House of R - ‘Andor’ Season 2, Episodes 7-9 Deep Dive
Episode Date: May 10, 2025The galaxy is watching! Mal and Jo to recap the seventh, eighth, and ninth episodes of ‘Andor’ Season 2. They break down what happens on Ghorman, the tragedy of Syril, Mon Mothma’s speech, Bix�...�s decision, and so much more. (00:00) Intro (05:48) Opening Snapshot (17:08) Wilmon Brings a Mission to Yavin (44:11) Cassian Meets a Force Healer (01:10:17) Cass and Wil Depart, Vel Visits Bix (1:17:37) Syril Confronts Dedra, Part 1 (01:31:26) The Ghorman Front Prepares (1:51:43) Forces Arrive on Ghorman (2:04:39) Taking to the Plaza (2:26:23) Syril Confronts Dedra (Again), Part 2 (2:34:08) The Ghorman Massacre (2:45:21) Syril vs. Cassian (2:55:46) Escaping Ghorman (3:01:25) The Senate Stands on Edge (3:07:45) Mon and Bail Plot and Scheme (3:10:42) Cassian’s Next Assignment (3:13:28) Luthen and Mon Meet (3:18:36) The Extraction Teams Arrive (3:20:41) Mon Mothma Makes a Speech for the Ages (3:32:35) Mon and Cassian Flee (3:35:37) Bix’s Decision Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson Producers: Steve Ahlman and Carlos Chiriboga Social: Jomi Adeniran Additional Production Support: Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Greetings.
And welcome
to House of R.
A Ringerverse podcast
on the Ringer Podcast Network.
I'm Mallory Rubin.
Joining me today.
Yeah.
I've done a poor job
of letting her know
how much I admire her grace.
Oh my God.
Better Robinson.
Wow, that just inspires me.
Should I start wearing drapey silks the way that Mom Mothma does on the way to work?
Is that what I should do?
Yes.
Right.
Absolutely.
And then if at any point you need to shed that drapey cloak, I will be there.
Okay.
With a hearty.
With a hearty jacket.
Jacket.
That does sound like you.
You, Askin, Joel Miller, you all got your coat game on luck.
Love it.
Joe, we are here today.
let's just say it right at the top to talk about three of the best episodes of television ever made.
The masterpieces?
We are here to talk about the third arc of Andor Season 2, Episode 7, Messenger, Episode 8.
Who Are You in Episode 9?
Welcome to the Rebellion.
We have so much to get to today.
We appreciate everybody's patience as we are one day off of our usual schedule.
Thank you all to the bad babies for waiting to share these wonderful episodes with us.
Before we dive in, some very quick,
Programming reminders.
Everyone's covering Andor here at the Ringervverse.
The Midnight Boys, Pugh, Pugh.
Have an instant reaction waiting for you already
up on the Ringervverse feed
and will have their instant reaction
to the three-part finale next week for you on Wednesday.
Morning, we will be back Thursday evening next week
with our deep dive.
Very deep.
I anticipated it being a very deep dive.
Memorial service to Andor, one of the best TV shows that's ever existed.
I'm not ready to stop discussing Andor.
Yeah, Mallory has actually already come up with plans for how we can keep talking about
Annor.
I'm plotting for how to extend at least one more week.
I'm just simply not ready to conclude.
Benjamin Limburg, old Ben Limburgie, is writing about the show every week on the ringer.com.
What a great website.
But that's not all because we are also covering the last of us season two right now.
Here's the schedule.
Sunday night, midnight boys,
beep, pew, pew, instant reaction.
Monday night, House of our deep dive.
Monday, the watch.
Thursday, Joe and Rob,
checking in on the Proceed TV podcast
with an interview,
spoiler chat,
gamer guide chat, all of it.
It's all happening everywhere.
And on the gamer front,
we also have a button mash episode
on Thursdays from Ben and Daniel
on the ringer verse.
Joanna.
How can everybody follow along?
How can they catch up on all of our Thunderbolts coverage if they haven't yet, et cetera?
Gosh, what a great question.
Here's my thought.
If you want to just follow the pod, subscribe to our pod, to the Ringervverse, to the Prestige
feed where you can hear Mallory Rubin talk about hacks, whatever you will hire.
That might be a good start.
Also, just, yeah, as a reminder, you can watch us.
Yes.
We're doing great over here.
We're doing fine.
So it's really fun to watch us, try to tackle all of this content at once.
And then, you know, follow us in social, the social media platform of your choice,
where we're definitely not dodging propaganda at any given time spun out from the imperial news sources.
And then email us, please.
Hobbit and Dragon's the email.
Please.
You folks sent so many meaty, juicy, lengthy, wonderful emails about Andor.
I've learned so much just reading what you guys sent in.
thank you so much for watching the show so closely,
for caring about it and for sharing those thoughts with us.
Y'all are the best.
So that's what I would suggest.
Beautiful.
Bad babies are the best.
Here's the final reminder.
It's the friendly neighborhood spoiler warning.
We will, of course, be talking in detail about the three episodes of Andor that we are covering today.
We will also be talking about all of Andor to date and all of Star Wars.
If it's ever happened in Star Wars, it could come up today.
that's the spoiler warning.
Wow, that's a lot.
Even if this show contradicts
what has happened else.
I'm wearing my red shirt today.
Nice.
Yeah, it felt right.
It felt right to represent our beloved specters today.
Joe, this is your flu game.
You have the flu and yet you are such a champion
that you were here with us anyway.
I stand in awe.
I would be napping, sleeping,
but it is one of the many testaments
to how incredible these episodes of television
are that you actually just refused
to not do the podcast
despite literally having the flu.
That's genuinely hilarious
because I know people have recently listened to you
a podcast with the flu.
So listen.
Well, but that's because when I get the flu,
it's like, I'm on day 12,
I guess I should pod,
but that's not how the first few days go.
Here's how the first few days go.
And I can't wait.
Listen, it's just so good.
And I'm devastated to be like slightly,
but hopefully not totally
under the weather as we talk about this because genuinely this is like life-altering art that we're
watching on Ador right now. I'm just in awe. And I feel so lucky that I get to talk to you about it because
you are so brilliant and so knowledgeable in the realm of Star Wars. So I'm excited.
Joe, you're the best. I'm so glad that we get to do this today. Let's get right from that setup
into our opening snapshot. We've already sort of said it.
But anything else on the table setting front here that you want to note before we get into our very deep, deep dive today about this third arc of the season, directed beautifully by Yana Smetz, written stunningly by Dan Gilroy, set in to B, B.B.Y, once again, one year after the prior arc, one year before the arc to come, which is our final arc. I'm not ready to watch it and say goodbye.
these episodes were unbelievable.
Tell us how they affected you.
Tell us how they have been sitting with you
over the last few days since you watched them.
And we should say we have had confirmation
that each arc is just three days, right?
So this is 72 hours in the life of a rebellion.
And we will get, I guess our next arc is the three-day countdown
to Rogue One, which is absolutely wild
because Tony Gilroy has said you could basically watch Rogue One as a series finale.
So that's what we're getting next week.
It's very exciting.
I thought this was absolutely breathtaking television.
And there's two things specifically that I want to call out.
I mean, all three episodes are incredibly good.
It's wild that the Mon Mothma's speech and subsequent sort of like escape from the Senate is not top of my list because that's just like,
exquisite television. But the Gorman massacre, which is something that we talked about last week
we were like, hey, this thing is coming. We were trying to be a little vague about it, but we're
like, this thing is coming that is instrumental to the kicking off of the rebellion. And we've been
asking all season, like, what is the thing? What is the tipping point that pushes people over from
factional resistance or, hey, maybe should we think about doing something to widespread
organized rebellion.
And it is a million little things, and we'll talk about those million, you know,
it's something that a bellhop says to Cassie Nandor.
It's like a million tiny little drops.
And then there's the tidal wave that is the Gorbon Massacre followed by the Mon speech.
And so to see it executed so well, to see it, I feel like I keep, you know, kicking dirt on
the Battle of Jackson in The Last of Us.
But it kept thinking about it because when you watch the Gorses,
Gorman Massacre, which is and isn't a battle episode, but it is basically a battle episode.
It contains all those, like, many narratives that I was talking about feeling like we were
missing from the battle.
We were just following so many little stories that interlock that we care so much about, and we
care on either side.
This is something that, you know, Weiss and Betty, if we talk about the ideal scenario on Game
of Thrones is we care about people on both sides of a skirmish, so we don't know if we're
rooting for DeNaris on her dragon or Jamie on his horse and they're in conflict with each other,
you know. And so obviously we're not rooting for the empire, but we are emotionally invested in
Cyril Karn. We're emotionally invested in Dejramuro. And so we care about them. We care about
the lone agents who are bouncing around and then we care about the part, you know, the Gorman
resistance who we've spent a bit of the season with and we can identify an ENZ. And so when her body
goes flying through the air and she just absolutely cracks on the ground.
Like, I'm invested in that character.
Absolutely.
So it's not just...
The shriek from Dilan.
Yeah, exactly.
It's not just...
It's not just bodies being mowed down.
We have spent time and we...
And they are in relationship with each other.
You have a great point to make about that.
And we care about all this sort of stuff.
And then, so there's all of that executed perfectly.
And then I just think that Cyril Karn is like one of the best characters that has ever existed.
on television. And I think it is so wild to me that, and we identified him in season one as someone
we were like, why do we care so much about Cyril Karn? Like, you know, he's making all these,
he's, he's an antagonist to our hero. He's making all these decisions. We don't support or agree
with. But like, he is drawn so complexly in a way that I just like think is so compelling.
And I have, it's a tragedy. Oh, yeah. While all the while I am not.
not rooting for him and for him to have this sort of like abortive redemption arc.
And then this absolutely gut wrenching, but it doesn't matter at all.
And that's his greatest fear of death is, I will be thinking about that forever.
So I just, I think on a big scale having to deliver on the Gorman Massacre as this
rebellion-shaking moment.
And then on the personal scale,
and this is like,
Ben's headline in his recap
of how personal
this big conflict has become,
and isn't that the point
of these stories we tell
to make it so personal
for Cassie and for Will,
for all these people,
and for freaking Cyracarnededadryorimiro.
I mean, like,
that's just masterful storytelling.
So I am,
my brother-in-law
called me this morning
to talk to me
about politics and he's like just having an existential morning about politics and then we just wound up
talking about and or for you know as as like a text of our time to like help us navigate and understand
how we're feeling or what we should do um and that we're so lucky to have that anyway so that's my
that's probably we have so much to get to that was probably longer than it should have been.
Mallory what do you want to say in this sort of space? Oh yeah a text of our time
irrefutably, and as, you know, Gilroy keeps saying, a text of all time as well.
And the show's ability to feel so...
That's what I told my brother-in-law, he was talking about something.
I was like, you know, bizarrely, I've been studying global and historical acts of resistance for my day job.
That's what I've been doing.
I've been watching various documentaries.
Anyway, sorry, go ahead.
Yeah.
Well, you're just like Tony Gilroy, right?
He's like, I've been studying up on all of this, and when will I get to use it?
I mean, I don't know if he said that in multiple interviews, but I saw, I think he was talking
a screen rant the clip that I saw where he's just basically said this is like a lifetime of being
fascinated by revolution and rebellion and I thought I would, and I put it all in here.
And like how lucky we are to get to experience someone's lifetime fascination brought
exclusively to life.
Okay, sorry, go ahead.
Yeah, I agree.
And like, I think that that, you know, has been part of the master stroke of Andor the entire way.
But this arc in particular and this season.
in particular, the way that it feels so completely urgent right now and also eternal is just
incomparable.
These are my favorite three episodes of the show to date, a show that I love and I think
has a number of arcs that you could make a very compelling argument are the best arc of
the show.
This was like, I just honestly, like, couldn't.
breathe watching most of this.
I mean, I thought episode seven was like really good, but episodes eight and nine were
astonishing.
And I think that like episode nine, I agree with you in most seasons of most shows is the
thing you talk about forever.
And I do think people will be talking about it forever.
But episode eight to me is like in the running for best hour of Star Wars ever made, period.
Like it's, I just, it's me.
But I mean, like, what's great about Andorra is the TV show is I don't think you can
isolate it.
Right. It's not like when we talk about the Bill and Frank episode of The Last of Us or whatever, you just sort of like vacuum seal around that episode. Like you need the seven. Yeah. Episode seven setup. You actually need the four, five, six, set up to make episode eight hit the way that it does. Yeah, I think it's been really interesting to hear. Like Chris and Andy have been talking about this on the watch, like this idea that Ann Dorsey's two is being positioned as a movie every week and, you know, how that feels because of the three episodes in a row that we watch and the tight focus.
of a year passes and then we spend time in three days,
that it does feel,
and also just this stretch in particular,
like felt so cinematic and grand.
Yeah.
But it is, without question, television.
And part of what has been so rewarding about it
is the way that our investment in time spent
with the characters has allowed us to feel
as deeply emotionally invested as we are to this point.
I just thought this was exquisite.
I mean, obviously, we'll talk about all of the themes,
the idea of the messenger,
the cost of the murder of truth, all of it as we go today.
There's just so much to break down.
But I really thought this was exceptional.
And you know, you and I share a tradition in our respective households of watching Lord of the Rings every year.
It's like we know the holidays come around.
We're going to watch Lord of the Rings.
It's like a part of the fabric of the year and like the rhythm of our lives.
And, you know, one of the things that Adam and I've been talking about is I think Andor has to be that for us moving forward.
It's just got to be a part of every year.
I just so good.
And I can't imagine not wanting to keep returning to it.
So I just like have loved it.
And I thought these episodes were incredible.
Do you want to make it part of like a holiday tradition or is it like should it be
spaced out more than, yeah, I know.
It probably not.
Like May should be like a hopeful springy sort of thing because rebellions are built on
hope or something like that.
Yeah.
Like it's because it's 24 hours.
That's a lot.
Not that the, you know, the extended cuts and Lord of the Ring is, that's, like, I think,
13 hours thereabouts.
But, like, yeah, 24 hours.
I think it's got to be split over two days, right?
You can't obviously do.
For sure.
Maybe even, like, a couple weeks, it becomes a moment in the year that you look forward
to.
But, yeah, I just, I can't wait to finish the show.
And then part of, like, we've been texting about with Chris is, you know, the despair
that it's ending.
But also, and I, you know, we talk about this a lot with a lot of the stories that we
love. And I genuinely do believe that being a part of the reason I spent so much time revisiting the
stories that I love is because then it's like they never ended. And when you return to a world that
you, that meant so much to you, it's like one of the great gifts of storytelling, of reading,
of viewing, whatever the case may be, of playing. And, you know, because of and or in a vacuum
and how beautifully realized and rendered the story is and then also the way that it connects to and
enhances our overall experience inside of Star Wars.
Like, it's just, it is genuinely such a gift.
I love it.
I can't wait to see how the story concludes,
and I can't wait to talk about every aspect of these three episodes with you today.
I have no idea.
I'm not, sometimes we're like, oh, you know, William, for this time.
I don't know.
It's possible that when the three-part finale drops next Tuesday night,
we'll still be here potting about these episodes.
I'm not making a prediction on the time, but we'll see.
Get hydrated, everyone, here we go.
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snoring, gasping during sleep, feeling fatigued,
ask your doctor about Zepbound, terseptite.
The first and only FDA-approved prescription medicine
for moderate-to-severe obstructive sleep apnea, OSA,
and adults with obesity.
Zep-bound is a prescription medicine used with a reduced calorie diet
and increased physical activity to help adults with moderate to severe
obstructive sleep apnea, OSA, and obesity to improve their OSA.
Zepbound is approved as a 2.5, 5, 7.5, 10,
12.5 or 15 milligram injection.
Zepound contains terseptitide
and should not be used with other terseptide
containing products or any GLP1 receptor agonist medicines.
It is not known if Zepound is safe and effective
for use in children.
Don't share needles or pins or reuse needles.
Don't take if allergic to it
or if you or someone in your family
had medullary thyroid cancer
or if you've had multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2.
Tell your doctor if you get a lump or swelling in your neck.
Stop Zepbound and call your doctor
if you have severe stomach pain
or a serious allergic reaction.
Severe side effects may include inflamed pancreas or gallbladder problems.
Tell your doctor if you experience vision changes before scheduled procedures with anesthesia.
If you're nursing, pregnant, plan to be, or taking birth control pills.
Taking Zepbound with a sulfonel urea or insulin may cause low blood sugar.
Side effects include nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting, which can cause dehydration and worsened kidney problems.
Talk to your doctor.
Call 1-800-545-9 or visit Zepbound.lily.com.
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Let's dive deep.
Okay, Joe.
Let's begin on Yavin'4.
We're at the Rebel Base,
where our beloved Wilma has returned.
Wilman.
With a mission.
How interesting.
Like, we'll become, you know,
like we've talked a little bit about this already,
like your Clias, your Lonnie's,
your wills of season one sort of being drawn into the four in season two.
I also like that along with the fair,
We get the ferricks clang for passage of time, and then we get insects.
Like, we're in, we're in the jungle.
Like, it's nature.
Nature is healing, and nature is contrast to the corruption of Corrosan, the industrial corruption
of Corrason, et cetera.
Yeah.
I think that's really, yes.
The barricades, the tech.
We talked in the first arc about seeing the Triboros,
walk through the rye on Mirrohau
and how it felt like an interesting
evolution of the troopers moving through
the crystalline waters
of Scariff and the
something about heightening
the already so sinister nature
of what the empire looks like
and how it feels and what it does
when you see it invade this space
where it does not belong.
And so like not only to be on Yavin
in this on this forest moon,
but to be in a setting like
So basically like sprawling treehouse for Manpix and Cassian have made a little life.
It's giving Swiss Family Robinson and I'm here for it.
I love it.
One of the cool things about just this opening stretch of these episodes when we realize we are on Yavin is that as the show has very effectively done across this season, we can feel how things have changed without spending time on how they have changed.
right. We can feel how close we are to Rogue One, to a new hope. Because there is so much going on here.
It is a buzz with activity. There are more people. But there is also like, we're going to hear Vell say shortly to Bix, building a real army. They're talking about checking in with your duty officer, getting your medical clearance. Like there has been an evolution of the formality of this thing even before we get to Vonn's declaration. And that next then,
a catalyst in the formal declaration and cementing of the rebellion.
Inside of this little tree house, our guy Cassie Nandor is rotate in the shoulder.
Blaster burn that won't heal.
Before we see him, after we hear insects buzzing,
Closed Clause Cousin says Cassian groaning.
And I wanted to ask you, Mallory and Rubin, what were you hoping for?
growing softly. I was hoping for a sex scene. I was hoping for a sex scene as I often am. And I will say, though, we basically get one. I mean, the staff is out. We're saving wound. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh, yeah. The chemistry between these two remains electric. I thought, again, like much like the soldier who Bix is seeing at the beginning of the previous arc with this blaster burn on Cassian's shoulder, like we didn't see him.
how it happened. We don't know all of the particulars of that mission and we don't need to.
The thing that we understand is where our characters are as a result of all the things that we have and have not seen where that has put.
I think in many cases, I agree with you. And I would say there's like a few spots where it makes me, I mean, we're always wishing for more time with this story, obviously.
There's just like a few spots where I was like, if we had had a little bit more tract delay here, it could have been even better, you know.
Agree. I will spoil that I could have used more time with Erskine and Mon.
100%.
Erskine should have been a character in season one.
You know what I mean? I think if they were to do season one over again,
Erskine would have been at Mon's side.
We just saw so much of Mon at home rather than Mon at work that we weren't getting like
Erskine time. And now not even a little note for Perrin.
I won't be back.
Bye. Oh, should I visit my daughter after her honeymoon?
I'm good.
I won't be back.
Enjoy all the cocktails you want.
Are we going to see Perrin again?
Who are we going to see sooner, B2 or B2 emo or Perrin?
I've sort of resigned myself to the fact that we might not see B again, though.
I hope that Bix makes contact and that B is then brought to her wherever she has chosen to settle.
Okay.
So that's my dream and my wish.
Do you think we'll see Bix again?
Do you think we would see B again?
I don't actually think it, but I'm daring to dream because rebellions are built on hope.
I have this kind of painful forecast in my head of us seeing Bix, like, finding out what basically happens on Scariff and some way.
I don't know if I honestly don't know if I can handle that, but maybe not.
Maybe this was the last time we will ever see Vicks.
It's entirely possible.
Will we see Perrin?
I hope so.
I love our time with parent, as you know, I'm a maniac.
Blasterburn. Bix comes out and she's like, take off your shirt.
Plies a salve, tells him to relax.
He's wincing men.
You know, they're such babies.
Then they flirt.
What are you going to do?
Anything I want.
And they're clearly about to fuck.
And then Will arrives at cock block o'clock.
Their son is a pal.
Their teenage son, Will.
But here's the thing about Will.
And we're going to talk about Will and Drina across this episode.
We saw Will and Bila in the first dark.
Like, Will has a girl in every port, you know?
And so he's like, I know what's happening here.
I am happy to return later.
Despite the urgent peril of the mission that I am here to impart,
let me know if you guys want me to come back to great bell.
You say a girl in every port, like he's not loyal, but I feel like in both cases,
perhaps ill advisedly, Will's like, I'm staying.
Yeah.
I'm not just leaving.
I'm not just going to fuck off like Mon.
did with not even marry a text apparent.
I got to go say goodbye.
I got to find them, you know?
When he is with each of them, it's the only thing in the world to him.
Yeah.
But as soon as it's not a part of his life anymore, he's like, I will fall in love again.
It's been two years since Bila, right?
Frankly, I feel cheated now out of seeing who Will Fucked after Rido Huffing.
Well, it might have been saw.
And so there we go.
Oh, man.
They all embrace the three of them are so happy to see each other.
the affection for each other, this pharynx bond,
beautifully incorporated throughout
these three episodes.
Cassian's like, where have you been?
Really pushing. I love that Will was kind of
doing the Greg Gary, this and that
from White Lotus season three. He's like,
here and there. Gassian's like, yeah,
I know where here is. Like, where's there?
Something I love about the
ferrics, the ferricks three,
or the ferricks four, if we count
B2 Emo, which we should.
Like,
uh,
Bix had a relationship with Will's dad, but like, and Will to a certain degree.
Yep.
But you never got the sense that like Will and Cassian didn't really have a relationship on Ferris.
Ferriks is a small town, but it's not like he was like Brasso and Cassian had a close relationship.
But it's like since then, because they are for Rixian brothers together, you know what I mean?
The stone and sky or the genuine anguish that Cassian has, like leaving him behind on Gorman.
And it's like, that's a bond formed an exile together of like we remember where we came from together.
I love that.
We remember what we loved and we remember what we lost.
And then we know why we can't let it happen what we're fighting for anywhere else.
Like it's just been, it's really been beautiful.
I thought the moment on Garman when Cassie, like the way that he gripped the back of Will's head and just like, please.
Yeah.
They have both lost so much.
The idea of losing then that.
that shared understanding,
like the few people who there is still
that deeply rooted connection to
would be unbearable,
which of course makes what
happens with Bix's up.
Frankly too painful to confront.
I'm not sure how I'm going to get through
that part of the podcast.
Speaking of Biggs,
when I first saw her here on Yavin,
all of the styling that we see
is so 70s.
They're like so, you know,
especially like the four sealer.
Like we're really trying to step in closer
to a new hope feeling like a direct,
you know, like,
Rogue one kind of in the shape of Mon, but like, you know, this is really sort of connecting us stylistically
in the wardrobe sense to a new hope. And Bakes almost felt like she was like Endor Leia styled slightly,
you know what I mean? Like with her hair down by the braids and stuff like that, I was just like,
it just, jungle paradise, forest paradise. We love a forest planet. Oh, I love that. I did not,
I did not think that, but frankly, if I'm being honest, it's probably because I was spending most of the scene waiting for them to take their clothes off rather than studying what they're wearing.
She has this, like, tunic over along, it's just like very, I mean, she's still in pants. She's not in like a gown or whatever. But like it's, yeah, it just felt very laicoded to me to a certain degree.
Interesting. Fascinating. I could be wrong. But maybe I'm not. Next. I'm sure. I don't think you're wrong. It's a wonderful observation.
Luthin.
Yeah.
I want to know if Cass is ready to work.
Cass is like if you know some burdens, because you told them.
It's never peaceful for long, great little touch.
Luton wants to know, Will says, if you can count on them.
Now, this was great because Bix says, well, Luton's not making it easy.
And then Will kind of fires back like, well, this whole thing, this place you are, the people you're with.
Like, that's not what we're about.
He says all these people, new faces every day.
And then he makes this compare.
to the way Luthan works, right? Action.
So what's happening here at Yavin, Will says, all we do here is get ready.
I thought, especially for like a place in Star Wars that is like held in such regard and esteem as this central location and consequential location.
This was kind of like a fascinating way to contrast it to.
You know, and in so many ways this is like the pursuit of Andor, right?
What is happening elsewhere?
What is happening in the shadows?
what is happening that leads to what ends up happening above Yavin in a new hope.
I think also this idea of like group and joint, like, you know, Cassing's like, we're part of an
army now. Like, have you checked in? Have you checked in? Have you checked in? Have you checked in?
Like, check in. This is what we do here. Even though he's like, but I take off in a ship
at any time I want. Fuck off, Graven. But like, I think that like this idea, obviously the idea
of joining, which is
the story of Andor, what
does it take to get Cassie and Andor to join
really full-throatedly join
the rebellion? He tries to quit
once again in this arc of stories, right?
So joining.
It's a story of Jen or so, joining,
right? But like, this idea
of, to your point, what you've been
saying about, like, cohesion and sort of size
and scale of the group. And so it's like
Luthin works in the shadows
and Luton works by
isolating everyone and holding all the information and just sort of like these are his asvels like we're
not his puppets anymore like he's got his puppets on a string but he's the only one who gets to know
everything is going on right mom is one of his op like he's one of his cohorts is operatives to a certain
degree and he's got urskin spying on her also you know so he's like he's isolating he's pitting
people against each other as you noted sort of with bix and cassian in the last arc and stuff like
that and there's a time for that perhaps that time has passed we're in a new era year
here where it's all about community gathering, sharing, combining forces, common cause.
The coalition building has started in earnest.
And Luton, as he says by his own admission, doesn't belong in that phase of rebellion.
And I think what's interesting about the way in which these episodes are shot is we have so many shots inside of this arc of imperial forces by them, Dedra by herself.
Partigas by himself.
Cyril by himself.
Like this isolation,
cold isolation versus the warmth and nature and community of Yavin,
I think is just a fascinating visual contrast that we get throughout this arc.
Yeah, for sure.
I thought it was really interesting in the No Yavin for me,
stretch later with Lutin.
Like, a couple things.
One, I think the fact that with everything happening at the Senate with Mahn
and sending Cassian in and what's happened with Erskine.
Luthin has to confront, says, like, none of these people trust me.
You know, has to confront the fact that the vera, to stick with one of the emails we got last
week and the analogy from last week, like, the people who are running each leg of the relay
for me, they don't want me like to necessarily be the coach.
Like he has to kind of stare that in the face in that moment.
And I thought the evolution of Luthin's relationship to this idea to like having
to stare in the face what his role in the coalition building is when he was like the one who
sat across from Saw in season one and basically implored him to stop standing off to the side,
to stop listing off all of the different factions of the rebellion and instead unite.
But now in the moment where that is actually happening, Luton does not feel like he can be a part
of it.
So that's just yet, like yet another thing that makes his character so fascinating to watch.
And just like Tony Gilroy as a student, a scholar of
rebellion, understanding that there are different phases of rebellion, and there's a time for
Luton, and then there's a time for Draven. Like, there's a time for different kinds of leadership.
There's a time for Mon Mothma to be working inside the Senate, and there's a time for her to leave
and, you know, start wearing tunics and her hair different, you know? So it's like, you've been waiting
for the shift to bangs, the whole season. Still waiting. So close now. We're so close now.
Oh, man. Yeah, I just think, I think that's really, I think that's fascinating.
fascinating, you know, a sunrise I'll never see, like, a save the Shire, but not for me, right?
I don't know.
I don't even get to go to Yavin.
Like, I don't even get that far.
Yeah.
And he's always known that that was how it was going to go, which is, again, part of the extreme heroism and bravery of what he has chosen to do.
You know, I share, I just share my dreams with ghosts.
Like, he made the choice to do that so that everyone else could get here.
I think on that, on that point, the different phases.
the different moments,
like this has been another
through line of this season,
the shift from the fight
to the win, right?
Like, we have decided to fight
now for characters,
you know,
to like Cassian,
you have to kind of decide again
and decide again,
and that's part of his journey.
Right.
But, you know,
when Cassian says to Will here,
like,
well, we need an army,
it's all a risk,
which it is,
of course, he's right.
What do you want?
Will you want to fight?
Or you want to win?
Is this about,
and Will will say,
like,
vengeance when he tells them, hey, we got to go assassinate
ISB supervisor, Dedger Amaro.
But this idea of, like, this is about the win.
This will be so central to how we process what we watch later
when Bix makes the decision to leave Cassian
so that he can fulfill this purpose
because we heard Bix say last arc.
Like, if it's a war like you say, right,
we don't get to choose what we save, we don't get to choose what we lose.
Maybe you do get to choose, actually, sometimes what you lose
to try to save something else.
if we're going to do it, if we're going to fight, I want to win.
This idea that it has to be worth it when you have given up all of this.
Like, I don't know if we want to set over under for how many times today I will quote,
what do I sacrifice everything?
But it was just, I mean, there are so many moments from the prior history of the show that are top of mind,
Nemex manifesto, Marva's funeral, hollow message, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
But what do I sacrifice everything?
I mean, every character confronts their version of that at some point.
You know, the section of Lutheran speech that I was thinking of.
about the most in this arc is one we don't quote a lot.
Because Cassian is frontline for so many historical events, right?
Like the whole point of Rogue One is here's the untold story of the rebels who got the plans
who we never talked about in a new hope.
We didn't say Gin or so or Cassian Andor once in a new hope, right?
the line that people know is many
Bothenstein, which is just like a completely different thing
altogether, you know what I mean?
So like,
um,
so the unsung heroes of the rebellion.
And so the,
the, the names we don't know
of the rebellion and the important roles that they played.
And so when Cassian
executes the
rescue of Monmothma from the Senate.
Yeah.
And it, canonically, and we'll talk about this in more detail later,
but canonically inside of Rebath,
it's the rebel crew,
Goal Squadron or whatever,
and they talk about that inside of this,
how, hey, for optics, we're going to do it differently.
Your story.
So you don't get any credit for this.
And so the line from Luther's speech is,
the ego that started this fight will never have a mirror
or an audience or the light of gratitude, right?
Like, I don't get to have,
I don't get to tell a showy,
do a showy speech in the Senate
that everyone will always remember
that's not my role, I'm going to do this thankless thing that no one will ever talk about
until Tony Gilroy decides to make a movie show.
I love that.
I love that one of the central missions of Andor and interests of Andor is the different forms
that heroism can take and like the different forms that rebellion can take.
And on that front, like one of my favorite moments of the three episodes was when Draven's like,
you want to watch the speech in my office?
And Cassian's like, I've heard her before.
You know, no one will ever know what I did, but I know what I did.
And like, that's what matters.
And that's why Cassian's incredible because he did all these things.
Like when Luthon, I mean, we're going to talk about the Forst Taylor shortly,
but then when Luton kind of has his connected moment to that and basically talks about
Cassian, like he's a nexus being.
You know, it's like history can't exist without you.
Yeah.
And he just like kind of recap.
caps all the key locations.
Not to be,
not to make like a shoddy analogy,
but I was thinking of it as like Forrest Gump.
When we watched the film,
Forest Gump and Forrest Gump is like there for all these historical events.
It's great one.
And I'm like, there's Cassian.
Here he is again.
You didn't know he was there at the Gorman Massacre.
You didn't know he was there when Ma Mothma gave her speech.
Incredible comment.
With one notable difference,
which is that Cassian,
he's not going to prematurely ejaculate the second his finger grazes a nipple.
He's ready.
Wow.
Shots fired at poor, Forrest Gump.
Poor American hero.
Great film.
Great film.
When Cass learns, when Will finally sets where he's been, he's been all of these trips,
we can tell this is like this mystery has kind of been building.
Where have you been?
Not just this once, but all of these times.
It's been Gorman.
It's like, I got a girlfriend.
I got a French girlfriend.
There's a mission, but also
wait until I tell you about Drina.
And honestly, dude.
Drina rules.
Talk about like, yeah, I mean,
people who are not touted across the history of Star Wars
and then we see what they did,
the Palma one broadcast?
Holy fuck.
I mean, oh my God.
And that was Drina.
Unbelievable.
When Will hands over.
the datapad with Dejra's face.
And they talk about Gorman first.
And like, we have all of the history behind it.
It's being destroyed.
And Cass says of Luthin,
he must be thrilled,
which was just such a like withering indictment of Luthrin,
who I actually, like, think was softened in a,
in a necessary way in a couple spots in this episode.
And we are shown that he, I think,
really does, you know, care about his people and got those beats as well.
And that complexity and that brew is the Luton story.
but you know we're thinking here of course of the last arc and if it goes up in flames it will burn very brightly
i'm going to sit this one out we know what cassian thinks about this we know what he thinks of of luthin
being willing to whether it's al-dani or gorman or anywhere else in sight of response for the sake of the
larger cause we know that he tried to talk luthan out of gorman completely and i thought the way that
this all came together here not only pulling in the history of the characters but setting
up the massacre to come in the next episode, where, you know, Will says, like, that's not what's
happening. Not now. It says not now. So it's like, yeah, that was what was happening, right? But not now.
Now it's the empire. The empire's gone crazy. We need to kill Deidre Mera. She destroyed Farragh. She
killed my father, you, meaning Bix, know her. Dr. Gorsd, the torment of Bix. Deidre
hovering over her in Farrag's in that chair is, you're in my net. The worst thing you can do now is
bore me. The way that
Gorman
is the massacre of Gorman, the Gorman
is depicted in this stretch
as
one of the most consequential
moments in the history of
the galaxy and the rebellion.
But also, the way that our
characters converge through their personal
ties and personal experiences,
what did this person do
to my father? What did this person do to you?
What did this person do to the place we
called home? The way that Will is like she's hunting,
think us and everyone we know.
It's not about vengeance.
It's about us.
It's about Farak, Stone, and Sky to make it small, to make it intimate, to make it personal inside of this larger thing.
And for us to understand all of that at once is just, like, brilliant storytelling.
The tension of having Cassie in there and have him do like a perimeter of the square as things are happening, having him realize what's happening before most other people understand what's happening.
and for him to like try to warn Will off,
but also that's not why he's there.
Right.
And it's not his agenda.
And it's almost like cover for what he has to do.
And so like he's his focus,
you know,
Will starts firing on stormtroopers as soon as he can.
That's not Cassian's focus because he's there.
So like that that whole cat and mouse aspect of what will draw Deidre out onto her balcony
and can he get the shot at the same time as this atrocity is happening.
It's fascinating storytelling.
And I think also what's so compelling about this is that it is both true.
All of this is true.
Will is like, she came for our home.
She came for you personally, Bix.
She came for my dad.
All of that's true.
And it is also so clearly a little meal that Luton has cooked up just for Will to say,
here's the strings I'm going to pull on you puppet.
And here's the string you, my puppet, can now pull on Bix and Cassian.
You know what I know who is.
To go get the.
The person who's after me.
After me.
You know who is most important to Cassian, we know, is Bix because Cassian made that dumb-ass
movie at the last, the end of last arc.
And so he's like, you know, she tortured Bix, you know.
Right.
I'm just saying.
So if you want to take her out, it's not about me.
It's not because she's hunting me, Axis.
And we should say, and his intel will come in handy later as well.
But this is Lonnie Intel.
Lonnie, yeah.
Our super ginger coming through with all sorts.
of important information, you know?
I love, again, it's like, you got to watch Andor really closely.
And it's just such a rewarding thing to watch in that way.
The little, like, oh, who's the plant?
I mean, it's obviously immediate.
We know who the plant in mid-Bail stands fairly right away.
But this, like...
Is it because she has Terminator Fades?
Yes, honestly.
It's like, so that's the evil one.
Did you see that that actress, the actress who plays, what she's talking about,
the actress who plays the ISB plant inside of Bail Argana's team, who just looks
evil the moment you see her.
Instantly.
Beautiful and evil.
Is married to the actor
who played Plutie,
the guy who worked for Saw
and who got shot by Saw last arc?
Yeah.
And she said in her caption,
she's like,
I'm married to Plutie the cutie?
Plutty and Kitty's very good.
Wow.
That's incredible.
Well, she went out
very quickly getting caught
making an ill-advised phone call
in a supply closet
and Plutie went out
talking about
prime. So, you know, we all have our journeys that were on.
Neither than they're both.
Not very good spies.
True. Correct.
But I just loved it's like Young's agent, right?
So how does Luth...
We're like, oh, Lutthin and Klaelik, I mean, yeah, Luton's the spy, but like, how do
they know that something's up and Bail's rescue crew?
Lonnie, of course. And for Lani's hand in events to be clear even in an episode that he is not
in? Great stuff.
Speaking of people who are not an episode.
episodes.
Luthan's not in
the first two episodes
of this arc.
Right?
I have some questions
about how Luthan
appears
on corson.
Out there without his wig
which tells us
something about where we are in the story
and that everybody recognizes
that this is a moment of change.
This is a pivot point.
But very notable.
To be clear.
And then we don't know where he is at the end.
Clea says get to the gallery.
But then like we hear he's safe,
but that's it.
it. We don't know where he is. I just want to make something really clear, guys. On the wig watch
with Joanna Rob's in front. Even when Lutheran's not wearing his wig, Stellan is wearing a wig.
There's a wig under that wig. I just need you guys all to know that. Okay. Let's move it on us.
Yeah.
That's just important wig lore. It's a wig on a wig. That's all we're talking about here.
Had on a hat. wig on a wig on a wig. It's time to meet a for saleer. Bix takes Cassian into the village.
all of these people who are ailing in somewhere
lining up to see this four sealer and Cassian's like,
this is not for me, and let me tell you,
Marva would have something to say about this.
This was a great little, you know, scenes from a marriage moment
because he's like, Marva, I hated four sealers.
And Bix is like, she hated one, who she met once.
Yeah.
This is great.
I love that.
Cassian does not believe in this, right?
And Bix says, they wouldn't be faking something
if it didn't work.
And I thought that this was...
If it never worked, yeah.
If it never worked.
And I thought this was really fascinating
as a way to like,
not only prime us for the decision
that Bix will make
and how she responds to what unfolds
between Cassian and the cook
from the mess,
all the foresailor and the scene,
but also just more broadly,
like what Bix will say
about Cassian's purpose later,
these things that she has felt and sensed before,
Bix's relationship to faith.
Like what that means to her.
Because she's been having these dreams, that means she's like somewhat force sensitive, right?
Is that what we would say?
I think that that is at least an interpretation and here for us to consider.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Or that Bix is not in any way force attuned and is trying to make sense of these things that she has experienced in some way.
And that could be one of the ways that she did so.
Regardless, it's like, you know, what's faith, right?
Faith is believing in something you can't see.
You don't have proof about.
And so, like, that's at this point in the, in galactic history, right?
Like, we know where we are with the force.
This long after Order 66, after the Inquisitor hunts, there are force users out there,
but they're few and far between.
I mean, many are in hiding.
More than we thought.
More than we thought every time of this story comes out.
But still.
And like the forces, the idea of the force is like a whisper, right?
It's not this like central present visible thing.
And we can think of so many examples of this.
Like, you know, one of the things that I love best about Rogue One is the relationship
between Cheroot and Bays and like, no Jedi here, only dreamers like this fool every time
our guy is like, I am one with the force and the forces with me.
How do people talk about the force in a new hope?
whether it's like Tarkin, talking to Vader, the Jedi are extinct, their fire's gone out of the universe,
you, my friend, or all that's left of their religion, or Han, a very different energy than Grandma of Tarkin,
also saying, kid, I've flown from one side of this galaxy to the other. I've seen a lot of strange stuff,
but I've never seen anything to make me believe that there's one all-powerful force controlling everything.
Like, this is where we are with the force.
Key religion, the mongo, jumble.
What I love about thinking about Chirut,
I love that.
Thank you so much for
Take us on that tour.
Chirut,
who is one of my favorite parts of...
Yeah, same.
You know,
the...
The page for Rogue One was,
hey, we're going to do a Star Wars story
without any force in it,
without any Jedi in it, et cetera.
Vader wasn't supposed to be in it.
We weren't supposed to have any lightsabers in it,
whatever.
Then they decided,
they, being Lucasfilm,
decided to do
puts them in.
Okay, fine.
But Trude does this, like, sort of,
we're not doing Jedi,
but we've here,
we've got this guy who can fight with this,
with this staff and,
instinctually,
here we have Daredevil.
Incredibly, yes, here we have Daredevil, exactly.
It's such a, like, fun way
to keep the force inside of, like,
a forseless story.
And I think that when he says,
would you trade that necklace
for a glimpse of your future to Jin,
this idea of, like,
the force as
as like
mystical
like crystal ball
reading
and which is you know
this woman is a force
healer but what does she offer
is like a glimpse of the future
for Cassian right
like this is I see your destiny
we'll talk about all of that in a second
and I think also
later
there's this moment in Rogue One
that you know
people are like
this is a little
this feels a bit inconsistent
when they're in Saas's
page and Cassian's like
this is a
first for me. You know,
True and Bays are like, we've been in worse traps than this.
And Cassian's like, this is a first for me and all of us having watched
and are like, what are you talking about Cassian?
He's been to jail so many times.
But he says, you know, Truitt's trying to talk about the force.
And Cassian says, I'm beginning to think the force and I have different priorities.
Yeah.
So it's like, I love that.
What Cassian's relationship as a skeptic across the stories is really interesting.
Yeah, and in contrast to something like a guardian of the will, right?
These not only keepers of belief, but keepers of story, like messengers.
And again, how that could take so many different forms and come in so many different shapes,
how a guardian of the will or somebody like Cassian who's like with all of this or if this is really for me,
like are still ultimately part of the same pursuit, which is like what is our role?
and history and how do we share that with each other and then where does it lead us?
Like I just really, I really love that.
This idea of like people who are force sensitive, force healers or forced dreamers or whatever
it is, like this idea of being able to see currents of the force but not clear directions
or exact visions or whatever, this idea that when Chirid is talking about basically
in Adu, which we hear about
inside of these episodes, but when Cassian
goes out with his gun into the sniper position
and
Cheras says the force moves darkly near a creature
about to kill this idea of like
we can sense it
swirling around a Cassian and or he is like
got, you know, it's like
midichlorians or no, he's got like the
currents of destiny are just
inevitably drawn to him and curling
around him and I just think that that is like what this woman says to him here, which we're
about to talk about is just like so interesting and so much more interesting to me personally
than like a midi-chlorian Jesus idea. Just this idea of like things are, the events of history
are drawn to you sort of as Lutheran's saying like or you are the catalyst for these events
of history is just a fascinating prospect. Yeah, I thought this was really interesting. My relationship
up to this sequence and these ideas, like, this is probably what changed for me the most across
watches, because when it was happening on my first watch, I was like, there was a little part
of me that was like, oh, did we need it in Ariandor, which I was kind of surprised by, because I'm
often actually, like, I think a defender of these decisions. But I ended up, I think, really liking
how this was handled for exactly the reason that you're citing.
So this force healer comes over.
She senses Cassian from across the yard,
is drawn to him, senses the wound,
touches it, successfully heals it as we will talk about.
So I think we should do a little power ranking.
Who are the best force dealers?
Like this mess hall cook, Grogu, Ben Solo,
how are we ranking on it?
Everybody brings their own criteria to a forced killer power ranking.
Curious for your thoughts.
But like, she thanks him.
she is he's the skeptic yeah she is so moved by this experience and assured right she thinks him for
what the clarity that feeling it's been a very long time and then later says all that you've been
gathering the strength of spirit made me think of the strength of feeling in the serial sequence last
week as a turn of phrase surely you must feel it um a couple things like
I was going to ask why I know you,
especially when we get into like the who are you for Cyril Karn at the end of
eight or I have friends everywhere.
This like repeated phrase is just sort of like,
how are we connected?
Who's connected to who?
What this idea of destiny.
And also when she heals him,
we have this great email about what the score does here.
But also before that,
before we get to her healing,
we hear drums,
which again made me feel like we were on endor.
You know what I mean?
It's just sort of like this idea of a mess hall and barracks and life.
And I don't know what Cassian and Bix did to get that sweet tree house.
But like, you know, things on Yavin are like,
there's community.
There's coalition.
There's community.
They're sharing.
They're sharing of food.
They're sharing of music.
This is what is happening inside of this.
also we're preparing and for all those other stuff.
Were you looking for any members of the Maya Pay Brigade to see if they survive being eaten long enough to enjoy the?
I think the two members who survived that skirmish are driving.
Yeah, that sounds right.
Okay, great.
Our listener Charlie wrote in and said about the score in Andor and the way in which the score in and or throughout both seasons deals with the idea of tension and release.
And so Charlie wrote basically everything the show is a held suspended or tense chord that resolves or releases into a more solid chord.
The theme of and or is simply that if you listen to it.
Nothing flashy like John Williams would do.
It is simple and tells a simple story.
A story about no disrespect to John Williams.
Charlie speaks highly of John Williams elsewhere.
A story about movement from discomfort to comfort from strangeness to the familiar from, you could argue,
oppression to freedom.
The best example is the band from Marva's
processional.
It's diagetic,
I think it's the Mon Motho one.
It's diagetic music in that case,
but it's still tension release.
In episode 7 through 9,
the tension release chord,
when Bix is explaining what happened
with the Force Healer is the Force theme chords,
and there's no mistaking it.
There's a great podcast called the soundtrack show
that explains this,
but Williams used his actual music to tell stories.
The Force theme has this building line
that creates mystery,
and can phase some kind of power.
It plays behind Jedi using the Force,
notably when Luke lifts the X-wing from the swamp.
I think it also plays behind Obi-Wan
and the prequels in a few places.
In this scene and or,
it's just the first two chords.
It's only mystery.
No mastery.
The Force Healer doesn't know what she's feeling,
and the music reinforces that idea
in a really powerful way.
The musical language of Star Wars
is as important as the visual language
or the Lord Masters
keeping Canada in their heads.
This show rules.
This idea of him,
Charlie of the idea of taking the force theme and taking the section of the force theme
that is mystery without the accompanying training that gives you mastery is I'm so
terrible at parsing these kinds of stories inside of score motifs and themes. So I really
appreciate the bad babies whenever they write in about this. But that is just like brilliant
to me. Like anytime a TV composer, because you have so much more space.
for music to come back and be re-blended.
So anytime, like, Ramin Javadi was like a master of this in Game of Thrones,
any times you blend one theme into another or something like that,
it's just like, Chef's Kiss.
Amazing.
I loved it.
I do not have the musical expertise to have been able to identify what Charlie has here.
I think that's an incredible and very powerful insight.
just being able to as a more casual Star Wars score enthusiasts kind of feel that subtle shift into okay
actually this is happening yeah like and Cassian might be denying it but we can't because
that we know like on a sensory level what those notes are meant to invoke I thought was great
on the music front too like I loved um you know you've been
tracking across the season the auditory pairing with the opening and or wordmark and like how we got
again in these episodes the theme and like the ferricks chime in episode seven and then in episode eight
it's that like choral hymn and then in episode nine it's the gorman chant but kind of is like
a reverberating echo dirge this yeah this dirge and this echo across history i just thought was
Incredible.
I have a question.
No detail missed in the show.
That section that you just read when she says that that clarity, that feeling, it's been a very long time, all that you've been gathering the strength of spirit.
Surely you missed to feel it.
So that feeling, that clarity, that faith.
Faith is what we're talking about a lot.
We talk about this.
We talk about Bix.
But like what's the difference between faith and hope?
Is there a difference?
And is she talking about hope here?
Like you are giving me hope.
Absolutely.
Like a key, of course, usward.
I think so.
But I like that she doesn't say it.
She doesn't say, I feel like I have a new hope or something like that.
You know what I mean?
But it's just sort of like in the text there.
I liked it because like she basically is saying that the other people will, they will come no matter what.
Right.
And so this idea that her crisis of belief has been a quiet.
an internal one that struggle, that lack of certainty,
and to have that rekindled, much like hope can be,
you know, that this thing that maybe she used to be able to channel more consistently,
like to the, yeah, to the point of the who are you versus like that sense of who this person
is across the yard and like the idea of the presence that Cassian has left in the force
being the thing that she recognizes, like that ripple in the force.
like that ripple in the force that he creates and continues to create and then sends out those currents,
like that's the thing that she's feeling.
And so then it's not just like a belief in him and the role that he has to play.
It's a belief in the way that she understands how the energy between all things,
like the way that she understands how things are connected, how people are connected,
that we are all part of the living force together.
And I thought that's why I ultimately ended up really loving this actually,
because like, you know, Cassian's angry, he leaves. He's like, you can stay if you want, and Bix does.
That's great. And asks the force dealer what she saw and she says, I sense the weight of things,
things I can't see. Pain, fear, need, familiar terms, certainly when talking about the force.
Most beings carry the things that shape them. They carry the past. But some, very few, your pilot,
they're gathering as they go.
There's a purpose to it.
He's a messenger.
So this is the line that gives the episode its name,
but also this kind of cementing of a core understanding of who Cassian is.
We think back to Melchie, who will return in these episodes,
and Cassian parting on Neimos after escaping Narcina
and Melchie imploring Cassian to spread the word of what had happened there.
People have to know.
It is what Will will say.
when they are saying goodbye on Gorman, people have to know.
Like this idea, time and again, that Cassian is a part of how the horrors across the galaxy
and then also those kernels of hope will be communicated to people
and that all of that for Cassian will culminate in a literal transmission,
a message sent from Scariff.
Like, I just, I found this to be incredible.
And, like, the idea that, you know, like, I do, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I,
I do think Andor doesn't need the force.
I still think that.
But that inside of the story about regular people doing extraordinary things,
that's actually one of the most powerful ways to show us how the force would function
is like really meaningful because we always hear like the force is the energy between all things
and connects all things.
And anybody can tap into the force.
And so I love the idea, first of all, of a messenger.
as a very different type of Messiah,
hero, savior,
but also then that like Cassian does not have to be wielding the force
to be a part of the force.
He's not swinging a lightsaber.
But like, and it's not, you know,
we're going to talk about this idea of destiny in a second
that Gilroy has spoken about really interestingly this week.
But like, is it even that the force has chosen him?
Well, not through like a high mid-chlorian count, right?
but it's that his choices have caused those ripples in the forest,
like I think is really beautiful and kind of like very broom-boye to me.
Yeah.
Anyone can be,
well,
that's the thing about the story is like Cassian is special in his own way.
Yes.
But also like there are a ton of Cassians inside of this rebellion.
And there are vells too.
And there are bellhops who will give you tagline.
that will, you know, play again and again in Rogue One trailers.
You know what I mean?
Like, there's just like, there's a million Cassians everywhere.
Is this particular Cassian more special than others?
Perhaps, I mean, like, that's something that.
Yeah.
Luthen is alluding to this idea of, like, did you have a choice?
Or is there another hand here?
There's another thing.
On that language from the Mess Hall Cook Force Healer.
Yeah.
most beings carry the things that shape them.
They carry the past,
but some very few your pilot.
They're gathering as they go.
There's a purpose to it.
He's a messenger.
What I thought was so interesting is like,
what Chirut says to Cassie in Rogue One is there's more than one sort of prison captain.
I sense you carries yours with you.
There's this idea that like he can be both.
He is both.
Like he is.
He has these things that he carries thinking about.
Shout out the last of us.
But like he has.
these wounds that he carries
and these physical objects too, if he has
fix his blaster, if he carries
Nemex Manifesto, if he has
something of Marva's as well, like
there are literal things that Cassian carries,
these little wounds that add up
to this great big pile of destiny
for him. Yeah.
That he's carrying
the past
with him and gathering
momentum and speed and people,
gathering gin to him, gathering,
gathering, you know,
K2SL's with him,
gathering all these people around him,
Melchie, whoever it is,
they're all going to be key
to what's to come.
Yeah, and I love how it works in all directions, right?
It's like all of those things
that Cassian carries from them,
but then like I loved the return of the blaster.
That's, you know, when Vell holds it up
and when we were like, oh my God, it's Malshi
because, you know, that's the corporal blaster
that Cassian took from Cyril
and then hid away on,
and it was all in Aldani
that Vell would recognize.
that he hid on Neimos
and then that he gave
to Melchie.
The messages are moving in all directions.
Cassian is carrying Marva's messages
with him as he imparts all of these messages
to other people and I love that.
And I agree.
It's like clearly the show is saying here
that Cassian has a destiny that is distinct
but also that
and this is my personal read on it.
And I think for me, like, you know,
we always love to talk about like choice and destiny
and how they are entwined.
I think obviously so many of the stories that we consume
orient around in some way the idea of destiny
and some sort of crucial figure,
it's always the most interesting to me
when that character makes the choices
and decides to do the thing
rather than feeling like they have to
or they're on some sort of tram line.
I thought, I think that Cassian's arc
has really been like a masterclass
in that respect, including in these episodes
where, as you noted earlier,
like he says, I'm done.
He says it to Clea.
He says it to Bix.
And, like, how do we build toward the point where in Rogue One, he will say, like,
I can't imagine walking away.
On the one hand, every decision that he made got him to that.
Yes.
On the other hand, it's Bix's choice.
Bix's decision that at the end of this puts him on the staff.
Yeah.
But that's part of what I love about it.
It's like it's not just chosen one in isolation.
It's like it is that the Farak Stone and Sky.
it is what happened on Mina Rao and Brazo not getting his stone.
Like, it's all of it.
It's, it's, it's, it's all of the other people that they lost.
Like, it's the people that they don't want to have to lose again.
And I think that Cassian couldn't be who he is without the people who have shaped him.
And we feel that really with him every moment.
Can I go back to this extraordinary path that you've tracked for the, for Cyril's Corpo Blaster,
it becomes Melchie's Corpo Blaster.
like it going from Aldani to Nemos to Melchie,
when Cassine shows up with the blaster and Aldani
and Ski and our guy of a mouse backerack is going through his stuff
and he says, who's is this?
And Cassine says, didn't get a name.
And that's Cyril Karn who later he'll be like, who are you?
Like, and or?
The best.
Doing it.
The best.
Didn't get a name, but he really seemed to care about the piping of his uniform.
Yeah, his collar looked great.
I think he should really grow his hair in a little bit and give it a beachy wave.
And I think that's what he needs.
Loving the waves.
Here's what Tony Gilroy said to Decider about bringing the Force into Andor.
I think we knew we had to do something with it.
We really wanted to touch on it.
It would have been really just uncool.
to not do it. But how to do it. And then later he said, pulling together all these pieces and saying,
oh my God, there's destiny here. The idea of reluctant destiny is really fascinating. You know,
I mean, we have religions based on that. So that was the right moment. And then he adds even
loose and starts to wonder what else happening. I really was struck by, oh, my, pulling all these
pieces and saying, oh, my God, there's destiny here. That for the creators, like, it's the same journey
that Cassie and himself is on,
not just the reluctance,
but it's not you hear a prophecy
when you're a child and you know you're on this path.
It's that you start to see the shape of the thing
as you live it or as you make it.
Yeah, and I thought that was really fascinating.
When he says, you know,
there are religions, we have religions based on that,
like you can sort of weave a story of destiny
around any kind of person
if you decide to do it retroactively.
Shout out Megan O'Keefe,
who I think did really good job asking Tony great questions this week in her interview with him.
And I, yeah, I don't know.
I guess I do feel complicated about the presence of the foreseer,
but I think it's such a light touch.
And I didn't hear Cassing say, I don't want it, but kind of.
Oh, yeah.
Always so I'm sorry.
her Johnstone energy is here. I liked when Bix went back and Cassian's moving his shoulder.
She's like, it's better, isn't it? And that must be confusing. First of all, iconic. But again,
it makes us think of Rogue One and Truton Bayes. It bothers him because he knows it's possible.
Like, what does it mean when you do have to confront the truth of the thing that you are not necessarily ready or inclined to believe in?
I love that. I thought that was great. And this is where she tells him.
I've felt it before.
I'm not afraid to say it.
What if it's important?
She tells him it can only be good,
which I thought was like a fascinating little moment,
given the pain that awaits for these people.
And not just how not true that could be.
Well, I wonder if he's thinking about that.
Okay, so like, what is Cassie and Andor thinking about
when he embraces Jin Erso knowing they're about to die?
The doom of Valeria.
I guess I'll never see Bix again is one of them.
I guess I'll never see B again, you know, I guess I'll never see B again, you know, etc.
But like, hopefully he squeezes in a goodbye.
But this is a good thing.
It can only be good.
Is he thinking about something that Bix said to him in the end there?
You know, I don't know.
I hope so.
It's a nice thing to think about.
It's a nice way to ease some of our sorrows.
because this is also deeply sad,
but also deeply inspiring.
What a story.
Cass is like, all right,
I'll go to Gorman after all.
He and Will are prepping to depart.
The Rogue One ties continue.
Draven's here.
This is where he says, like,
and again, we can just think,
okay, Alliance Intelligence,
this is getting serious.
We see the shape of this thing that's building,
and he's like, you know,
this isn't going to work.
Not a base for privateers.
Loves that.
Those who enjoy the securities of Yavin
must proclaim their loyalties.
I thought hearing from Cassian, even as you noted on the heels of him kind of pitching,
Will, I'm like, just like, go check in, do the thing.
Don't push too hard.
You know where I stand.
The day I need permission to come and go, I'm gone.
Very nice little tie to obviously everything that's going to happen in Rogue One.
And just in general, Cassian has joined, has participated, has shaped all of these events.
But in his way, in his way, the whole time.
Never was a good soldiers follow orders guy ever.
And I love that about him.
So Draven, who if folks didn't rewatch Rogue One, is obviously in Rogue One.
Alistair Petri, who is one of the best, most British names ever.
We did get an email from a listener, Matt, who is a fan of sex education, which Alistair Beatry starred on.
And he said, don't worry.
Headmaster Groff is here to kill everyone's boner, which is, like, sort of his role on that show.
He's great on that show.
But it's interesting to think about, like, who do they call and who they didn't call, right?
like Ben Daniels isn't here
but Draven's here
and that connection
to be
that connection
to Donna gets a shout out
yeah that connection to the team
at Rogue One is
very important
also I was thinking a lot about our discussions of the social
contract that we had and we were talking about the last of us
when he says those who enjoy the securities
of Yavin must proclaim their loyalties
what do you give up
for the protection that Yavin
provides
and Cassian's like nothing.
I don't give a better.
I have vacation days.
I do what I want.
What am I going to do whatever I want in the words of my girlfriend,
for my wife?
It's unclear.
Oh, man.
I loved the little sequence of Cassie and a Will
approaching Gorman and Cassian like fucking with Will a little bit looking at him to
the side.
Will's like, oh,
Going low.
Go in love, right?
Great stuff.
Very like Han-esque, not just pilot, but smuggler rogue spirit from Cassian across the stretch here.
Love that.
Also, like, I mean, that's a funny sequence.
But I was thinking about when watching Cassian, I mean, taking the horror of what's going around him at Gorman, but also stay clear on his purpose.
Yeah.
And thinking about, like, Cassian as a person who's, like, you know, in Scariff, there's, like, a massacre happening at Scarf.
and he's like, what's my purpose? What am I here to do? What's my clarity of purpose here?
You're my mission.
Change and mission for Vell. When Cassian departs, Vell goes to visit Bix and says, no more smuggling. I needed a break.
Bix says it's good to hear you say that. And Vell says, I was getting reckless. So reckless, we can presume, after having lost Sinta, what did that do to Vell? Where did it lead her, that pain? And also just a little bit of Clare.
to hear from Bix. You know, you asked a question last episode, like, where did we think we'd find
Bix on her healing journey? And we do have a couple moments, you know, in this stretch where, whether
it's this conversation with Felle here or elsewhere where Bix is saying to Cassie and, like,
if I were in pain, like, I would do whatever I had to to try to fix that, where we get little
insights into how Bix is thinking currently on her arc about like self-care.
Right. Does shooting gorse in the head mean I'm back in and I'm shooting? We had an email
about this. I will read later, which I think is like a justifiable slight critique. But like,
am I back on like shooting missions or am I going to Yavin Trader Joe's every day and
just hanging out and make a tea? Is that what I'm going to do? Also reminded me of the
I want some of that tea. I want some of that tea, dude. Cassian slept right there.
through this goodbye message.
I mean, we need some of that.
She put some, she put some extra in his team, but like, um, no question.
Vell and Mon, Mel and Mon's discussion during that wedding hike, um, again, I simply
wouldn't hike during a wedding, but, um, the wedding hike, this idea of like, hey, we have to live
while we, you can't pour from an empty cup. You got to live a little bit during a rebellion.
So, Val, you can like, yeah, just do what you want to do, which is yell at new recruits.
and that will just sort of fill you with joy and spirit,
but also enjoy the drum circle at the mess tent.
And yeah, man, it's pretty cool here.
It made me so sad to be thinking back to that Vell and Mon moment and that idea
because, like, Vicks and Cassian can't have that at the end here.
And it makes me really sad.
Why is Vell here?
She's here because Draven and Dadaun are like, yeah, you got it.
What's going on, Cassian?
Like, we really want to promote this guy, but he keeps just leaving.
and making us tell him it's not a base for privateers.
He's captain by the time Rogue 1 happens, so let's talk about his promotion.
How are we going to make that happen?
We need to get him the title of Captain.
How are we going to make that happen?
Don't they call him Captain Andor at the end of this arc?
Do they?
I think the kid who's, I can't remember exactly what it was, but I think the kid who's,
I would have to go back and look.
Someone, I think, calls him and screams at him Captain Andor at one point.
But then I was like, how did we?
So do you feel like he got promoted in this 24-hour period, like after Gorman, after he came back?
and he was like, see, I told you I was going to bring the ship back, and he's like,
hi, I, Captain.
Maybe, maybe.
Maybe they wanted to promote him to a major and it never happened.
Yeah, a colonel.
I don't know.
It could be.
Great question.
Oh, man.
This is where you mentioned when Vell says, like, they're no longer loses puppets,
fascinating to think about Vell and what she has made for herself to, like, extricate herself
from that circumstance.
They need Cassian to embrace, Vell says, that he is a leader.
Now. Think back to the last arc. You're thinking small, Luceon's head. You're thinking like a thief. I'm thinking like a soldier, think like a leader. Continually interesting for us to compare how other people talk about Cassian and see him and how he talks about and thinks about and sees himself. Whether it's pilot, thief, soldier, leader, or just a person walking around the base versus messenger destiny. As we continue to track.
mirror watch.
It's a good old
Cass who's looking at himself
who's looking at the star in the mirror
inside of this episode.
Who am I?
Soldier, pilot, leader,
forced destiny being.
These are all great questions.
I have no easy answers.
We go to Gordon.
We'll return to Yavin.
Okay.
Later.
But it is time.
to head to Gorman, where Cyril is making his way to Dedra for the first of more than one
a harrowing encounter. When we return, we get, this is like a recurring motif across these episodes,
these little snippets of the Imperial News broadcasts and the different news footage that we
hear and we see, this machine, this propaganda machine in full swing. One of the lines that
will repeat is continued and inexplicable Gorman resistance to imperial norms. We hear that
the firebombing the night before is an act of terrorism. We can see before we even really get into
unfolding it that the empire has shifted its tactic from inciting the rebel activity to staging these
attacks and blaming them on the rebels as the pathway into the thing they need to ultimately do.
The couple things, the, I was thinking about like, the propaganda
about the Gorman people is, you know, aren't they like spiders spinning their web?
But like the web spinners, the spiders is the propaganda network that like they're out here spinning their lies and weaving their little propaganda messages to send out into the world.
And again, to your point about like the messenger and transmission that you track so beautifully across all of these stories, NEMICS manifesto, Marva trying to get the message out, like how do we get the message out?
and how do we get the message,
how do we get a message out that can cut through
the counter messaging that is coming from the imperial apparatus?
And that is something that I've been thinking about a lot
in terms of in this, you know,
Tony Gilroy is telling a story for all time,
but he is also telling a story for our time.
And in our time when thinking about other instances of rebellion,
state-controlled media,
but how right now we as consumers of media
are just drowning in noise and information and misinformation
in a way that is never before seen in human history.
We've never had this much access to these many narratives
and conflicting narratives at our fingertips at all times.
It's really chilling to think about how does one cut through misinformation
in an ocean of it that we are currently dealing with.
And that the people in position of power and visibility are the ones saying fake news and that the truth is not real.
And the ones who are shattering, seeking to shatter and destroy the very idea of truth.
Yeah, it's just like, I mean, this is just, it was a whole time, but our time you're thinking about.
Yeah.
And then also the really beautiful echo of watching Cyril making his way downtown to work again.
We saw him do that long walk in our intro to Gorman, and here we're watching him again, not as long a walk, but watching the imperial presence, right?
The black uniformed troopers, not to mention the stormtroopers out and about, but also just like how ugly the barricades are that they have up in the plaza that they will then move in front of the imperial building.
but like in contrast to the elegant stone beauty of,
of Gorman and of Palma,
like to have these just ugly intrusions,
you know,
things will get much worse than an ugly barricade,
but like it's starting already here.
Yeah, it's a harbiter.
Yeah, how disrespectful to the harmonious beauty of this place,
these little touches of the empire,
or not even little,
touches, right? The fist is closing in
tight, and this is exactly, of course, what Lutin
wants. So, yeah.
Oh, boy.
Dedger's on a call with Partagast.
He's like, Crenix with Palpi right now.
The moment has come.
There is no substitute for
the Calcite.
They need to take the planet.
This is where he mentions Adu. We think, of course, of
Gailon Erso. This is the base that he was working on in
Roke 1. Partigast says,
I don't know the science, but it's
bad luck, Gorman. We need
what's in the ground when we're finished.
There won't be much left to call home.
I thought, I don't know the science, but it's bad luck, Gorman, was one of the more
effective displays of the just sickeningly casual nature of the evil at work here, right?
The got one call, and I'm going to make one quick call, and a couple lines to
order the decimation of a people at a place.
Bad luck, Goldman.
Bad luck.
The fleet's 48 hours away.
They need the marshal domain now.
Captain Cato is bringing a variety of personnel to help manage the situation,
a.k.a.
A bunch of children.
Green boys to offer up for the slaughter who can't even keep their visors up.
Dejra reminds them that the insurgents have weapons now.
Of course, we know how they got them, last arc.
And Part of Gas says, we're counting on it.
This is all so deeply upsetting before the thing even happens because they are, of course,
executing the thing that they always intended to do.
And part of gas, because we see that this is affecting Detra.
But he says to her, you know, this is going to secure the ISB's place by Palpatine's side,
by the emperor's side.
Let the image of professional ascendance settle your nerves, which is basically, I mean,
she will invoke the idea of promotion to challenge Cyril's challenge to her.
later. You didn't seem to mind all the promotions. But it's the same idea here, right? Whether it's
the carrot or the stick, it's like, do you make your peace with the horrors you are helping to
perpetrate because they benefit you personally? And this has been the way that Partagas mentored her
from the jump, right? Like back in season one when she was fighting with Blevine and he was like,
this is what you need to be prepared for, this is what you need to do. And when she got the
Gorman assignment and didn't want it, not because of any moral objection, but because she wanted
to stay on access. But he said,
Gorman is a gift. Take it,
then win it. And that is still the pitch
he's making to her here at the end. Gorman is a gift.
To think of that, what we were about to
witness, how other people on the other
side are talking about it as
a thing to covet and seek. A bullet
point that you can put on your CV.
Yeah, exactly. Right? It's just hideous.
Engineered the Gorman Massacre. That was me.
Yeah. Everyone who
matters knows what you did is a thing
he says to her. The thing I love about
this, in terms of like, him
you know,
let the image of professional ascendant
settle your nerves
is just incredible writing.
Another great party line.
But like,
the way in which he is
categorizing this
as professional ascendance
while at the same time,
you mentioned this elsewhere
in her notes,
but like throughout
undermining her,
um,
anytime she raises an objection,
he basically calls her hysterical,
right?
Yeah.
Dedra.
calmly.
Yeah.
You seem animated.
Yeah, disgusting.
But he's done this from the jump, right?
Like, we were talked about this in season one about how he was sort of leveraging, like, the one non-white employee in the room, Blevin, who is gone.
We don't know what happened to him versus, like, the one woman in the room or like the two people that he was sort of like pitting against each other inside of these meetings.
This way in which the empire is using these slight, small, tiny, Dedra tries to make herself as like, you.
conformist as possible, but she's a woman inside of this all-male organization.
So he's like, you know, you're on the climb, right?
You're working your way up the ladder.
But also, I've sent this guy and he's going to belittle you.
And he's going to like take over your mission and not keep you in the loop on things.
And then she sort of, when Cyril comes to her with the same complaints of like,
I'm not in the loop what's going on, you know, it's just like she's just to your
point echoing the same lines down the ladder to him.
So it's a, and the fact that they made it personal, the fact that they...
Real trauma cycle there.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
The fact that they made Cyril and Dejura romantically involved.
And not only that, but like gave us in the first arc gave us like Dejra being a hero for Cyril
against Edy, you know what I mean?
Like showed that their connections matter to each other.
Yeah.
Which makes this all so much more painful.
So good. So delicious. All right. Really, really, really, really great. Cyril with that new wavy hair that we're loving.
Do you think Deja likes it? Something to grip? I do. I do think, yeah. I mean, you got to hold on to something in the dark once you've turned out the lights, you know? Get leveraged in order to drive the heel of your shoe into his thigh. Exactly. Great. Exactly, yeah. It did really feel like the long hair was like, you know, connected to what we talked about last week. Cyril definitely is like, Gorman. This actually is.
Oh.
This is the place for me, right?
Trey French.
How continental of him.
Exactly.
Oh, man.
Searching for Dredra, and he's very heated, like, animated.
If Partigas were here, he doesn't just say it to women.
He would have told Cyril too, animated.
Confronts her about the bombing, the rumors.
Now, Partagas last arc, we talked about this at length last week, said to Dedra,
just a reminder, you can't tell him anything.
You got to keep him to.
in the dark. Can't know what this is really about. So she's still sticking with that here,
says there's evidence of outside agitators using the line, the lie, to try to handle him here
one more time. Are you serious? He says, that's what I came here for. And he's like,
you're going to make me beg for evidence of it. And this, one of the things we talked about last
week was like if the moment comes where
Dejra has to make the choice between the job
or this person that she has
this actual connection to, what will she pick? What will
that choice look like? And
you can just see
and feel that these decisions in
real time are backfiring, that she is
losing him, but she's staying
the course in this scene and this conversation
at least. And I thought the moment
when he's pushing
and she switches into like
whisper mode, like
imploring him, please.
go, pack, be ready to leave.
Later at the end, she'll sort of say in a more like fully charged way,
do what I say, right?
Like issuing an order. But here, there's this personal plea.
Like, we can still do this thing together.
And she says, good things are waiting for us.
We'll be out of here soon. We'll be back in Coruscant.
We'll be together. We'll be rewarded.
And he says, for what? For what?
And I was thinking about Marva so much across these episodes,
but this was really one of the moments because, like,
just that core idea of what is driving a person.
You know, Dedra is saying she is connected to this person,
doesn't want to lose him.
But she's saying, look at this place we can go and these things we can have
and these things we can gain and these things we can claim.
Pink fondue, opera, high heels in the dark.
Lights that we can turn out.
Yeah, exactly.
We can turn out.
A very plush bedspread that you can sprawl upon in a tense moment.
In her place, like, we can have all of this together.
We can have it all.
And he's like, how do you keep me down the farm after I've tasted the cheese of Gorman?
I don't know.
I don't want to go back to Choruson.
Have you seen the lattes here?
Amazing.
Oh, my God.
Have you seen the shelves that I keep my spiders on and the candies inside?
In episode seven of season one, one of our favorite moments of the first season,
when Cassian was trying to convince Marva to leave Farrex,
he said, we'll find a place they haven't ruined yet.
And Marva said, I'm already there.
That place is in my head they can build as many barracks as they like.
They'll never find me.
That moment also very top of mind for us when we get to the Bix and Cassian sequence later, obviously.
But I thought here is this point of contrast between like the pitch you're making to somebody
and the thing that's driving you being like a place you're fighting for and people you're
fighting for versus just like a ladder that you're seeking to climb and the difference between
true connection and ambition as the kind of core like pillars of your life. And how Farrix is such a
beautiful example of that, but certainly in Star Wars, not the only one. Like I was thinking a lot
in part because of the connection to rebels, but like about our pals from Lafal and how that was
the place and the, the motivator for them. And how Dejre doesn't have that and how like really sad that is.
grew up in a kinder block.
Yeah, exactly.
It's part of why we can hold on to a little kernel of sympathy for her,
even as we watch what unfolds.
This is, I'm not to sound like too much of a socialist on this podcast.
Like, this is, like, when you think about, like, what can I get for me?
Yeah.
Which is pure capitalism.
What can I get for me versus what can I protect for us?
What can I build for us?
Different concepts and things.
entirely.
The Gorman Front is preparing, Joanna.
Yeah.
They're meeting, but they are not all aligned.
I was thinking of something you were observing and clocking in the last stretch of episodes.
There's this, like, generational divide inside of the Gorman Front, which feels even more keen here.
I'm obsessed with this, honestly, like, we talked about this a little bit last week, but, like, the fact that it's Rylens and is it,
Is Lézine?
Is that how it's pronounced?
The Rimes with Magazine?
Or is it, like, Lézin.
How French is it?
Who is to say?
I mean, I'm honestly going to defer to you on this.
I feel like you have the better instincts for these things that I do.
I believe last spot I said Lazzine in like a Baltimore of a mid-Atlantic accent, so I'm probably not the one to ask.
The man who starts the singing, who, you know, who we met in the previous arc and Rylance, who, of course, has been sort of was the difference between the young rebels.
Okay, let me rewind and say.
I think with this capture so well, and we get this later, again,
I don't want to step on this tremendous observation you have about the Corrassant Massacre,
but I was struck before I read what you wrote about how often the Gorman rebels in that scene
are paired off as a man and a woman, and there's so many sort of like,
you know, you've got Will and his lady friend,
But there's also just, there's this idea of like, rebellion is sexy, a young, sexy, we all are, like, sleeping together sort of.
Yeah.
Delah and Enza, like, embracing as they find each other in the crowd.
Yeah.
Like, there's just this, like, idea of, like, yes, we're all young and hot and fucking and we're going to fight the system.
That is very much capturing the spirit of the 60s in America.
For sure.
And a lot of young student movements of just sort of like, revolution is cool.
In addition to all, like, it's ideologically.
pure, but it's exciting, and it's
entertaining. And then you've got
Lizanne and Rylance who have
seen this before.
They know, they
like know the cost of
Tarkin parking
his car on the
square. And so does like, our
bellhop, of course, but like,
they're like, we've seen this before and it's
not going to go the way you think. You think
it's going to go a certain way and it's just not.
And what absolutely
devastates me, Lizanne, when
he's
starts singing and doesn't like if you watch that it's not a like we're about to win it's like
he's pre-singing the dirge for what's about to happen he looks sad and resigned as he takes his
like he's bolstering the crowd but like he himself looks just sort of like we're about to get our
asses beat but i'm going to sing for us before we do um and then we'll get to everything that
happens with rilands but the fact that the two of them survive and so many of those
Those kids die and that they have to be the witness once again to the atrocities of this.
Like, like, there are so many moments when Rylins is knocked on the ground or all these other moments where he could have died and you had been like, that's so tragic.
It is way more tragic that he lives and that his daughter dies and, you know, his daughter gets fucking tossed and crumpled.
And so I think, I think setting that up from the jump in the last arc is, is,
so smart. It just absolutely broke my heart.
Same.
The performances from every one of these actors is astonishing.
But Rylance is doing something special in episode eight.
This is unbelievable.
He says here, like, we're good at letting them provoke us.
He says that peaceful resistance is the only thing that carries any
Dignity obviously certainly makes the pacifist of the group firing a blasterbolt into the side of Cyril Karn's head even more notable at the end when it happens.
That is the depth of Cyril's treachery that it led Rylance to do that thing.
Our bellhop, our hotel bellhop from last arc who is at the front desk now, but here in the Gorman front, I love seeing too how the front had grown, how, I don't actually, do we ever hear anyone say?
Is it Thela?
Is it Thela?
I would, let's say Thela.
It's in the, Thela.
Thela.
He says, we left dignity behind years ago.
And, you know, we think back to what he shared with Cassian, with Varian Sky,
when he chucked him into his room.
And he said, like, with that note of, it was such a lament when he was looking out at the plaza
and the memorial, and he said, haven't gone very far, have I?
And, like, then what it means for him to be there in that room fighting more actively,
but how more broadly this idea of dignity,
like that this is what the oppressor does,
that this is what the empire does,
is seek to rob you of your dignity.
So, like, I love what you're identifying about
how when Lazzine,
where did we land?
I said Lézine,
but I just decided to make it as French as possible, yeah.
I'm not French, I'm sorry.
When he starts to sing and it feels so mournful and sorrowful,
I loved that it also felt like a, like a,
an honoring of the promise he made here, right? The declaration he made here, which is like,
we have to remember who we are. Yeah. And the, you know, like, what is that? What is that?
It's we are the gore. If they take that from us, then what's worth saving? You know, I love that
you mentioned, alluding to the credit council from earlier in the season and that propaganda machine
and the, the, the, the, um, both sides of that coin of these ideas. And like, you know, I loved that they brought
that clip back in like the previously on of,
has there always been something, you know,
a little arrogant about the gore and like,
what does it mean to the people who live here and come from this place?
Like, what does this place mean?
If they take that from us,
he says here,
then what's worth saving?
And I was,
I'm getting emotional.
Like, you know,
I was thinking of Marva here again and like the end of season one.
And like that that was,
that was kind of the thing, right?
That was the idea.
that sparked the action.
But like, as is so often the case in Star Wars,
it's like that, it's about that final spark and that final push.
Because before they heard from Marva,
they had all taken to the streets together already.
And they had like previously rung the bells to warn each other
or to help each other and to know that like their neighbor needed them.
And then this idea to like what Marva knew that she was going to die
and the message that she recorded, of course it ends with like,
and we'll talk about this part of it a little later, actually.
Big Marva pod today.
Yeah.
Fight the Empire.
Like it does end on that note,
but where is it start?
It starts with a message about home, right?
I want you to go on.
I want Farrex to continue.
In my waning hours, that's what comforts me most,
but I fear for you.
And then she says later, we forgot them.
Because we had each other.
had pharynx, but we were sleeping. I'm moving across the message here. Yeah. There is a darkness
reaching like rust into everything around us. We let it grow and now it's here. It's here and it's
not visiting anymore. It wants to stay. Perhaps it's too late, but I'll tell you this. If I could
do it again, I'd wake up early and be fighting these bastards from the start. And Marva is the old
guard. Riley, Rylan says something similar, right? When he was just sort of like
take it all back
like can we take it all back
and it's too late to do so
so beautiful
I love you I wish I could hug you
talking about Marva
but like
the other thing Marva says
to Cassian
before this speech
when she's talking about Rick's Road
and how for like years
she didn't walk
the place where
her husband was strung up
and they took that from her
they took a part of her
home from her
and she's like
I'm gonna go fucking
and walk out on Rick's Road
that's what I'm gonna do
like I
they can't have this
they can't take this from me
right and they can
and they will
but
you have to say no
when they try
you know
because they will take Gorman
that's what they will do
in this episode
and that's the other message
of Andor
that's the message of Rogue 1
right is like
everyone dies
in Rogue 1
Gorman Falls
You know what I mean
Like we don't we don't get the numbers
But Mon tells us in episode nine
Like it's staggering
It's not just who was shot here
In the square
It's across the planet
It's like it's a massacre
And so
They will win
Until they don't
But you have to keep fighting
Yes
And I love it's like
A little bit of the like
Asgard is in a place
It's a people idea too
Like that's why it's been
And so moving and important every time we've heard the pharix stone and sky embrace it.
Because they're not, they don't have ferricks anymore, but like they carry it with them.
Yeah, it lives in them.
And like it is different, obviously, than what's going to happen to Alderan or what happens to Gorman.
I was thinking actually even of like, you know, I know everybody in season one had some timeline questions about like, okay, well, actually the.
the mining incident of Kadari
is like pre-empirate and Republic,
but even so,
it is really interesting to think of
Cassian's origin and the loss of his homeworld
because of the governing power in the galaxy
seeking to take something out of the ground
and the place that he came from.
And like, you know, there's not a moment
in these episodes where Cassian talks about that
or says that when he's, you know,
when everything that's happening with Gorman is happening or later.
But like, we have that, right?
And like, I don't know.
It's just the richness of how the places that people have lost or had ripped away from them
and forums the way that they want to do that for other people.
But I also love what you're saying about how he's also like,
he's got his mission and he's looking through his scope.
And the other end of the scope, he sees the one person he's there to get.
I think I was thinking a lot of Aldani too because there's that section in the
Aldani arc where, you know, the imperial forces there are talking about the way in which they have
actively atrophied this cultural pilgrimage that the Aldani take. And the way they did it is so insidious,
because they did not do it by depriving them of it. But just sort of, it's a long track,
and they just started opening up these like rest stops and whatever, these lures.
to just sort of, and I was thinking about Luthin's idea of people fail, it's what they do, right?
The way in which these insidious forces will use human frailty against themselves,
like human nature against themselves.
So like I don't want to go on just like one hike during a wedding weekend,
let alone this like multi-day hike to go see the eye.
I'm just sort of like, I've seen the eye.
I don't need to go every year or whatever.
And that's what they're counting on me being like, or I could just sit down and have a beer,
you know, which is like what they do.
So they like, they use human frailty
to strip away the Aldani cultural core.
And here in Gorman, they used their national pride
and their, you know, like,
just saying you need a resistance
that you can count on to do the wrong thing,
you know, and so it's sort of like, okay,
let's plant these seeds of we're going to take their,
planet from them and we're going to watch them do the work for us because we just led them
to slaughter, but they wandered in on their own volition, you know, because that's what they do
because they're humans and that's what humans do. And that is what is so scary about what these
kinds of regimes can do because not everyone inside of the regime is intelligent, but they always
have some level of intelligence inside of them who have studied human nature and human frailty. And
how can we exploit fears?
How can we exploit pain?
How can we exploit this in order to divide, conquer, grip, control?
And it's so desperately sad about Gorman because what else were they supposed to do?
Just let the mining happen, you know?
Like what?
Right, here.
Here, take our planet.
What were they supposed to do if not?
But they are on that planet.
Yeah.
Like, yeah.
Oh, Joe, what an incredible observation and like,
what's one of the other things that they pray upon, right?
Like, it's hard.
It's tired work to fight.
Yeah.
And, like, resistance is exhausting and fighting is exhausting and fighting.
And fighting to gain something or to avoid losing something is hard too.
And on Aldani, that was so central and palpable.
Like, what if you resist the off ramps along the way,
What is waiting for you there?
Sneer, somebody handing over the pelt and talking about how it smells, people mocking your tradition, people befouling the sacred space.
You know, they're counting on the fact that it becomes at some point too hard to fight.
And so then that is another connection to Cassian, right?
It's like every moment that he says, I'm done, it's like, how could you not be done?
How could you not want to be done?
Yeah.
you know, like what is required to do this once, let alone again and again and again.
And that's what makes it so astonishing every time he does it again.
And every time anybody does it at all in the first place.
That's, I really, I really like that.
Aldani Comp you just made.
What did you make of this moment in the streets between Cyril and Enza?
There's just like a little something there.
Like the slap feels personal.
I know that Enza, like, we're.
was like, she was the one advocating to recruit him.
So there's like a personal pride for her.
Like, by them, off screen,
Le Resistence has found out that Cyril Karn is a plant, essentially, right?
And so...
You think it was immediate?
You think they were like, we saw you in a, up in a hoodie on the balcony,
just like, feet clearly feeding intel to the empire.
Are you thinking it took them a little while?
But I think there's something about this moment.
on the heels of that Dedrick kiss
where he seems like just deeply not into it
that I'm like did he
even if Cyril and Enza did not have an affair
an actual affair it feels like
there's just this like flavor of
just just in addition to him like falling in love with Gorman
is like here's a beautiful young woman who was part of the resistance
and like I think he liked being seen by her
as someone who was like dashing and brave
and all his other stuff like that and so like
did he have a little crush on her or did they have a crush on each other?
Did they have a dallings or did they not?
But there was just like a little something extra inside of that slap in that alleyway,
which I really, really liked.
Yeah, even like the moment when they first meet and they have a little bit of a...
Yeah.
There's something in the eyes there.
Yeah.
I think I'm with you.
I don't, unless it was part of the mission, like, you know, an American style.
Like, you got to come all in here to buy your cover.
I don't think that they had an affair
were actually together
but I do think that I agree that I think
Cyril is seeing it's like the road not taken here
I mean like this is the life that he could have chosen
and the life that he could have had
and I love thinking back to
you know a moment we talked about last episode
where when Rylance's meeting came after the town meeting
and says like you know yeah like I saw you in the crowd
oh I stood out that much like no actually
and the idea that this could have been a place
where Cyril belong and built a wife.
It's just, and like to now not only have to like confront this thing that is happening
on this place that he actually is drawn to and feels like a sense of belonging,
but to confront his role in bringing this about, but then to have to see himself through
their eyes, like to have gone from being needed and valued.
the only thing he wants in his entire life.
That's it.
Like being seen as like worthy and like capable, worthy.
Because he comes from Edy Legend Imperial News 24 hour watcher.
He comes from her house where she is just constantly undermined and belittled by her.
And then he's just sort of like, can I get that validation inside of my job at, you know, as a corporon?
no, can I get it from the ISB?
Can I get it from Dedra?
Can I get it from this exciting mission?
Can I get it as like even a fake revolutionary inside of here?
Who is going to give me approval and telling me that I'm a good boy?
And then at the end of the day, the most tragic thing for Cyril Cairn is,
Who Are You?
And then the shot to the head, obviously.
Like that is, that image is going to stick.
Historically brutal.
Yeah.
But him wide.
like wild-eyed, just staring around the square as he sees,
well, well, well, if it isn't the consequences of my own actions,
like is one of the most incredible and delable images.
I agree.
I just can't get over.
And any one of those stray shots could have taken him out,
but the punishment was that he had to look.
I know.
I wrote that to my notes.
I was like, especially, like, when they both get blown to the ground and there's a second
where you're like, is Cyril dead, I'm like, it would have been better if he had
died there before Cassidy Andor said, who are you to him?
That is like, oh my God.
I loved to hear in this little quick moment with Enza that he had to like face the rebuke
of like the specific thing that he was offering, right?
That's we're still in this like, okay, I'm hanging on to the last little tendril of this
outside agitator's idea.
What if I could pin this on other people?
Yeah.
And like, the slap and the like, we're going to build toward his exchange with her father,
which I just honestly thought was one of the best scenes in the like the history of television.
This is unbelievable.
These episodes are so good.
Everything is simultaneously like one of the five best scenes in the history of TV and barely a top 20 scene in these episodes.
It's amazing.
But like the idea that we'll tell a lie.
We will sacrifice somebody else in order to save ourselves.
we will look for a way out
instead of fighting for the thing
that we believe in that's here.
He's pitching the empire
to someone who's facing it.
I just thought that was a really
great little touch for her to have to confront
like actually you are the person
in this moment at least that they think you are
and that is the real defeat.
Very painful.
Not the most painful thing coming his way,
but very painful.
The forces are arriving on all sides.
Kato Donald from bad sisters.
Wow.
I'm like, oh my God, it's like
you're living.
Boy, this would have been,
I would have loved to see this guy die brutally.
I do feel a little bit cheated of seeing him like
really, really, really torn apart.
Maybe like spine shattered by one of his own KX.
A KSkeets or something.
Rip the spine out of the back of him.
That would have.
I think we.
frankly deserved to see that.
He greets Sergeant Bloy
and the personnel, and we
actually get to hear Dandra say, like,
they look like children.
I mean, this was just so
upsetting. She says that and Bloy also,
like, again, I was thinking at the point you made
on The Last of Us pod where it's just sort of like,
what does it mean that someone
who's just like just below Isaac
on the chain of man or whatever is like chosen for this?
Is like, is this what we want to do?
So like,
I love that Sergeant Bloy shows up and he's like,
there's not a man among them here, you know?
And he's like, is this going to be a problem?
No, so we get this exposition.
Yeah.
Like, we get this nice explanation via Bloy, via Dejra of like what exactly they've assembled here.
Right.
These children that they're willing, you know, who won't know what they're doing.
They're cannon fodder.
Not just cannon fodder, but like wildly unpredictable and will not behave appropriately
inside of this, both of those things, like easily dispensable, disposable.
and then also just sort of like
will not behave themselves
when the shit hits the fan
and I love the way that we got that information.
It's so tidy.
There's so many moments.
Again,
the layers of it,
there are so many moments
where we're hearing something,
whether it's like Imperial News or whatever,
over the visual of something else that's happening
because they've only got three episodes to give us
like all the story they need to give us.
I know, it was wild to see in some of the interviews
Gilroy talking about how, like, yeah, Danny
just wrote this incredible like K2SO horror episode
that like we couldn't end up, we couldn't do
not enough time, not enough money.
I'm like, what?
DR texted me about that.
He was just sort of like, apparently there was a whole K2SO episode.
Can we have it, please?
My lord, no kidding.
We should get that one day, I hope.
Cass and Will are here too.
Quick little planning.
This is the meeting plan.
This is the comms plan.
This is where Dedra posts.
Do we think the glass is old enough?
Is it going to require two shots?
Like, it's all just boom, boom, boom.
This is what we're here for.
This is how we'll do it.
Dejre embrace a part.
Work-life balance is not great.
She's sleeping in the office.
Sleeping at the office.
And I would say going out on the balcony too often.
But far too often, honestly.
It's hostile territory from her perspective.
Yeah.
Come on.
Yeah, sleeping at the office.
Do you think she has at least like a comfortable quarter?
Or is she just like sleeping in the part of guest conference?
I think she has a cot.
Cot's not ideal.
Yeah.
Okay.
Maybe she's, how often do we think she was going to Cyril's before everything went so wrong?
Never.
Well, that's upsetting.
That's upsetting.
That's the other thing is, how long do you expect your boyfriend to like go Honeypot?
Like, he's been there over a year.
you know long enough to grow out those beautiful waves time has passed
Cassie and Shexon at the same hotel speaking of time passing
Ronnie Guja Midrrim News okay Ronnie Guja great great cover name
so funny
Never heard of it midroom news we're trying to change that
Great stuff
We understand why Cassie is here because the hotel is right on the square
But also do we check into the same hotel under a different name
one year later, only one year later, without really meaningfully changing our appearance.
Like, oh, I got to say, oh, my God, I'm so sorry.
I cannot believe I haven't said this already.
Cassie and Andor is rocking a half up hair for a lot of this stretch.
This is my favorite Cassie and Harriet.
Incredible.
Yeah.
Yes, the very sky hair was a slickback deuce, but it's just not different enough.
I also think it's really funny when he shows up to as.
is Ronnie Guja at the Senate building,
and he's just got like his war wounds from Gordon on his way.
I actually was like, does this make sense?
But obviously they do his,
he is like formally saying I was at the massacre and now I've like followed the story
to the political fallout.
So I guess that would be okay.
But I would be like, do we not have a little concealer?
Yeah.
Is this guy a secret assassin?
This is like a lot of bruising.
Yeah.
So our, our beloved.
Vila, Bellhop from last arc
at the front desk now.
Can I just shout out really quickly?
So the actor,
he's very French.
Stefan Crepeon, is that his name?
It seems to be.
Okay, so he was on Le Birore,
and we got a lot of emails
about how much people love him.
Chris and Andy.
Chris and Andy favorite.
And I think it was like,
and my pal Daphne, who you know,
also texted me. She said he was, he's her favorite.
She's like, imagine those eyes.
deployed like over the course of many, many episodes.
But, um,
Oh, wow.
I think it was like a little bit of a casting spoiler for people, like when he showed up,
like in the last dark.
And I think people who like,
Lebrot are like,
this is not a one scene kind of guy.
He's definitely going to throw a bomb later.
Anyway, he's great.
Wonderful.
He really is really, really, really good.
Yeah.
There's a little bit of a little bit of a, oh boy, like,
do you have your, uh, entry stamp?
Cassian blames the,
curfew. I didn't want to miss the curfew. But the other person at the front desk says,
like, we're going to have to report this and then disappears, muttering about an Alderman.
Shut up. Great Dutch. And our guy tells Cassian, she'll have to report it. This is the timing.
We turn over the names in the afternoon. And then just confirms that he remembers who he is, right?
That he recognized him. You'll have to carry your own bag this time. You know the way.
way. Cassian seems
less ruffled about this than I would be.
Now, given that we just saw him
land a plane in a way where he's just
sort of like, ha ha, isn't that funny? We almost died.
I guess like nerves of steel
or like his thing, but I would just be like
I personally would have a moment
of fear if I were...
I liked like
he gives him that little nod, right?
And I liked then thinking back
to their first moment together
from last arc through this lens
of on the one hand, Cassie
and is like preserving his cover,
is varying sky right?
I'm a designer.
I'm like, I'm here.
It's my dream to be here.
I want to learn about this place.
He is actually learning about the history of the place,
the Tarkin massacre,
what happened in that plaza,
the memorial, what does it mean to people?
But he's also learning about this person.
And I like thinking that he was like,
what if I need to rely on him one day?
Where does he stand?
Is this a person I can trust?
Not friends everywhere, man.
Got friends everywhere.
And like, it was interesting, too, to think of,
you know, there are so many parallels
and then contrasts between Cyril and Cassian,
but when Cyril needs to get into the building later
and he's able to flag down and get waved in by
the guard from Last Ark, who had been watching the pod racing,
who would sweet talk to his way and, like, you know,
that cultivating your sources is part of doing the work,
the spy craft and the tradecraft.
The way that the massacre,
the way that Cyril and Cassian are just moving around the square,
these foils of each other,
The way that the camera will, like, cut from one to the other in a way that you're almost like, wait, who am I following now is genius.
Incredible stuff.
Genius.
It's like.
Very good television.
So much of the show has been about getting them out of the same place.
Yeah.
And then the way that it all finally happened.
When they pass each other at one point and you're like, yeah.
And you're like, yeah.
I was in Harlem?
It's like, oh, my God.
Oh, God.
Cassian goes up to his room.
just a fucking sick.
I've got my blaster that I'm turning into a sniper rifle secret case here moment.
Really incredible.
Radio's will.
Weather report.
Clear skies tonight.
We'll check in tomorrow, etc.
And I loved when Will said, we're always here.
Because the Narcina 5 arc and the animalistic screaming from Cassian, nobody's listening.
The idea of this code, this code.
this code phrase
my friends everywhere
and how there are moments where
like Mon later hearing that
never having felt so isolated and alone
right
but for Cassian it's like
Will is someone he can rely on
when Will tells him we're always listening
Cassian knows that's true
and like I just love those little touches like that
I thought that stuff was great
also great when he just basically like takes out a little spy mirror
because he hears the sounds
and he knows the sounds and how could he not?
Like, everybody does, but also...
That thing's retractable, right?
Yeah.
Yes.
So it can sit in your luggage.
Yeah.
Unrolls it and then rolls it back off the lake.
Although we never see the troopers, we only see them in the reflection in the mirror.
It's like really...
Yeah.
Yeah.
And especially for Cassian, it's like, you know, the memories and the horror of the troopers
and Clem and Rick's Road in the square in his past on Farrex.
Obviously, the arrest and the confrontation with the troops,
troopers on Neimos. He knows what this means. And so it is, again, like a combination of the
personal history and the personal reason for terror and having to push through that. And then this
larger sense of like, well, what does it mean to have troopers here on Gorman? We know.
Really, really, really, really, really good. And in the morning, as you noted, he's like something's
going on at the plaza, a lot of activity. They're moving the barriers. He radios Will, who is just
in bed with Trina, like in the middle of the, like, in the middle of the, like,
People are just everywhere.
To your point about everyone's young and everyone's fucking.
I love that.
I love this.
It's just like, we don't need our own private space.
We're just like all right here.
And they think they're opening at the gate.
Yes.
Cassian says they're not open in the plaza.
They're building a shell around the building.
They're building a fortress.
Dejre, meanwhile, is receiving an update of her own.
Gawmline.
Mining equipment.
Garmley.
Gondley.
You seem animated.
The mining equipment.
has arrived on the planet
Joanna. All over the planet.
All over the planet. She asks,
Partigaz,
if this is a story director,
Krenic wants to be telling,
and Partigaster says, we're done. We're done with the local rumors.
We're done with story time. We are no longer
like trying to cultivate the right narrative
or foster the right climate.
The only story that matters, he says,
is Gorman aggression. Their struggles are,
quote, well documented. In other words,
They have the cover that they need to do the thing they're going to do,
and they no longer care about anything else.
Also, it's so chilling to then hear the exact same language that he uses
out of the voice of the reporter,
and the next scene he uses the exact same.
This is the status of what's going on here.
Also, calling them insurgents.
It's just, anyway.
Anyway, just like the definitely, you know, your rebel is my terrorist sort of thing.
It's just sort of like the fact that Dedra just uses the word insurgent over and over again.
It's this dehumanizing way to talk about the citizens, the voters, you will.
Absolutely. I was just going to say the same.
On the connection front, I love that little cut from Edie, who is watching the Imperial News and the serial spider is there.
It's on the table to then cutting to Cyril, who is moving the spiders on the,
shelves and we see the battle prep.
We see the Gorman front dissembling their
blasters, the
built their armory of their own, right?
We saw how they stole it and then preparing their like
Molotov cocktails, getting ready for a fight.
A soldier comes
along and he fetches cereal. It's like,
calms are down. We're asking all imperial
officials to report to the
IOC building. So we're starting to get people to
all of the places that they need to be and then it is
time to take to the plaza.
Calms are down intentionally. This is like
during like the era of spring when like they would just block Twitter in certain area,
you know, geo-block Twitter.
Like, so you could not communicate with each other to organize what you need to do.
And earlier in this season on Minerao, when they blocked the frequencies so that nobody who was there could call to anybody else to ask for help.
It's really encouraging that Twitter is now in Bahia en Máas.
It's great.
Okay.
Can I get, okay, to that point about sort of like getting the message out.
Yes.
So when the Gorman Front goes into the plaza, right, we get, you know, the end of lay
mis, act one flags waving, smoke machine going sort of thing.
Yeah.
They head to the plaza.
They are chanting, we are the gore, the galaxy is watching.
And they say the galaxy is watching again and again, again.
Which is, this is like.
there are several times inside of these episodes that Tony Gilroy has put in
language from real-world rebellion inside of this.
So, like, the whole world is watching is this chant from the 1968 Democratic National
Committee protests wherein the police brutally battered the, the, you know, the anti-Vietnam
protesters.
And the whole world is watching is such an upsetting thing to use here because, like,
as is rallying cry,
the galaxy is watching,
the whole world is watching,
and that's exactly what the empire wants.
But they're like,
shame on you,
everyone's going to see what you've done here,
and the empire is like,
we want everyone to see what we're about to do here.
And that is like,
again,
they're just like already all tangled up in the web
that has been woven around them.
They're already in the trap,
and it's just so upsetting.
Jesus Christ.
I mean,
this is basically what
Enza and her father argue about in their final conversation.
He says, we'll admiral Akbar here in our ender.
He says it's a trap.
And he, I mean, he is beside himself.
He is begging her.
He's imploring her.
You can stop this.
They're begging us to fight.
They want us to fight.
They want people to see.
She says, we can't be silent any longer.
And he says, silent, we will be silent when we're dead.
And the thing that was so upsetting about this in addition to obviously the fact that
this is like a father and a daughter at odds in this way in their final moments,
but that they want the same thing.
They believe they should be pursuing it differently, but they want the same thing,
but that they are also both right about what they are saying here, both of them.
And that's when you feel the closing of that fish.
Like, it doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter, right?
One way out on Narcina, like no way out here.
And that is just like...
I was thinking of him one way out in Arkinna.
when you think about the way in which they have designed this plaza,
I'll talk about this a little bit later when I talk about another real world comp,
but like there's literally one way out.
And what I love about, sorry, to get ahead, but like on this,
one of my favorite things to talk about surprise versus suspense, right?
There are like we who know Star Wars know there's a thing called the Gorman Massacre.
So the minute we go to Gorman, we know not everyone,
but we who have watched rebels or we who whatever know the Gorman.
and massacre is coming.
So we know that this is inevitably we're spinning towards this.
But there's just moments inside of this episode, like when we hear them talking about, like,
the south steps, do we have the troops for the south steps?
Like before the stormtroopers show up on those south steps, which is the one way out,
the one way in.
We have seen every time Cyril has gone to work.
Anytime someone has come to that hotel, you have to go down those steps.
That's the one way in, the one way out.
And, you know, so that or we see the KX.
units before they're deployed.
And so they could have come out as a surprise, like, oh, shit.
But we know that they're waiting.
And even as we see the resistance, like, make any kind of win, we know that they don't
even know what's waiting for them yet, like what's yet to come.
The brutality that is awaiting them is just so upsetting.
And it is so smart to put those suspic.
of like we are filled with all of this dread because we know worse is coming and worse is coming and worse is coming.
Yeah. I thought too to that to that point like where they are specifically luring them, not only to this place where there are, it's going to be like the fish in the barrel, but they are drawing the citizens of Gorman to the memorial that marks the Tarkin massacre. The last time a thing like this happened.
They're making them believe that they can go back to the sacred place and gather and reclaim
their homeland and that will be the place.
I don't know if you know this.
The empire afflicts this of the atrocity.
The empire is evil.
Hideous.
Let's talk about this moment between Cyril and Rylance.
Cyril's moving among the marchers and Rylance spots him and he pushes him into an alley.
He asks him how he dare to walk these streets.
streets and Cyril says like, I meant you no harm. How do you say that? How do you speak the words
you've destroyed us? And Cyril says, I was here to trap outside agitators. Rylans tells him
about the mining equipment. This will be the interaction that leads to the fateful Cyril.
Dedra confrontation momentarily. That's a rumor. Are you mad? Rylance says that I believe that.
that it's worth saying, what kind of being are you?
And he asks what's in the ground,
what they've been sent here to steal,
and Cyril is just like,
he literally throws him to the ground and walks away,
and he can no longer fail to confront here
how he has been used.
That it is not that he has the purpose
that he has long craved.
It is that he is a tool.
And worse than that,
that the thing that he rebelled against his own rebellion on Marlana,
the idea of a cover-up and some sort of deception in the shadows,
that the truth was worth pursuing and revealing,
that he would have been used in that way to bring about the destruction
of a place that he actually had a fondness for and an affection to.
I'm struggling to think of a line that is more of a brutal evisceration,
then what kind of a being are you?
What kind of a being are you?
Stop me in my tracks.
And I think especially at a rewatch when we find out that, like,
who are you are the last words he hears before he dies?
As a shot by.
But what kind of a being are you?
And so here we have from this moment, if not sooner,
but Cyril's spinning out in this sort of like,
what have I done?
Who am I?
Oh my God.
I'm not this dashing double agent that I thought I was.
I am a tool.
I am nothing.
I am insignificant
to have that just like
the cherry on the top
of that Sunday being
who are you?
For like,
Ahab finding his white whale
and have the whale
being like,
I don't think about you at all.
Oh my God.
Which is an iconic
Don Draper madman line,
which you and I both had in our notes,
is the madman line
I think about
more than any other madman line.
Same.
That and that's what the money's for.
That's what the money's for is like,
but I don't think about you at all.
Not great, Bob, also, I got it,
but like, I don't think about you at all.
I don't know if I've told this story of the pod before,
but like my coworker and I used to say it to each other
in terms of like,
whenever we get spun out about like, at Vanity Fair,
whenever we get spun out about like the layers of,
you know, intrigue and like whatever,
and we're just like, actually, let's just take comfort
to the fact that, like, probably they don't think about us at all.
No one's thinking about us.
This has nothing to do with us.
I don't think about you at all.
Like, they're just not paying attention, and that is fine.
What kind of being are you?
Oh, my God.
Well, that can be the, they don't think about us at all can be a comfort,
but if the person saying, who are you is the defining thing your life.
Not for him.
Not for Cyril.
That's the worst thing he's ever.
her, but like, I stick hold comfort in it.
But yeah.
I love that.
What kind of being are you?
Oh, my God.
This was so brutal and just like so incredibly written and incredibly performed.
Really, really remarkable and memorable.
My God.
Cassian has to head out to the plaza, too, but before he does an iconic Star Wars quote, has to be born.
So I feel like there are versions of this.
That suck.
Where you're like, yeah.
Oh, they showed us how rebellions are built on hope came to be.
We just roll our eyes and are like, okay, it's like, we get it.
I was, this moved me to tears.
Like, I just thought this was for Thila to be the person who says this, this hotel bellhop,
who spent his life looking out at the reminder of the worst thing that had happened to him
and wondering why he stayed so close and then deciding to fight to save it.
Like, he tells Cassian, don't worry, I never checked you in.
So we have a cementing of this understanding and this bond.
We are friends everywhere.
Yeah.
And Cassian, of course, understands the risk of that.
You're supposed to do something for the empire and you didn't.
And then Cassian says, not a thing actually that he says to everyone,
I hope things work out for you.
And then he leans in and he whispers, rebellions are built on hope.
And I just love this.
This feels so connected to the idea of the messenger.
in these episodes.
I just love thinking about this chain of custody of this little ember, you know,
like for it to go here to Cassian and then be an idea that he shares with Jin
so that Jin can then attempt to rally Yavin.
And then eventually we work toward our rogues doing the thing that they do so that
the information that needs to get into Leah does.
And when someone asked, what did they give us?
She can say hope.
Like, this is such a, we love to quote the line from Fellowship of the Rings,
such as the course of deeds that move the wheels of the world.
Small hands do them because they must while the eyes of the great are elsewhere.
I just like love the idea that this like boy who lost his father.
It was like and felt his home in peril became a man who said this thing and inspired this person in this way.
and the effect that that had on the scope of history.
Like, this is just one of, I think, the best embodiments of how, like, every person actually
can make a difference and it can feel like cheesy to say and hard to believe.
But, like, when you watch something like this, you can feel that it's real.
And that's just amazing.
I love this.
I, um, we got this incredible email from John that, like, in some ways echoes what you just
articulated beautiful, beautifully.
And then there's like, I think it's worth reading just because I think there's,
there's like, often is the case that someone articulates something beautiful in an email.
And then it's just like, Mallory already said it.
So I'm not going to repeat it.
But okay, so what John says here is he says, this bellhop made one offhand remark that
eventually is what helps the Rogue One crew find the inspiration they need to go to Scariff.
Without that phrase, the pain the bellhop went through, without his father taking him to
the square that day, Tarkin decided to spark his space Tesla, you know he has one, on top of the people.
would the death star have been destroyed? Of course, none of us are watching or analyzing and or in a vacuum.
We know what is happening in our country and world right now, and we are all constantly asking,
what can we do to help? We all feel so powerless right now as day after day, more executive orders,
renditions, agency closures, threats to entitlements, et cetera, continue to be rolled out,
even while so many vulnerable people are being targeted. When the problems are this big,
it feels like the solutions have to be equally large. And so none of us,
are content to settle for reactions that feel too small.
We crave big ideas because the threats are so overwhelming.
However, I think this is where it is important to remember
how the relay race of rebellion resistance works.
Even if our resistance is something as seemingly small as sharing hope with others,
we have no idea what dividends it might pay out down the road.
The important thing, like our friend the bell hoppeded,
is to be on the lookout for opportunities,
and even if we have but a few words to offer a fellow traveler,
who knows how those words might help.
down the road.
I just thought it was really beautiful email.
Beautiful. Yes, and from John to your incredible point.
Oh, John.
Oh, God.
So thank you to John.
Thank you to Mallory.
Thank you to Professor Tolkien,
who is always welcome on this podcast.
Always welcome.
And thanks to a bell help,
who actually I think has been promoted to concierge.
I don't want to diminish what seems to have been a promotion for him.
Yes, definite, definite promotion.
Welcome to the front desk and the resistance.
Oh, my God.
What a show.
I was so related to what John wrote here about this idea of feeling overwhelmed.
And there's nothing I alone can do that feels big enough to match what is the overwhelm
of what is happening from the current administration who I disagree with.
And so it's just sort of like when my brother-in-law called me this morning to talk about
the sort of the shock and awe of the bam, bam, bam, bam, every day there's something new.
And how do we keep track of what to follow?
And how do we wrap our arms around everything that's happening?
because it is by design
inside of a lot of these
like, you know,
in my opinion,
fascistic sort of regimes,
it is by design,
it is meant to overwhelm.
So that you feel helpless
and incapacitated.
And so this idea that you don't have
to attack it all,
but what are the little things
that you could do
inside of your community
that could build and build
and build and build
that build the ladder
that we climb to get to the top
to send the message
to Princess Leia,
et cetera,
et cetera.
So I love this show
and I'm devastated that it will soon be over.
Oh my God.
And I'm not thinking to even just like,
they climb to send it and they have to trust that someone up there
open the shield and someone is there to take the next step.
The relay race cop really was a great one.
Man, the bad babies.
Oh, fuck.
Oh, my God.
I'm a wreck right now.
Cassian goes outside.
This was when Cyril just watched like past him on the stage.
and I screamed.
Everybody is making their way, converging on the plaza,
making their way to each other.
Enza finds Dilan, Tazi and Sam.
Sam really has his moment in this episode.
My goodness, Liza, Capso.
But when Sam has his moment,
you're like, is this what Cinta died for, actually?
Like, Sinta dies that Vell can say, like,
skin.
Sam, remember this and be a warrior.
And then he is one and he saves Cassian and Orr.
It helps create K2SO who are instrumental in the relay race of this rebellion.
Sidditch should not have died, but I'm just saying it's all part of this.
Sam took Vell's words to heart.
Yeah, I mean, like, it was Sam.
It wasn't like Dilan who did it.
It was Sam.
And that matters inside of this story.
Yes, absolutely.
Agreed, for sure.
Will tells Trina he has to go find his friend.
They're trying to reach each other.
Will and Cassian across the stretch.
They can't hear each other on the radio.
Oh, my God.
The stress, very, very high.
Cassian spots Edra on the balcony.
He's using this scope, this little game inside of the larger horror.
And Cyril makes his way to the IOC building.
Flags down the guard, gets in.
This is where he makes his way into the waiting room,
where he spots the droids.
We don't know for sure, but I like that.
to think that the one who looks over
will eventually become K2S.
Yeah.
Has to be.
And Cato orders,
Boy, send the troops out into the crowd.
The troopers are marching down the stairs.
The citizens have begun to scream.
All of the tension is building.
And then this is where Luzine
takes his hat off and starts to sing.
And then slowly, like the way the chant shifts
into the,
this shared anthem, like a reminder of the thing they're fighting for,
this celebration, this embrace of this place and this people,
was so affecting and beautiful.
I was just like a wreck watching this.
Take on me earlier this week and the last of us and this.
We're just having like an incredible musical moments inside of our genre television.
this beautiful national anthem that they wrote for the gore
which is about
gorgeous
you know
like about the land
the valleys
we are the gore
it's just really amazing
we got several emails about this
and it was hard to winnow them down
but our listener Chris
um
it immediately reminded me that
unforgettable moment in Casablanca when the house band
starts playing La Marseillaiseu
and the whole
Bar stands up to drawing out the Nazi singing in Rick's Cafe, which is one of the, we got a lot of emails about that, Casablanca moment, which is one of the most beautiful cinematic moments of like resistance-based singing in La Marseus as this like French national anthem moment of like, um, you know, fucking Captain von Trapp ripping up a Nazi flag and then singing Edel Weiss. You know what I mean? This idea of like, this is who we are. This is Austria. This is France. This is we are not this.
Our listener Reagan wrote in said to say,
my favorite Marvel movie moment isn't a flashy battle or a funny quip.
It's the old German man who refused to kneel for Loki.
Seeing the Gorman massacre play out,
I had plenty of historical perils to think about,
but watching Lozanne figure out what was happening around him,
seeing the resignation on his face, turned to defiance.
Hearing him start singing a song that will never leave my brain,
I cried watching it.
I'm crying again, typing about it.
It was like, I was shot with a diamond bullet right through my forehead.
This man loved his home world.
He was speaking truth to power.
He was standing in front of a tank,
in Tanneman Square.
It didn't matter that he felt like he was about to lose everything.
He was going to express his love one last time.
That love and that song spread through the doomed crowd like wildfire.
Do hear the people sing, Gorman Burn brightly indeed.
Stone and Sky, one way out, voices joined in chorus together.
Actually, the guy wrote that last part.
Usually in brackets, it's be.
Stone and Sky, I was just thinking about Stone of Sky one way out,
these ideas of like voices chanting together one thing.
Oh, God.
And how the brilliance of.
of this show is to give us, you know,
then we later, you've pointed out a number of times,
when we hear Cassie and say Stone and Sky,
um,
you know,
if,
if Melchie and Cassie can get to talk to,
will they say one way out?
Is that something you would say?
I don't know.
But like,
you know,
these just these like,
the way that the language of the show gives us,
um,
things to think about and short hand of,
of rebellious spirit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
the language that you share.
I love that.
I love that.
Those are beautiful emails.
I love to.
All the lyrics were gorgeous,
but I think my favorite part was call your kin to come and sing We Are the Gore.
Like that idea, again, of the communal bond, the family, the people who you lived your life with.
You have to sing this together.
It's interesting also in the, you know, to make it a more comfortable remove if we think
about like the Nazi uprising, the way in which like fatherland and patriotism was like warped to,
you know, fuel that this idea of our home, our homeland, who we are, our kin, this is what
matters, that kind of like insidious bent of nationalism, you know, as this dark mirror to
this other thing of like, let us keep who we are as the empire continues to try.
to quash individual cultures and spirits around the galaxy.
Very upsetting to think about.
Deeply.
Deeply, deeply, deeply, deeply.
Speaking of upsetting.
Cyril.
Sneaks upstairs, didn't listen to, or a while, told him to stay, but.
Yeah.
Charges into Dutra's office.
What have you done?
What have you done?
Yeah.
What are we doing here?
I love that pairing of the you and the we.
This is a fascinating scene for tracking language.
Shoy's Cyril going from you to we.
Dedra in her replies soon.
They, when does she say they?
Blaming someone else, right?
Yeah.
When does she say we?
Yeah.
What can we gain?
What was their fault?
Who is the us?
In The Last of Us, who was the us inside of all of this?
Dedra and Cyril?
Similarly, like, for Cassian,
and Will Cassian and Cassian's like
Hey, we're the us. We got to get out of here.
Will's like, I got a new us actually.
And she's fresh.
Similar to
the galaxy's watching.
The following orders
line here,
which you rightly point out
is also used in the bad batch,
but like
is historical language from the Nuremberg
trials is what Adolf Eichmann, in his defense of what he did inside of the Nazi regime,
this was the origin of that phrase that he says, quote, forced to serve as mere instruments.
So again, to your point of, Dedra, when is it they and when is it we?
You know, she's just sort of like they were going to, she talks about it as an inevitability.
They were going to do this anyway.
Yes.
It was going to happen anyway.
So why shouldn't we benefit from it?
And I think I get so frustrated when people talk about things as an inevitability.
I think it happens all the time with AI.
People are like, what's going to happen anyway?
I'm like, it is if you say it is.
You know, so it's like, again, just using historical language inside of your fantasy Star Wars show to
to Tony Gilroy's point.
Make us understand that this has been happening and will continue to happen because these are the cycles.
that we exist inside of.
Yeah, yes, right.
The scene is upsetting for so many different reasons,
including the one that you just brilliantly outlined
that tie to history.
I thought that the way Cyril screamed,
when asks how long she's known,
starts to shake her, she says he's hurting her,
screams about the Armada.
And the way that he says you couldn't even wait, haunting.
Then he begins to choke her.
This is brutal.
He says, don't.
You tell me it's a rumor and I will throw you out that window.
What have we been doing here?
And she tells him, finally.
And he releases her horrified and she makes this final pitch that we've already discussed.
We're going home, Cyril, we're going home as heroes.
This began long before we got here.
They've been planning it for years.
They're doing this no matter what.
We wanted to be together.
You didn't seem to mind the promotions.
And I thought that the way that this shifts from obviously the horror of the physical violence, the emotional violence,
into the like rapturous state of this hero's pitch, we can win.
We can be together.
we can celebrate the roller coaster that we are on for both of them in this scene.
And I think that, like, we're tracking ultimately the end of Cyril Carnes life years.
We build toward the Cassian scene.
And I think we both and Tony Gilroy, we have some quotes to share from him,
believe that Cyril Carne's story is a tragedy, but not one where he has no culpability, right?
And this is, of course, why Andor is the show that it is.
And I thought, like, something like that you didn't seem to mind the promotions line was a great
touch and an important touch inside of a scene where to be clear, we are watching a character
who we have wanted to see, reject the thing that he has been a part of at last and make a different
choice, abusing a woman.
Like, this is obviously horrific.
And I thought that you didn't seem to mind the promotions line was really crucial because
like, they're, it is right to call Cyril out, like on his greed, right?
And how this desire to be valued and to advance and to be praised.
It's only last week that we watched him say of Partagas complimenting him.
If I say this is the greatest day of my life, does it spoil everything?
Now, all of the things that have shaped who Cyril is and the toxicity of his household and the withering and the diminishment and belittlement from his mother all the time made him this person and that is devastating.
But then he did the things that he did and he made the choices that he made and all of those things are true.
Yeah, and I love that, yeah, we want to understand characters like this,
because we want to understand all characters, right?
I am interested in the internal, you know, the heart of the psychology of a Cyril Karn.
And so meeting Edie and spending time with Edie is so interesting.
But yeah, the show is never interested in letting Cyril off the hook for who he is.
And I think the choice of having him choke, Dendra here, which is such a horrific thing to watch, is so important.
I got a text from our pal Brian Cogman
who loves Cyril Karn
and he says,
as the guy who's favorite characters to write were Jamie and Theon,
RIP, Cyril, you are my favorite.
Then he was like, redemption arcs are bullshit.
We love a character on an arc, and we love a redemption arc,
but I do love that Cyril doesn't get one.
I, you know,
as much as we were sort of like,
K-man wake up, like, leave.
Anyway, we'll get to that.
But I just think it was so important
to have him do this very vile thing
inside of this moment as he breaks away
from this thing that he willingly waltzed his way into.
Yeah, it's really good.
Yeah, I mean, we'll talk about it more
with the Cassian scene,
but I think the combination of
we can see on his face as he stands in the plaza
and that like borderline catatonic haze.
Yeah.
I have played a part in ruining this place that I actually love.
That I love.
Yeah.
And I don't want this to happen.
Like when he went to Enza and said,
what if I had a way out?
Like that he,
there is a part of him that wanted to behave differently and do a different thing and to
help.
He just didn't know how.
And like the fact that at the very final moment,
the final moment is the lowering of.
of the gun, which I can't wait to talk to you about, obviously.
But before that, when you're in that plaza,
Cyril could fight.
But when he sees Cassie and he is sucked back in.
He is sucked back in to the obsession that misled him.
And that just felt very sad, but also quite fitting for a character who I all.
It was just perfect.
The almost of it.
The almost of it is perfect.
Really, really good.
The Gorman Massacres here.
The troops march into the singing crowd.
Dejra receives the call.
She hesitates for a moment and then gives the order to Cato, who proceeds to tell the sniper fire at will.
And that sniper shoots not a citizen, but an imperial soldier causing Bloy to order his soldiers to fire upon the crowd at will.
And all of our friends then join in on the fight.
I think from the Dejra perspective, like, we just,
can't really
overstate the
significance of this.
You know,
we're talking about it a lot
with like Cassian
and Monmouthma
and Gorman
and what this means
for the rebellion.
And like,
Dedra is also a messenger
one of the cogs
in this machine
and it receives a call
and then shares the message.
I thought that moment earlier
in the episode
where Cato was like,
I'm the trigger,
but you're the finger,
you know,
the, that web.
But she chose to partake.
And like,
she oversaw
the mission on Gorman that leads to this moment
and the centrality then for Dejramiro
in the history of galactic events
like cannot be overstated.
And this is what we're swirling towards
this moment is what we're swirling.
Like because it's not, it is Rogue One.
Like we are getting to that.
But if you think about all the threads
that we follow from the beginning of Andor,
it's Cyril.
We were like, why are we following Cyril Karm?
And who is Dejramuro?
why are we following her?
And the fact that it's just like
all these forces
we're coming together
to be here on Gorman
at this moment,
this is what,
this is why party gas is here.
This is why,
and like that is a story
that they're telling.
And what that,
and then what that then in the next episode
will cause Mon Motham to do.
And like,
yes,
we have three or more episodes to go,
but that's the day new ma'am of like,
this is,
this is,
this is it, man.
Can I talk about a real world comp for this moment?
So we got this email from our listener Estella,
which prompted me to watch a couple little documentaries
on this historical incident from the 1960s.
Please forgive my pronunciation,
but I believe it's the Lataloko Massacre in Mexico,
1968.
The year the Olympics were going to be in Mexico City,
there were all these student protests
about police brutality and
a number of other things.
And
on a given day,
one given day that they marched
into the
Plaza de las Tres Culturas
and the
the cops surrounded
them. There was one way out of that plaza. The cops
surrounded them, snipers up at the building,
shot into the crowd, they shot and they shot
the generals
down the ground. So exactly what happens here
in terms of like a sniper working for the government shoots someone on their own side inside of the crowd
in order to frame the students.
There are other instigators inside of this.
And then Estella wrote in her email over 300 people died, but actually what I found out is that there is no official number of how many people died in the square that day.
But there is footage of it that you can watch and it is horrifying.
to watch in terms of like there was it starts so slow there's just like peaceful student unarmed
peaceful student protesters in in the square here and then there's also just like people around who
wandered in who were curious there were journalists sports journalists who were in town to cover the
Olympics who like came over to sort of like see what was going on and then they block off the one exit
and then it's just um as you as you sort of said about this plaza here fish in a barrel the other
thing that is so upsetting about,
and I don't know if this is something that
Tony Gilroy and his team drew on,
but the plaza itself
um,
De Las Rees Culturas was a place where
the last stand of
the indigenous culture there for
the Spanish conquest earlier and there was
already a memorial there to a previous
conquest. And so this idea of like,
in this sort of sacred space,
where this horrific thing already happened
to the Mexican people, this other thing
happens from their own government
to the student protesters inside of the square.
I was really, it's sort of like
similar to, and this just maybe
speaks to my own education, but it's similar to like
learning about what happened in Tulsa via Watchman.
Like I'm so embarrassed that I didn't know about this
until watching Andor, but
watching the footage and watching
the helicopters fly over, the same way that
the Thai fighters fly over. Like the visual cues
are so similar to the footage that I saw.
And again, I haven't seen any interviews where they talked about this, because I know that Tony Gilroy is drawing from just a number of real-world inspirations.
But I just thought this idea of, like, the police spies, the provocation inside of the crowd, the snipers, the helicopters, the nature of the plaza itself.
Like, there's a number of, but I also saw people, some people, like, on the Andor Reddit talking about how it reminded them of things that happen in,
Istanbul or like,
this happens,
this happens in history.
But this was an example that felt so
stunningly similar
and so upsetting.
I don't recommend watching this footage,
but,
you know,
it does exist if you want to watch it.
So it's,
it's horrible.
It's horrible to watch.
And it is
so well done.
This is one of the best action battle sequences I've ever seen.
And it's like there's no, you know, we love a Game of Thrones battle episodes,
but you don't need, I mean, Thai fliders are flying overhead,
but you don't need giants or white walkers or anything like that.
This is a human skirmish inside of a relatively hemmed in space.
We talked earlier about how they built this set to be all one real connected set.
so the hotel lobby or inside the cafe or whatever
so they could then destroy it essentially
inside of this battle.
And when Cassie and ducks into the cafe
or Thela's in the hotel lobby
trying to get people out of the way
so you can throw a bomb.
Like this is all one set that they built.
And it just makes it all feel that much more upsetting.
Or we see one member of the resistance
like carrying behind
who is sort of
most bullish guy in the crowd when they're sort of like getting chanting or something like that.
And then once the shooting starts, he's just sort of towering behind the fountain.
And then we don't see, I see the sniper take aim.
And then we just see him go down in the background from Will's perspective.
And I thought that was just like a really stunning moment inside of a really stunning sequence.
I think that, first of all, thank you.
And thank you to Estella for that email and those insights.
I think to that last point you just made, that was like what was most striking to me about.
I thought this entire sequence inside of an astonishing episode was just breathtaking and it's, in its harder.
And also in the mastery of the filmmaking.
I think this is like a, we already talked about it.
It is TV, not a movie, but like I genuinely think this is like Oscar quality filmmaking and what we see here.
What you cited about when Tazi falls, we see it from Will's perspective, that,
is of all of the brilliant aspects of how this was filmed and choreographed and how I love you
reminding us about the practical set and us understanding how people move through these spaces and how
they connect and that this is the path on which they live their lives. It's the Tarkin massacre
becoming the site of the Gorman massacre, but it's also how they walk to work, where they buy
their spiders, right? Like this is the place that they inhabit and move about. The way that we
cut from the different character perspectives, it's all brilliant.
The thing that I was most struck by, though,
was the way that every death of a character we had seen and knew
was paired with an observer,
like was paired with a witness.
For Tazi, it's will.
For Lisa, it's Sam.
For Enza, who, this was, I thought,
the most harrowing stretchier when Dilan, who has already been shot,
is on the ground, and then sees her picked up by the spine
and hurled and broken and thrown.
and that shriek, that like animalistic shriek that he emits as he is the witness for her, I thought.
And then later when Dilan dies, Lezine is there with him, like the way that something so big and so mass in the scale and scope of the casualty felt so personal and intimate as we watched it through the eyes of the,
people who were losing their friends, their fellows.
Like, I just thought was unbelievably impactful.
It's so good.
And like it almost seems like witchcraft the way in which everyone who worked on the show
was able to create those connections between those characters with very little screen time,
with very little time with them.
And Cassigan is here, sure.
It actually, you know, we were talking about Hard Home when we were talking about.
we were talking about The Last of Us.
It reminds me a lot of Hard Home because, like,
John Snow and Torman are there at Hard Home,
and that matters that these characters that we know.
So it matters that Cassian and Cyril and Dedra and Will are all here at the Gorman Massacre.
That matters in terms of anchoring us in perspective.
But the genius of Hardhome that we like to talk about is like a character like Carsey,
who we just met.
Right.
And we understand what seeing these.
little zombie children
does to her personally
inside of her story.
And so like these,
you know,
ENSA and Dilan or,
you know,
all these other characters,
like we haven't spent a ton of time with them,
but they matter to each other.
And so that matters to us as well.
And yeah,
I think this is such a brilliant observation,
watching their personal loss.
Dylan,
well,
I'm getting cut,
gut shot.
And we're like,
well,
that's curtains for that character.
but no, he doesn't die.
He then has to watch Enza die.
Like, it was tremendously brutal.
It's great word.
Yeah.
Speaking of brutal.
Yeah.
This is one of the most incredible things I've ever seen,
Serial versus Cassie.
And I can't believe this was real,
but I can because it's Andor,
but this just left me gobsmacked and breathless.
Of all the things I wanted to talk to you about today,
I think this might be top of the list.
And I'm like, have we already taught?
We couldn't help ourselves because we just kept talking about it because it's just like.
I know.
There's still a little bit of it.
There's definitely more.
I will say for me, I think the thing that we haven't mentioned yet that really struck me is the like berser nature of Cyril here.
And like.
The ferocity.
Yeah.
We have not seen like when we last saw Cyril in Ferris both times, he's a cowering kind of guy.
Like he's not a fighter.
This isn't what he does.
And so like to watch him really fight,
like WWE smash a chair
into Cassian's back fight
is incredible.
Incredible.
Yeah.
And also just like Cyril is also tidy.
Yeah, fastidious.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, right?
He's got the piping and the well-fitting hat.
And like it's about the presentation.
And one of the really like brutal Edy moments with him in season one is like, you know,
what do you think you're saying to people with how you present yourself?
But like this is just a obliteration of that.
Yeah.
Right?
There is no, I am presenting myself to the world.
It is I see the person who destroyed my life.
And it's the only thing I see.
This is like an embodiment of myopia and being driven to your doom by the thing that you could not let go.
and then to hear the person on the other side say,
who are you?
Like, first of all,
they have met.
It would be bad enough
if Cyril had to confront the fact that
the source of his obsession,
oh, actually, yeah, like,
we never really encountered each other.
But that's not the case.
The savagery of the actual fight,
the kind of feral,
animalistic nature of it,
the way that the grenade leads to Cassian having to take cover,
and then the moment when Cyril stands over him with Cassian's gun,
I thought the like, you know, the messed up hair, the soot, the sweat, the blood, the rage,
all of it was just like unbelievable.
What else do you want to say about who are you and this being the final thing that Cyril hears?
And then what do you read in the lowering of the gun?
Well, just Kyle Saller, I'm devastated that you're gone.
This is an incredible character and an incredible performance.
You'll always matter to me.
You'll always be the character who led us to have to say on recorded media multiple times,
we think fascists are bad.
We don't think fascists are good.
You'll always be that guy, Cyril.
I'm going to just take the opportunity to read a couple.
I mean, you've got a great Tony Gilroy quote about Cyril Caron that I want to get to.
But we got so many serial emails and they were all quite lengthy.
And so this is the best I could do to sort of encapsulate a couple things.
Alistair Macal wrote,
I guess if anybody was going to leap dashingly over the barricades
onto the back of his own redemption arc and then hop back off because he got distracted
and summarily die doing something stupid, it was Cyril Carn.
So like, yes, perfect.
Incredible.
John wrote this really incredible, different John than the one I quoted before.
A different John wrote this really incredible email, the subject line of which was Cyril Carr and the Cardboard Man.
It's like a novel.
It's like incredibly good.
I only have part of it here.
John wrote, he was the kind of guy who was never radicalized by the empire simply at home, and they made him make his home on Gorman.
And then the people adopted him.
So, of course, his loyalties became confused.
This is a real thing that happens in tradecraft.
It's how most double agents or triples,
as he might have become with more time, are recruited.
And when Debra reveals that is all a lie,
Amin's no an end, that's it.
In Cyril Karn, we see the breaking point in fascism
for even a, quote, company man.
Revolutions don't happen until the regimes start to lose the Seerles.
He's angry at Deidre,
but I think he really means it when he jumps that barrier
and goes back into the crowd.
So, like, I love this line.
Like, revolutions don't happen until the regimes start to lose
the Cyril's and this idea that like, yeah, Cyril Carn was never someone who was like,
you know who I love the emperor.
He's like, you know what?
I love law and order.
You know what I love, you know, an organization and a place to belong.
And the way in which he is betrayed by this.
And it is not until it's a personal betrayal to him and his dignity that it becomes a cause
that he cares about.
unfortunately, but like, again, what is the tipping point for various people and for Cyril?
It's this.
And fascism is bad.
And we don't support the Cyril Carnes of the world who gleefully assist in the rise of fascism.
But it is an endlessly compelling type to think about and a really incredible performance from Kyle Saller.
So what do you want to say?
I'll read this Gilroy quote again.
This is a quote from Tony's interview with Megan O'Keefe at Decider.
I believe it was the THR interview that reminded us that in season one,
Gilroy was really like bumping on people calling Cyril a fascist.
That was also kind of like interesting to remember in terms of hearing how Gilroy talked
about Cyril now at the end.
So here's what he said to Megan.
I feel terribly sorry for Cyril.
I actually have great affection for Cyril.
I think Cyril is a victim in every way.
I think he's a romantic and a fantasist.
I think he could have just as easily gone in many different directions
if he'd been shown any place that there was some love or some light.
And then later he adds,
and then to stand there and realize that you've destroyed something
that you didn't intend to destroy.
So, yeah, I mean, I think we are meant to pity Cyril at the end and also to judge him and to do both of those things in tandem.
And I think that it is, you know, I do love a redemption arc and I do love a, there's nothing more classic than the Star Wars redemption arc on the redemption arc front.
But this is, this is riveting.
This is human.
Like to see a character, yeah, flirt with something else and then fail.
People fail.
That's our curse.
That's what Luther would say about Cyril.
we know it.
This was just so good.
What did I completely use the word indelible earlier?
I mean, Cyril is an indelible character to me.
Like, this is just all-time stuff.
It's so funny because, like, I think sometimes we're like, what is wrong with us?
We're obsessed with Serial, but this was a real week to see how true that is for so many people.
It's the first person everyone I talked to about and or texted me about Adam was barely able to function.
You messaged watching what happened to Cyril.
You messaged Chris and me when you watched the, we had already seen the episodes,
and when you watched the episodes, you messes desk, and you're like, I am like inconsolable,
and I just wrote back to Spiro, and you're like, yeah.
It's just like how we're not alone.
It's just the, like, I think we're rewarded for our attention that we paid him from the start
because whether or not this is always the plan, because in a medium like TV,
you should be adapting and changing.
And when you see someone like Kyle Saller show up the way that he did for us,
for Cyril.
I think it's a character type
that Tony Gilroy was interested in,
but when you get a performance
as good as this one,
and it's just working,
then of course you're going to want
to use him more and more.
I think we were all confused
a little bit by
how season one ended with Cyril.
And so the season two
Cyril arc is just
exquisite, just so good.
It really is.
Oh my God.
The combo of who are you
in the lowering of the gun,
I'll think about delay.
I really will. And the lowering in the gun is just so perfect because it's like it's not,
who are you? It's oh my God. The lowering of the gun to me, it's like it's not, and now I am reformed,
you know, and now I will go do all the right things. It's like I liked the way that Kyle Solar and his
T.HR interviews talked about that. He had some really interesting things to say. He's like,
I'm paraphrasing, but he was basically like, he would never be the guy who, like, it went and,
you know, fought the death star. But
that doubt and having to confront the mistakes you've made and where your own obsession led you
and misledged you. It's just like in a, oh, boy, it's really, really memorable and impactful.
Great stuff. Also, Rylance being the one to do this, we already talked about this from the Rylance
perspective, but it also gave us this one other little delicious element, which is this look
that passes between Rylance and Cassian because Rylance.
Rylis was like, not much of a revolutionary are you?
Not much of a revolutionary are you?
Yeah, he's like, oh, Varian Sky.
Oh, hey.
I see you.
You're back.
Oh, man.
Yeah, Rylans being the one when it could have been Will or it could have been, you know, our concierge or something like that.
But it was Rylens.
And also Cassian, like as Cassian is dragged away, he keeps looking back at Cyril of like, you know.
Who is this person who was obsessed with me?
Like, what was this?
What does it mean for someone to hate me?
Yeah, what was this?
Yeah.
What is this, my God?
What is this bigger picture story that I'm unaware is happening around me, you know?
Yeah.
God.
It's time to leave Gorman.
Will says, no, I have to go find Drina.
And then suddenly the screams erupt again.
The KX droid, who will become K-2S.O.
The very, like, Bucky is the Winter Soldier.
come for me here. It's like we have now had to see K2SO and do some really awful stuff,
but he can't be blamed for his programming at the time. Do you think he was K2SO who threw Enza?
I can't quite face that, I think. I think he just stomped around a bit and waved his arms.
And then he threw these people who we didn't know and have an attachment to it in the street.
They seemed fine.
This is where Sam crashes the tank into K and rescue.
use Cass and Will. And then this is where we get that little like hand on the back of Will's head. Will,
please from Cass. Just incredible stuff. Farak's going to the stuff. Stoan's guy. And then we load up K.
Cassian drives away. Yet another episode that is like really heavily at the end just focused on Cassian's
face and the tears and the pain like welling up. Just incredible visually.
Diego, this is your show and I'm sorry. I just talked about Kyle Saller for 20 minutes.
But like, they're all so good. Diego, you're also amazing. And the.
Cassian's trauma and tears as we are listening to Drina is the burden of being the messenger, right?
The messenger, that can say, oh, glory, no.
Like, tell people what happened here to have to be the one who does that.
Oh, my God.
To be the one who lives.
And again, this gets to us, like, Lizanne being the one to hold Dylan and to do that.
Think about Lizanne and, like, in Rylance and a number of the other.
people that we met on Gorman is
it's going to sound so stupid.
They're actors with faces.
These are people with faces.
And like, when you think of the way in which we cast,
I tend to latch on to those people.
You know, I'm like, if it's like an old British man
who's been on the stage, I'm like, that's my guy.
I'm excited to see what he does, you know.
But like, Nina Gold, who's casting director on Annor
as well as Martin Ware, they're both equally listed
as casting director, so I'm not sure if one did one season and one did another or whatever,
but I want to shout out the casting work on this show because it's just like,
like, I mean, I think Adria Arjona is like one of the most beautiful people alive.
And so it's not like we're not casting beautiful people on this show, but like to not just cast
like shiny beautiful people, but just to cast people who look so interesting.
You know, I think Denise Goff, who's.
who is like,
who plays Dejaro,
who is like one of our favorites
in junket interviews.
She is like so delightful
has talked about sort of
her like resting trout face
and how like her mom always made fun of her for it.
But she's like,
it's serving me for DEDRA.
And she's like,
but even sometimes I look at it
and I'm like,
oh Jesus Christ.
But like her face and like her,
her,
her Dedra all alone,
breaking from,
pulling at her collar,
you know,
like I don't know,
what direction they gave Denise in this sequence,
or if they were just like,
you're having a freak out, go.
But the choices she made,
the way she just pulls on her uniform,
this is just like an all-time character breaks a fuck down moment
inside of this episode.
Really good.
I was thinking every time Cassian had Deadstone
his scope of when you asked me last week if you had to pick one person who's going to make it
who would be and I was like, Dedra? And I was like, oh, now.
I'll start on. To have another, like, musical corner moment, I will just say,
Dedra out on the balcony with her Eva Peron hair. I was just thinking about Evita.
Oh, my God.
Eadie, crying, watching the Imperial Neos, the propaganda machine is already spinning.
Fallen Heroes.
as Imperial Martyrs.
We don't end with Cassian's face.
We end with Edie's face.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I think that's the fitting transition into episode nine because it's the
Imperial lies, right?
And I...
Imperial martyrs.
I support this choice because we don't like Edie.
But I feel, you know, Edy watching with her friends as, like, it all unfolded on her
little, you know, Fox News 24 hours of habit.
Like, Eadie at the breakfast table watching it, you know, and then, like, you know,
Edie crying at the end.
And again, it's like sort of
what have you wrought?
What is your role in all of this?
But also, you're allowed to have pain
about it too, you know?
And she's also definitely like,
I told him not to go there.
I told him that they were
misusing him.
We're about to head to Correspond.
Quickly, I'll just also note we're about to talk
about some canon updates
on the Monmothma front.
The Cassie and K-2S0 origin story here
is completely a
New. There's a 2017 comic, Rogue 1, Cassian, and K2SO special number one, where we thought we knew the origin story, and this is an update. I have to take absolutely no issue with this, but just to remark upon it.
This is better. Sorry. Okay. This is good to being part of one of the most memorable secrets of the mystery, Star Wars is better.
Coruscant. The Senate. This is almost all going to be about episode nine, but we do have a few minutes there before.
episode nine where before everything that happens on Gorman, we see, first of all,
monaurskin dunking on Chlorists.
Like, I should ask for a new driver.
I was just like, don't they might send someone smart, which, first of all, I appreciated
a moment of levity in these very upsetting three episodes, but also just like, Chloris in short
order will be lured right into Cassie.
It's blast or fire.
So this was a great little.
It's also been like a really good character throughout in terms of like he's just a deeply
inept spot.
but he's been there spying the whole time.
So, so good.
I loved when, like,
he gets yelled at for calling back to the ISB,
and they're like,
we didn't check it if you had an update.
Great.
They might send someone smart,
like,
just, like,
sort of draw,
was just like,
Erskine,
you made a great point earlier.
Like,
I would have loved more of the Monarskin
relationship,
like,
throughout the show and maybe
last season as well.
It just would have been really fun to watch.
I think this is a great episode for him, for Erskine.
And I think the actor playing him is great.
And I would have just loved even more of this.
Again, this is like in a side of a like if we had a third season or whatever.
Could we, you know, because we get that.
And I was so glad to have it in the previously on.
But we do get, as you mentioned, this like Erskine encounter with Luton at the party
where he's talking about Nebu and and.
Gorman and stuff like that. And Luton's like, ding, I have an idea, right? No cocktail chatter at a party
unused by Luthin. But like, right, exactly. But to see, what is, what was that conversation? Like,
how was it for Ersson to get recruited? What is the tipping point for him? What is the pressure point
for him? I would have loved to. Yeah. I'm with you. I do like that we just, we, for Luthin,
it's kind of a fun little satisfying. Oh, yeah, like reminder, he's always on the clock.
But I'm with you for Erskine. I would have liked to better understand was the sales pitch.
you won't get to tell her,
but then I'll be able to say one day
that you protected her in ways that she never knew.
Like, how did he assess?
So pissed that Luthan outed him to Mon.
Like, brutal.
It's like, also like, we have a,
we're prepping for some important work here.
Come on, the timing, my guy.
But yeah, I think for me with Erskine and Mon,
it's mostly to jump ahead a little bit.
When she walks in, as always,
a beautifully delivered line,
a bit of acting.
But, you know, I'm not sure I've ever,
felt so betrayed.
From just as a person who loves Mon
and is invested in Mon,
it's devastating because when she says,
and I've had some experience,
that part of Monmothema's,
part of the essence of the Monmouthma experience
is that she is always feeling
like on the outside of the thing
or the relationship that she was supposed to have.
But it is just, I think,
kind of undeniably,
Lindberg wrote about this in his piece too.
Like, I don't think we know enough
about their relationship to feel that.
So that's like a rare note.
I think inside of these largely exquisite episodes.
The other thing that happens here at the beginning
before the Gorman massacre in the Senate
is this moment between Ambassador Orrin and Mon,
and as we recall from last arc,
he was one of the figures who refused
to sort of join her P-O-R-D challenge
and had to weigh what that would mean for Gorman.
What's so interesting about him is like,
I can't tell if he was right or wrong,
Because, like, the first time I watched it through, I was like, here he's paying for his earlier political cowardice.
But when he tells her, like, I'm just trying to keep everyone calm. Again, to your point, there is no winning inside of this garment situation. There is no right. Yeah. I think that's what I was feeling. It's just like the damned if you do, damned if you don't, like they have been ensnared. And I really loved this little moment because, first of all, it connects to this larger through line across these episodes about truth and lies.
the way he said they have no shame, they don't even bother to lie badly anymore. I suppose that's the final humiliation. My God. But I really loved when he thanked her. He said, your constant courage, the brave face you put to the world, I've done a poor job of letting you know how much I admire your grace and energy. To me, this felt like the show taking a moment to say why it cares about Ma'athema as a character, that it's about all the stuff she did before the big thing here. Because obviously the big grand
spectacle that draws all the eyes and gets all the attention, calling this a genocide,
naming Palpatine.
That cannot be understated in its heft and consequence and the bravery and courage that
we're required to do this.
It cannot.
But as Mon herself will say to bail, nothing will be harder than the thing we've done all this
time.
And for Mon to like fight for so long in a different way before now fighting in this way,
it fits very well with what you noted at the top of the pod about the,
the phases and the evolution of each person's relationship to the rebellion.
But I don't know.
I just like, it's easy to praise the character who does the big thing.
So I loved that Ma got this little moment before.
And I like that we had last week her trying to like whip votes on, you know, like trying
to work inside the system, trying to whip votes around something that was connected to
our kina.
So something that we were like already keenly aware of.
The fact that like, so then we get this.
arrest of Orrin.
Troopers in the Senate chamber.
And nobody says anything.
You know, he's like yelling about this, right?
It's my people today, maybe yours tomorrow.
And, you know, it's very much like the first they came for the socialist and I did not speak out because I was not a socialist.
Like, you know, when you stand idly by and just watch this happen, you know.
Anyway, Mon is not standing idly by, but a lot of people in that building are.
A lot of people are.
A lot of people are.
Mon and bail.
Plotting and scheming, scheming and plotting.
Plots and schemes are the same thing.
Joe?
I got a text from someone who shall not be named who said,
poor Jimmy Smiths for missing out on this,
he could have finally had a good seat.
inside of a Star Wars property.
Dude, this is like
Bail has some incredible scenes in this episode.
I mean, I think Benjamin Brad did a, oh, really great job.
But yeah, I felt, I thought Benjamin Brad did a great job.
Yeah, he was awesome.
And I love a recast.
I think I said this before.
But again, like, this is like,
this heals something inside of me that continuously hurts
every time I see that Tarkin bullshit that they pulled and broke one.
And I'm just sort of like, just recast, man.
It's fine.
But yeah, I think Benjamin Brad is great here.
they've gone too far and we all know it, Maen says to bail. We need to speak out. We need to stand up and speak the truth. And then we need to leave both of us. This is this idea that you've been teasing and then in previous weeks and then breaking down beautifully today, this final spark, this thing that you can no longer ignore. And there's this interesting little discussion here because Bail tells Mon that he can't go, right? He has to say they're not ready. Yavin is not ready. And I liked when she called upon the
shared history and compared to what nothing we will ever do will be as hard as hiding all these
years. Just the reminder of how long they've both been doing this, how long they've both been
in the fight and working in the shadows. Was your sense at all that anything inside of Bail's decision
here has to do with Leia? Like, you know, when he's talking about it's not so easy. Like,
he has his other thing to do, but like he's also protecting this other thing that Mon doesn't
have on her plate, you know? Yeah, maybe. I mean, I think it's interesting because, like,
I think the only entirely possible, I think like, this is where some of the connections in general to rebels get a little confusing for me because like when we see Mon give the speech in Rebels, Bail is like next to Dadaana and one of the locations we see.
So, but also like Leia was so involved by this point, you know, that I don't know.
It's, this is one where I'm kind of like, I don't, maybe I shouldn't stop and think about this too long because then the other canon like I get.
it does. I don't know how well, Bail being like,
it's a little confusing, but obviously then it all leads to him being like,
tear the shit out of his face.
Tear the shit out of this lady.
Frankly remarkable, so.
So good.
Oh, God, Bail.
I did think it was really interesting when Mon asked him later after the talk with Luther,
like, do you trust your people?
And do you know them?
He's like, yeah, I trust them. Do I know them? No.
I can't just to remind us of.
of who these people are
and who they're surrounded by
and what every single moment,
what a risk it is to do what they're doing.
I thought that was well reinforced here.
Tell me what you made of this
incredible scene between Clea and Cassian
when he's back on Coruscant
for his next assignment.
Ronnie has another byline to deliver.
Ronnie Guja.
Yeah.
Can I guess you're tired?
It's too much.
It's too hard.
like Claire Queen icon
always
when she wears her hair down
I just think this is
incredibly
great stuff
from Clea who has
had such a good season
and I think this idea of like
I need to start making my own decisions
I thought that's what we were fighting for
so good in terms of
Cassian is the he of the now
and she's thinking of
you know, the things we will not live to see.
Like this idea of making your own decisions is not something that everyone can do
and aren't we fighting for everyone to be able to do that.
Do you know?
Right.
Yeah.
I love that.
I like thinking, too, about how Nemek's words and lessons for Cassian might be,
not only on our minds, but sweet Nemek on Cassian's here too, because, you know, I'm done.
I'm done after this.
I need to start making my own decisions, like one of the most impactful parts of Nemex manifesto
that not something that Nemex said to Cassian directly in Aldani, but something that we then hear
later in the finale of season one, the imperial need for control is so desperate because it is so
unnatural.
Tyranny, I didn't mean to do unlimited power voice for saying unnatural, but maybe it's
sitting unnatural.
Tyranny requires constant effort.
It breaks.
It leaks.
authority is brittle.
Oppression is the mask of fear.
Remember that.
And know this.
The day will come when all these skirmishes and battles,
these moments of defiance,
will have flooded the banks of the empire's authority,
and then there will be one too many.
One single thing will break the siege.
Remember this.
Try.
If one of the impulses as I'm done,
then the counterweight has to be try.
And like, obviously try is,
a central idea in Star Wars
and I just love thinking about how Nemek's words,
obviously everything that happens with Big Sears
is going to be central to what Cassian does next,
but also to think of how Cassian might still be carrying
that lesson from Nemec with him too.
These moments for Cassian that are like,
yeah, literal letters that he has to carry with him.
I know.
Our messenger.
My God.
Okay, this is where Lucan just walks into the middle
of the Senate Chamber Plaza.
I honestly didn't understand.
I love this episode.
I want to go to Spain.
I'm going to Valencia.
You can't stop me.
Put me on set with my other wig.
No way.
Lutthin.
Not even a hood?
No murder cloak.
So I think the thing that I was, I actually, the thing I like about this,
both here with Lutth and Amon and later with Luton and Clayah and Cassian is like, well, it, it heightens
the sense of where we are, what the moment.
moment that we have arrived at at last. We're in the end game now. But like, then I,
I will be honest, like it, then I'm a little confused by how much of the back and forth and the
stretch hinges on the threat of Mon getting arrested. I'm like, if they want to find out who
Mon Mothwa is in cahoots with, all they need to do is check the security cams. You're right
there. I thought this was slightly strange. Maybe, but I did like both of these scenes. Maybe it's like
coop on your friends and neighbors. Luton has a remote control that kills any cameras that
in the near vicinity.
Is that a thing?
Not a reference, I understand,
because I have not seen this show.
It's a preposterous development
that happened to your friends and neighbors
after this character has broken into company homes.
He's like, P.S.
by the way, halfway through the season,
he's like, by the way,
I have this remote control
that kills any security cameras
so that they can't see me coming.
Handy.
Okay.
Speaking of handling devices
that people might use to detect your activities,
the reason that Mon and Luther
are chatting in the first place
is because Erskine does find a listening.
device, Mons smashes it. This alerts our guy, Philzona,
from since that great season one scene with
Dendron, here he is, back.
And the ISB, okay,
Cloris already sent a report. Now this is out,
so they're paying attention.
If you find a bug, it's all over been.
Yeah, I don't smash it. No, I just don't talk in front of it.
No, it's not just that. You, like, make other plans.
You make wrong plans in the bug. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Can't wait to go to the Senate
today and not say anything.
I haven't even bought it.
The agenda has been set.
I haven't even bothered to drink any water today because I have no speeches to make at the Senate.
I have no opinion on what the spice king from Carth might say and whether he will invoke the word emergency.
Can't wait to sit silently at the Senate today.
Yeah, it does.
That's not what happens.
Monsmashes it in the nursekins like, I'm going to keep a looking.
You better go out to the plaza.
Practice your speech out there.
Wild stuff from these two.
Wild stuff.
This is where she learns the truth about her, where Luthin tells her.
Just as is always the case in Amman, Luthon's seen dynamite.
I mean, there's just, it's so charged to both directions between them.
She's like, do you remember my friend Ticoma?
And what I love about this is like, it's been two years since Tatecoma died.
That's just something that we have to remember.
It's not remember two weeks ago when you killed, when you had Sinta flip the car.
When you had to turn the car over.
It's remember two years ago at a wedding when you decide an instant that my pal
take home a should die.
I still think about it two years later.
Be honest with us.
Was there a party that was like, are they going to confirm right now how he died?
Are they going to say it?
No, but I think it was possible.
I don't know that I asked CR to ask Tony.
I know that he already talked to him for their finale episode.
I asked, I asked him to ask.
I don't think he did, but I did ask.
him. I did. We deserve to know. I did. I agree. Yeah, I thought the tape part was incredible
for the reason you're saying, just reminding us at the time. But then what Mon says to him,
like, I think about it off how quickly you decided he was a risk, how quickly all that
happened. Luther talks about being bent by secrecy. But again, for Mon, it's like,
what, where do I go, where do I look, who do I turn to, Erskine, the, the, the, the
betrayal of my life. But from Luthan, it's like, I need this person to do this thing and believe
that I am here to help. I have a person Cassian who I will send. I rely on him. She can't too.
And nobody believes each other. Like what a place for this to have wound up. I thought this was
like really great. And Mon saying that the thing that she fears here is Luton when last episode,
not last episode, last arc, last week, we heard Cassian say something very similar last year.
Yeah, we heard Cassian when, you know, Bix was like, was it dangerous?
And he's like, the only thing that I'm scared about right now is Luthin, like for Luton's own people to talk about him that way.
But when he says, I don't know everything, Ma'an, but I know what I owe you.
That feels really true.
It does.
And he knows that and believes it and means it.
I think your right flag that Luton feels quite different.
2BY is a year of change in transformation for Luthin.
We're leaving the wig at home and we're growing a context.
For a different one way in home.
Oh, ma'am.
What else do you want to hit on the Mon Erskin front in terms of this betrayal?
Good.
Okay.
We talked about the origin of the spying, and so now it is time for the extraction.
teams to arrive after our beloved Erskine is dismissed.
Cassian, this is where Cassian and Clay and Luthin speak,
and he tries to convince Luthin to go to Yavin,
and Luton says, no, Yavin for me.
We already talked about that part of that.
But not for me.
The part of this exchange that we haven't talked about quite as much is,
you've stayed here long enough.
I'm not finished yet.
They're going to find you, Luton.
You act as if we had a choice.
Eventually, they'll hang us both.
won't they? We set that course the first time we met, speak for yourself. You see no truth in
that. I make my own decisions. Then we did talk about the rest of this with Luthin's reply.
But we talked about this from the inevitability for Luthin of the sunrise I'll never see, the absence
of the gratitude. But just in terms of like now thinking back to the beginning of his relationship
with Cassian and his recruitment of him and like saying in episode four after they escaped Farrick's
in season one, it doesn't matter what you tell me or yourself. You'll ultimately die
fighting these bastards? Wouldn't you rather
give it all at once to something real?
The pitch from Luton was never.
And we're going to enjoy the thing that we helped bring about.
We're going to win and you and your hot girlfriend slash wife and your robot are going to live happily ever after.
Sweet B.
I just need a quick B up to, even if it's like in a flash and a montage at the end.
Like I just need to see B once more next week.
I just can't really handle it.
I don't think.
Bale's team arrives.
We discussed this part already as well.
And so it is time for Mon Motho to make her speech, Joe, a speech for the ages.
All of our evil senators say they're evil things.
Wait, wait, wait, hold on.
I wrote one down that like...
Is it about the broth?
Yeah. Yeah, that's a great one.
The tragic broth we sip this morning has been brewing in plain sight.
The tragic broth we sip this morning has been brewing in plain sight.
It's great.
Actually, sorry, before we go, I don't know how to parse this, but I do feel like it needs to be saying, and we don't have to get into it too much.
It is wild for Dan Gilroy to write the line next year in Yavin for for male or Ghana.
That is a, you know, a very loaded statement.
And I don't know.
Anyway, I don't know what's meant by it, but it's wild that it's in here.
Anyway, speaking of bail.
He invokes article 17-252, yields his time to Mon, and Mon speaks.
The ISB is desperately trying and failing to cut this feed.
I loved on the Friends Everywhere front, the security guy being sent to cut the feed
and he can't get in because two members of the cause have locked the door and
the keys up on a different level.
oh, we fixed it.
Like, that was just a great little touch.
And then Mon's pod moves forward and she speaks.
The distance between what is said and what is known to be true has become an abyss, she
says.
Of all the things at risk, the loss of an objective reality is perhaps the most dangerous.
The death of truth is the ultimate victory of evil.
When truth leaves us, when we let it slip away, when it is ripped from our hands,
we become vulnerable to the appetite of whatever monster
screams the loudest.
This is this theme and this through line.
We heard it from Rylance to Cyril,
from Oran to Man,
Drina and her dispatch
to the entire galaxy,
the murder of Gorman.
The appetite of whatever monster screams the loudest
is so good in terms of like
that idea of the empire devouring
the galaxy and also the monster,
whatever monster screams the loudest is like
noise that cuts through
all the,
all the chivalrous.
Shatter, right?
But also, like, the monster that screams,
that best triggers our fears,
which is, again, what, like,
fascistic rise to power is about,
is about targeting your specific fears
and exploiting them.
Right.
Really good language.
This chamber's hold on the truth
was finally lost on the Gorman Plaza.
What took place yesterday,
what happened yesterday on Gorman,
was unprovoked genocide.
Yes, genocide.
And that truth has been exiled from this chamber.
and the monster screaming the loudest,
the monster we've helped create.
The monster who will come for us all soon enough
is Emperor Palpatine.
Padme is, this is how Liberty dies.
Gonna just have to move down the list here.
I always think, okay, wait,
say that, say more about that.
Because you're just saying, like,
in terms of things said,
tremendously stunning, memorable things said in the Senate chamber,
this is how Liberty dies,
doesn't really rank anymore.
I was just sort of thinking about how she was like,
yeah, you know, to thunderous applause.
She's just sort of like, wow, this is upsetting and horrible and blah, blah,
but I'm like, but haven't stood up and give a speech.
Exactly.
Yeah.
The kind of like meme in the shadow versus the actual explicit saying of the thing.
Are you know, are you able to say it out loud?
She's like, oh, this is how liberty dies.
Nobody says anything.
Everyone's just clapping.
I'm like, girl, you have a microphone and a little pod thing that goes up and out.
into the floor you want to use it.
And you're going to die of sadness anyway,
so you might as well go out with a speech.
You're breaking my heart.
Let's chat briefly about the
simultaneous updating and tweaking of canon
and connection to canon
because part of the reason that we knew this speech was coming,
that we knew the Gorman Massacre was coming,
is because of established canon
in this timeline from the tell,
animated television series, Star Wars Rebels.
So this is like, I think again, like kind of simultaneously in updating, but not a
complete abolishment of, you know, that rewrite the story line that we hear in this episode
feels very purposeful because it was the only thing they were like bumped on.
Like I thought it was good.
You thought it was too much.
No, no, I mean, I thought it was good.
But I was just sort of like this, like, I think they did a pretty good job of trying to
connect the story they want to tell with the story that had already been written.
Like, I think they did a pretty good job.
But they had to, like, grind the gears a little bit to make it work.
And it doesn't actually still quite work, but that's okay.
It's okay.
Yeah, I think that, like, if you love Star Wars rebels, you know, as I do, as we do,
I don't think this, like, shatters a thing, you know, from season three, episode 18,
Secret Cargo, like a really great moment in that stretch of the story where,
Ezra and Herah and Zeb and co are specters as part of Phoenix Squadron and sync up with the Gold Squadron to receive the secret cargo and are part of how Mon gets from making the speech at the Senate to this next speech and this declaration of open rebellion.
Many of the particulars are different. Obviously, the language of the speech that we, because it opens actually with them watching like a hollow snippet of the Senate speech.
before then we hear Amman give her new speech.
We'll share a quote momentarily about the creative decision to update the text that is frankly remarkable.
But, you know, there are like plenty of things that are different.
Even like Erskine is in that episode of Rebels and he's like, we've got to get you in hiding to Shandrella.
And then obviously on Andor, that is like not the role that Erskine is playing.
I already mentioned that we see bail in many different snippets of different rebel.
across various locations in the galaxy, but he's next to Dada, not like I've got to stay at the
Senate to keep some work going here. And obviously, he could sneak away to like a secret meeting
as he has been doing for many points in time. But even like they're going to Dantuin,
that's where all of the rebel ships are going to go, et cetera. But the core thing, which is
Mon makes this speech because of what happened on Gorman and announces the rebellion, that's the
key thing. And they did preserve that. And they also explain how Gold Squad,
and our rebel characters could come into play.
So I thought, yeah, it's, it reminded, it's like there's a little bit of like a fire and blood house
of the dragon aspect to this, like especially later in the Draven Cassian conversation where it's like,
you know, what really happened and how much do we really know?
Now it's a little different if you're reading a fictional history versus watching a canon show
exploring the events.
But here's what Tony Gilroy had to say to Entertainment Weekly about this.
I was reading this like, wow.
What are they going to do?
him, he's done.
This is actually like, wild thing to say.
Because it's so easy to be like, we wanted to do it a little bit differently,
but also respect what had transpired in Star Wars rebels under Dave Filoni's watch.
But that is not what he said.
Here is what he said.
Quote, we are hijacking canon.
In canon, she's rescued by the Gold Squadron.
And the speech is they given the cartoon, which was a canonical show, brackets, is on that ship.
The ghost.
And Danny's like,
Dan Gilroy,
do I have to stick to this fucking speech?
And then he adds,
in a really sneaky way,
we're minimizing what they did
in Star Wars Rebels,
but we're keeping it consistent.
We're just saying you don't really know
the whole story of what happened.
Frankly, a wild thing to say,
but you have to admire it.
So if you have any doubt,
I've been hearing for years
that people, Lucasfilm, don't.
Outside of Kathy Kennedy,
who loves Tony Good.
Gilroy don't really like Andor and they don't like the way that people always talk about
and were being the quote unquote good one and like all that sort of stuff like that.
Sure. And I was like, why? Like a win is a win or whatever. But, you know, yeah, the Faloni Gilroy
Civil War happening inside of Lucasfilm. And like, to be fair, it's not even like really a civil war
because like it's Flonny's house to a certain degree and Gilroy just got to get away with doing
two seasons of masterful television. In a way that like I,
I have heard from so many other people who have gone into pitch Lucasolme and have not made it past the Faloni wall and Tony Gilroy sort of snuck his way around via his relationship with Kathy Kennedy.
But like, I just wish Lucasum was open to all these very exciting different ways to tell a Star Wars story because Andor is so incredible.
And I really wish that they could look at Andor, which I know is not their most popular show, but like could look at Andor and be like, wow, we want to do more.
That's what we want to do.
Like, that's, that's, I wish that were the lesson.
And I'm not sure it is the lesson.
Yeah.
But we are lucky to have Annora's out as for certain.
We are.
I also feel we're lucky to have rebels.
I love rebels.
I love And this is like,
don't make me choose between my divorce.
Yeah.
It's not.
You're right.
It's fascinating in terms of what it, like, speaks to.
Yeah, but it's just sort of like, why can't we have all of it?
And the idea that we can only have, like, sort of one narrow flavor or interpretation
of what a Star Wars story should be is.
disappointing.
Agreed. Certainly.
Mon and Cassie and Flea.
Before we do that, I just need to say that our listener,
Maddie said, the important question,
who do you think gave Mon Mothma the haircut
from when we would see her next
canonically in Rebels?
Wow. I mean, this is really like...
Because when we see her on the ghost, she's got her
sad blonde hair.
So here's what I'm going to go with.
If, I guess this will be confirmed
or denied when we watch next week's episodes,
but I'm going to go.
go with if they can change the literal things that she said, they can also change her hair.
But if next week she has that hair and she needs to by, you know, Rogue one, then we do have to ask.
Now, maybe this is part of the overall, we have the lovely, like, symbolism of shedding as they're escaping the Senate coat to be cloaked in the garb of the rebellion in Cassians, in Cassians coat.
And obviously, that's very, like, practical. We're on the run. We're going to hide you, but also symbolically rich.
maybe it's just part of the overall rebrand.
You know?
Yeah, he's like, I mean, travel, it's not instantaneous.
You can no longer wear Shendriline blue and also no more hair products for you.
Just let it flop, baby, let it flop down.
All right, let me throw this out there and answer to Maddie's question.
You know who has great hair.
Pairn.
What if?
I'm going to say Erskine.
Erskine does have great hair.
That's another thing.
Erskins hair really on display here in rebels he's wearing the helmet.
Yeah, what if instead of never.
seeing Perrin again, she's like,
listen, I know your firebrand days are behind you,
but...
Do you still have those scissors?
The clippers?
Can you give me a number four all over?
I love the idea that Erskine,
with his Bucky Barnes hair,
gave Maunae makeover.
I'm into it.
I'm into it.
I hope we find out.
Great stuff.
We do find out how Mauna escaped the Senate,
and it is Cassie and Andor,
folks. Now, this is just incredible.
Like, it's...
And also like seeing.
Sorry, go ahead.
No, go, go ahead.
Well, I already, I already called out the set, which again is a, is a real location in Spain.
But the joy of having a practical built, you know, this is a museum that they've used or science center.
Like, so the shot of the wide shot of them like running down the stairs and it's just like, this is a real place.
And they are really, this is not shot in the volume.
They're really running down those stairs at this absolutely incredible place.
and I just think...
That was fascinating.
I loved on that exterior stair shot
when they're escaping after killing Chloras.
I loved where you could see other people
who were panicking and who was just sort of like walking about slowly.
But in the other stair shot, the interior stair shot overhead,
it made me think a silo.
Like how these halls of power would be built
in a way to control your movement and slow you down.
I thought that was really interesting.
Did it make you think of Matt Murdoch non-lethaly
making his way down a stairwell?
does it's not there to kill might just dangle a few people by the netto's not kill me again
um this is obviously like a really just like exciting and propulsive action sequence how are they
going to get away people are pursuing them when when cassian kills the isb plan and mon gasps when he
kills cloris and mon gasps is like the you know how nice for you times two basically having to
confront the man gas that directly has been memed to shit in a great way and it it should
live forever as a meme because it is
extraordinary. Speaking of extraordinary,
I thought of all the things, because it's not
easy for Cassian to convince
Mon to go with him and trust him. And he's like,
Vell, anyone could say that.
Adani, Yavin.
Maybe it's just the urgency
of what unfolds in front of them that left her with no choice.
But the last part of the pitch is
I know Luton can be hard.
He does that. He does that.
He does that. When the way
he calls Ploris, when he's
like, hey.
That was a real.
That was like maybe one of the most Han moments I've ever seen for.
Yes.
Totally.
Incredible.
Really, really good.
They go to the safe house where Cassian and Bix had lived.
I like how Mon observed, like you're familiar with this place.
And Cassian shared that he had lived there.
Did you think for a second when, because the, like,
that when we see the mangled leg that it was Luthin?
Oh.
Before we realized it was Will.
No.
I was like, it's,
What happened?
Will made it back with Drenna by his side, injured.
And it is time to head back to Yavin, but not before one final exchange between
Mon and Cassian, which is not sure I can make it up to you, not sure I can never thank you.
And what does he say?
Make it worth it.
Very of a piece with win.
Win.
It's time to talk about Biggs' decision.
I loved as we watched Will unloaded and Draven and Cassie.
Cassian talk, and he asks, like, who Drina is.
And Cass says, she survived the Gorman Masker.
She'll fit right in. This is when Val checks in Melchie, and we're seeing the ranks swell.
I was thinking of Nemek again.
Freedom is a pure idea to occur spontaneously and without instruction.
Random acts of insurrection are occurring constantly throughout the galaxy.
There are whole armies, battalions that have no idea they've already enlisted in the cause.
Remember that the frontier of the rebellion is everywhere, and even the smallest act of
insurrection pushes our lines forward.
Like, you really felt that in this moment here.
I just love that.
Because Melchie, I love that.
Because Melchie was already, you know, he's in Rogue 1 case people don't know.
That's why you were so excited to see him on Arcina 5 last season.
Melshi, you're going to make it all the way to Scarf.
But.
And then no further.
I was wondering if Drina was like someone that we had like seen in Rogue 1 or something like that.
But I couldn't find anything.
but I did find some canonical evidence.
Kenagal Evans that there were Gorman massacre survivors at Yavn,
so that she is sort of fulfilling that, like, you know.
Some people survived and they came here.
Trina.
Will.
Lurt for those two.
French.
I loved on the Luthon front, too, when Cassie was like,
what is Luton and Clayah said, like, for Will to have a doctor?
Like...
Did you believe that?
Like...
Yes, only because I feel like if that wasn't, if Luther wanted something else, he would have told them.
That's always what he's done, you know? And so that's part of why it felt like to me like a little bit of a shift in a way. I'm really interested to see what that looks like for the finale next week.
Joanna, Bix and Cassian, tell me everything. How are you? Are you okay? Hold me. Can you crawl through the flank and hold me? I can't honestly can't handle this. It's too much. Am I deeply upset? Was this like kind of clear?
like I was like oh she's leaving
like it felt like that was clear
before he woke up
but I'm relieved
on the like
does Kim Kim Waxler lives
and Better Call Saul like does
Bix Colleen have to die
in order for Cassian to
be motivated in Rogue One? No
she makes this active decision to leave
and we can decide what that means for her
and as we will
but I thought it was really interesting.
We did get a really interesting long email from our listener, Fran,
who wrote in about Bix as like a little disappointed where her arc ends up here.
Fran wrote at the beginning of season one,
she was the one involved with Luthin Long before Cassie,
and then after all of her traumatic experiences,
the end of season two, episode six,
seemed to suggest that she was preparing to take a more active role in the rebellion again.
And yet in this arc, she is stuck in this lovely little forest hut on Yavin-Forman,
making tea and talking to people about her partner's career?
I hate being disappointed in the show, but I am in Bix's story.
We know she's a good mechanic.
We know she believes in rebellion.
So why couldn't she have been running a repair shop on Yavin, fixing up busted equipment and
weaponry?
Why can't she be doing field work?
It feels like an extraordinary, enormously missed opportunity, and it means her entire plot now
seems to evolve around pushing Cassian along his story.
This choice with Bix also means that Cassie is far too separate on Yavin for,
and we seem to be replaying the story where he has one foot out of the rebellion.
What happened to kill me or take me in?
We did the story with Cassian already,
and we did in Rogue One with Genaroso.
There are characters in Yavinfor who were important to Cassian
and his development into Rogue One, such as Melchie and General Draven.
And the Partcher of Bix means Cassiem wasn't even present
or seemingly especially interested in the rebuilding of K2SO.
I can't help but think that seeing Cassian and Bix in that growing community
of Rebellion would have been more interesting than what we got.
End of the email.
So on the one hand, there are ways in which I kind of agree with Fran.
And in the other hand, I will say, I think part of what she's critiquing at the end there is rather the point of Bix saying you're not in if I'm here.
If I'm here, you're not in.
And if I'm gone, maybe you will start listening to Draven.
He won't.
Bond with Melshi, bond with K2SO, be really in, fully in present in the rebellion.
Does that mean that her, and she is making an active choice, she's the one who got to.
to kill Gors. She's deciding to leave. She's making an active choice. But are all of those choices
oriented around Cassian who is being positioned as this special, important messenger? Yes. And does that
feed into some regrettable gender optics that have existed in media as long as media has been all
around? Yes. And so, like, I think it's a fair, like half of a fair critique, I would say. But I would
say that I think having Cassian distant from Yavin is in two BBI is important to see where he is
in one. And we did get another email from a listener who was like, again, how many times is Cassian in
and out? And I can kind of agree with that. But I would guess I would say the road to rebellion
is not smooth or clean or one arc up. And the way that he would be two steps forward, one step
back makes sense to me, but it does underline, I will say, we've been saying, hey, man, it should
have been three seasons or, hey, man, we would have loved five seasons. I don't think I would have
loved to watch Cassie and do this dance for five seasons. For two seasons, yeah, I'm not bumping on it,
but if this were like, I'm in, I'm out, I'm out for five seasons, that would have been, I think,
a little harder to enjoy. If that makes sense. Yeah, I think on the, like, the path isn't
linear point. I agree. And I think Cassian being a character who like asks Marva to leave,
ask Bix to leave, says nothing is worth more than that. It's actually like, it's true that he's a
fighter and he's a soldier and he's a pilot and he's a leader whether or not he wants to be.
And it's also true that when he like has someone he loves, who's the most important person in the
world, sometimes he's like, haven't we given enough? Like he's, you know, he is the guy who
said to Luton, I give you everything. And Luton's like, this is everything. And so for that to be kind of
like, Jinnerson, I guess he's not that into you, I guess is the point.
Yeah, exactly.
But he does have to like build to the point of Rogue One.
We're saying I couldn't face myself if I gave up now after everything we've now seen as part of his story.
Like, I think that will land really differently for us when we revisit Rogue One having
after we complete and or next week.
Like I think that's.
And then just more generally like, you know, we have everything inside of their relationship
and their history.
I also like, I agree.
I think it would have been great to have more time with Bix
and to know what Bix was doing
and how Bix was spending her time.
I think what we got last week on the like,
but if I'm giving up everything I want to win,
like we have to front.
That sense of clarity for Bix felt established for me, I think.
And like, then we have this interesting,
you know, one of the things Andrew does really well
where we have something inside of a relationship
that then applies more broadly
and which of these pairs,
which of these people,
who is willing to give up everything,
who thinks that they should have to,
who challenges that contention,
who says, well, if I give up everything,
what am I fighting for?
I just am like continually fascinated
in how the characters are engaging
with that idea on the show
and who's like, no.
I think similar to Gorman,
there isn't a right answer.
Like, there isn't a right answer
of like, oh, yes, you have to have relationships
or else you can't be in rebellion.
or if you're too distracted or to invest in what you personally want
and not thinking of the larger cause,
you need both, I think, inside of the umbrella of rebellion
and Cassine is not someone who can hold on to that,
that he's like in or out sort of idea.
I love, in terms of like the way this was deployed,
the fact that we like, you know, hear her speech over him running around
looking for her.
anguish-inducing.
Cards together with this
direct address to camera.
It was a real
Jonathan Demi,
iconic sort of
close-up direct address to camera,
you know,
Silence of the Lambs,
Philadelphia-esque sort of framing of her.
I thought it was so good.
Again,
in the vein of Kyle Saller,
if this is the last we see of Adreira Hona,
like,
I think she's been so good on this show.
Yeah, fantastic.
And also,
I just really love looking at her face.
And I'm going to miss her if this is always.
Me too.
Me too.
I'm choosing for the both of us.
I'm choosing the rebellion.
And when it's done, when it's over and we've won, we can do all the things we ever wanted.
Everything we know we've missed, I'll find you.
But she won't.
But she won't.
And that is genuinely incredible.
Incredibly sad.
Oh, God.
We got a little comedy at the end.
Thank God.
Yeah, just when we needed him.
K2SO has arrived.
K2 is here.
I really enjoyed when the tech,
you know, we get a lot of like the key phrases we need, right?
The cortex and impulse suppression.
But when he was like, you know, here goggles, protect yourself.
And Cassie's like, I'll just take a weapon.
And then the little gesture to the guy who then backs off of him.
Very funny.
Very good.
But yeah, like on the one hand, there's something about hearing K2SO's signature voice and the humor that like made me really, I don't know, I felt a comfort there.
But then I felt this like, just the specter of the end, you know?
Like we just are so close to the end.
That's a good way to put it.
I also think it's just like quite sad that Cassine's best friend, nope, that's going to get me kicked off the pod to say like it's a droid.
It's fine that your best friend's a droid
But like if that means like
He should have two best friends
And the other one should also be a droid
Because he should find Beech
If he has two best friends who are droids
But like he used to have a wife
And a Brasso and a mom
You know
And like
Um
Yeah
I love that K2 is here
Did you
Uh
Did you see the clip from Celebration
Where they talked about
What was on their trailers
No
They had co you know
All the actors had code names on
trailer so like spy camps couldn't identify who was on set and for allantudic's trailer it said old pal
which is so cute he's like i just thought that was so cute and dangle was like mine said carlos he was
like he was the mexican actor so they put carlos off oh my god the way he told is like really
funny um anyway old pal is here friends everywhere joe friends everywhere joe friends everywhere
We did it.
I think we have tied but not broken our record.
I think this brings us in actually just shy of a couple of House of the Dragon
episodes for last season by like two minutes.
I pulled myself this morning.
I was like, this is going to be a four-hour podcast.
We are a couple minutes shy.
I thought we might go to five.
I don't know what the fuck is wrong with me,
but I'm honestly, I think this is reasonable and frankly, like, disciplined.
Oh, God.
Joe, this was genuinely special.
True delight.
God, it's
been wonderful to watch the show
and talk about it with you.
It's deeply fucked up of Disney
that we only get
four weeks of this show.
It's not fair and it's not right.
We should have 12 weeks of this show.
I really agree.
I am also loving watching it three at a time every week.
It's like,
oh, God.
Thank you.
Not only is this a four-hour podcast,
but it's one that we moved today
and it's one that the team rallied
to figure out how to produce.
always thank you, but thank you especially today to Carlos Chiroboga, who was like, yeah, I can jump
on with you guys on a Friday. Legend icon always. Thank you to Steve Allman, who will be jumping in
on the edit after Legend icon, Arjuna Ramgapal, who literally just got back from vacation
and it's like, I'll be there, guys, to help. Our team is the best. And thank you, as always, to
Jo Mia Deneron for his help on the social. Joanna, I don't need to ask who you are. You're the love of my life.
something. This was so wonderful.
Oh my God. If I ever leave you, it won't be in a Dear John video that I've recorded for you.
Thank you. Though if I do need a good night's rest and you want to give me a very potent tea,
I wouldn't mind. That's good. Bye.
