit to set up next week's final episode.
BlaineYeah, it's another show we're saying goodbye to.
BlaineBut has this season dipped in quality?
Speaker BI don't think so, really.
Speaker BHonestly, every season kind of had some episodes that I was like, I don't care as much.
Speaker BThe highs have been high for me.
Speaker BOkay, well, I did like the Madness of March.
Speaker BI like the one.
BlaineThat was a good one.
BlaineThat was.
BlaineThat was top notch.
Speaker BThe.
Speaker BThe one where they're filming the detective show.
BlaineThat was pretty good.
Speaker BAnd Nandor Convinced they're under attack.
BlainePretty good.
BlaineOkay, that gets me into what I'm not.
Speaker BNaja with the banana phone.
BlaineOh, God.
Speaker BThat was an all timer for me.
BlaineSo its primary purpose is to be funny and I feel like the jokes have dropped.
BlaineBut when it's sort of self contained, it's really weird because I'm very interested in this through line.
BlaineIt's managed to do and hold my interest of Guillermo becoming a vampire and still being a part of their crew without being a vampire and also not being a familiar.
BlaineWhere does he fit?
BlaineWhat are they gonna, you know, do with him?
BlaineAnd I am interested in that through line story.
BlaineAnd it seems to have resolved probably last season, which might be the problem.
BlaineBut when it's a self contained episode and it doesn't have much to do with that at all, I think it.
BlaineThe jokes land better.
Speaker BOkay.
BlaineAnd except for the group running from Jerry's the whole vampire party and when Jerry got killed, Jerry the vampire.
Speaker BThis is another case where I don't think it's funny to anyone but me.
Speaker BBut like Colin Robinson quotes the warriors to be annoying.
BlaineOh, no, that's good.
Speaker BAnd then it's actually the Warrior.
Speaker BAnd then they actually do the Warriors.
BlaineAnd then they do the Warriors.
BlaineYeah, okay.
Speaker BAlso Colin Robinson being like, you know, I can't fly, as he's like running.
Speaker BAnd also the gag of Laszlo seeing a baseball bat and saying bad.
Speaker BHe's like, I said I turned into a bat.
Speaker BBecause I said, well, there I did it again.
BlaineYes, that's a good one.
BlaineBut I think the reason why that episode didn't work as well is because the group aren't at each other.
BlaineThey're, you know, they're, they're trying to get away from a much larger, larger vampire group.
BlaineAnd they're, they're kind of having to rely on one another and be buddies.
Speaker BThey had to mildly pull together.
BlaineI like it when they're kind of bickering, even if it's not harsh at all.
BlaineIt's just, just a slight bit of like Nandor left and created his own army and we gotta, we gotta go get him and we have to bicker with him a little.
Speaker BThat's funny.
BlaineI do think it is.
BlaineI think that this season has dipped with its jokes because it's relied on the monster way too much.
BlaineI don't mind him being there, but boy, he's taken up some joke time.
BlaineNot screen time, but joke time.
BlaineIt's not landing for me.
BlaineI'm a little annoyed by him.
Speaker BThe penultimate episode was actually for me, probably the funniest he'd been.
Speaker BCause I agree with you.
Speaker BLike, it was.
Speaker BIt was.
Speaker BIt was.
Speaker BHe's been fine.
Speaker BThe stuff, like, the.
Speaker BHim being, like, the head of.
Speaker BOf the railroad.
Speaker BThat was good.
BlaineThat was okay.
BlaineYeah, it was pretty good.
Speaker BAnd then I did, like, he goes.
Speaker BCries in the bathroom, and he's.
Speaker BYou know, Colin and Nandor are bickering.
Speaker BNot Nandor.
Speaker BColin and Lazlo are bickering over the monster.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineThey kind of both want to be the dad.
BlaineAnd then it blatantly referenced in the elevator that they are the dad.
BlaineAnd he tells them to kiss.
Speaker BKiss.
BlaineSome of that's okay, but I don't know.
BlaineI don't know that I care about the monster having feelings and crying in the bathroom that much.
Speaker BI don't care about it in as much as it's a funny joke.
BlaineI think the show does a pretty good job of having that plotline of Guillermo, though, because I did.
BlaineI got kind of pumped seeing Nandor stick up for.
Speaker BI will say, like, for being a show kind of about nothing.
BlaineThat's right.
Speaker BIt really.
Speaker BThey really have actually always kind of done a good job of threading the needle.
Speaker BThat's Guillemo and Nandor's relationship.
BlaineYes.
Speaker BWhere.
Speaker BEspecially with, like, Nandor coming to this because he's a selfish, immature immortal coming to realize that Guillermo would mildly mean something to him.
BlaineThat's true.
Speaker BThat would be sad if Guillermo wasn't in his life and they've actually done, like, if the finale is about nothing, fine, Whatever.
Speaker BBut if it's gonna be about this kind of little thing that they've actually done an okay job of teasing out without banging me over the head with it, I'm fine with that, too.
Speaker BIf we just get a nice resolution for.
Speaker BFor Gizmo.
Speaker BThat's such a good gag.
BlaineIt does seem like that might be where it's heading.
BlaineWe'll find out.
BlaineWe'll state more about it next week, but.
Speaker BAnd I'm fine with that because honest, like, how do you end a show like this?
Speaker BYeah, you just gotta.
Speaker BYou just gotta end it.
BlaineYes.
Speaker BAt some point.
Speaker BChoose an arbitrary thing that happens, and that's the end.
Speaker BBye.
BlaineNandor sticks up for Guillermo with the canon capital boss.
BlaineThat's good.
BlaineGuillermo was one of my least favorite characters in season one, and he has grown.
Speaker BHe's really grown on me.
BlaineOn me so much.
BlaineHe gets one of his greatest moments in the penultimate episode where he reveals to the boss that the cameras are really part of his crew, and he snaps his fingers and points to them all and they do this nice edit where it's like power empowering Guillermo in the moment.
Speaker BI love that it's just him collecting evidence about Canon Capital, about all the illegal stuff that's been going on.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineHe's going to report them to the sec, which Nandor does not understand.
Speaker BThat was funny.
Speaker BAlso good.
Speaker BBut not.
Speaker BIt's not.
Speaker BAgain, it's not that funny.
Speaker BBut like, as Guillermo is trying to explain to Nandor, he's just inventing Batman.
BlaineYou know, as they leave.
BlaineYeah.
Speaker BHe's like.
Speaker BLike Robin.
Speaker BOh, no, I don't think we should be Robin people.
BlaineAnd he gives the classic.
BlaineI don't know who that is.
Speaker BYeah, it's good.
Speaker BIt's good.
BlaineWas the peak probably seasons two through four or five for the humor.
Speaker BWell, the funniest episode will of course always be.
Speaker BI think that was season two with Jackie Daytona, human bartender.
BlaineIt was two or three.
Speaker BYeah, it was two or three.
Speaker BWhenever he has to get.
Speaker BBut you know, they actually like the bits kind of kept me going.
BlaineYeah.
Speaker BLike the through fair of like.
Speaker BWas that season four where Lazlo has to raise a baby?
Speaker BColin Robinson.
BlaineThat was four in that.
Speaker BWas it?
BlaineYeah.
BlaineWas it four?
Speaker BActually.
BlaineThat's good.
Speaker BThat actually works.
Speaker BThat actually really works.
Speaker BNo, it is a bunch of dislike.
Speaker BThere's a bunch of individual episodes that really, really work.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineI do wonder, are they going to reference the Jackie Daytona bit again?
BlaineBecause they have to realize that's the fan favorite.
BlaineYeah.
Speaker BI will say too, that the way that they built Guillermo's role to be funnier.
Speaker BI thought that actually built through as the seasons went on.
Speaker BLike the one where he was.
Speaker BThey figured out he has Van Helsing blood and they've got him locked in the cage.
Speaker BBut it's really him trying to save their egos while also protecting them from.
Speaker BI felt like that was in a rising motion and that worked for me.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineI was curious if he could kind of.
BlainePowers might not be the right term, but I was curious if he could use his abilities against humans as well.
BlaineBut then we see it with the balls.
BlaineHe rips the disc.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
BlaineOh, cool.
BlaineHe can.
Speaker BHe's gonna get the boss there, but he's more in control of himself, you know, he's our.
Speaker BGuillaumer's a good guy.
BlaineYeah.
BlaineOne episode does not make a season.
BlaineBut we will come back to this and discuss, you know, the season as a whole after next week.
BlaineJust to see where it.
BlaineHow it ends, what it does as an ending.
BlaineThat's probably how we'll view it next week through that lens of season as a whole.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI hope the finale makes me laugh.
Speaker BI'm a little concerned that like.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BPutting extra expectation on it.
BlaineYeah.
Speaker BAnd honestly, like a show like this really shouldn't have like a load bearing episode, you know, that's true.
Speaker BAnd so I'm curious if that'll.
Speaker BIt'll be like, yeah, you know, it's the finale.
Speaker BSo we had the, you know, I.
BlaineDon'T know, the penultimate seemed to maybe take care of some of that though, with Nandor saying, hey, we're actually comrades rather than.
BlaineYes, you know, you're a part of my army.
BlaineYou're my right hand man in my army for real.
Speaker BI just have one last thing to say, which is that America, we've taken some wrong turns and there's some people that we've decided to view as less than human.
Speaker BAmerica, these are the queer icons you need.
Speaker BAs Nandor explained to us, there are boy wives and girl wives.
DonovanThat's good stuff.
Speaker BSo good.
BlaineWe'll end with that.
BlaineYeah, it's a good ending.
BlaineYou can follow Taking it Down as well as our website, the website that hosts us the Alabama Take.
BlaineYou follow all of us on social media, reach out, say hello, and then follow the podcast in your favorite podcast app where you listen to things and you'll see us each Tuesday morning.
BlaineFor Adam and Donovan, I am Blaine and we'll talk later.