House of R - ‘House of the Dragon’ Episode 1 Deep Dive

Episode Date: August 24, 2022

Mal and Joanna return to Westeros once again to give you their deep, DEEP dive into the season premiere of 'House of the Dragon', titled "The Heirs of the Dragon". They give their overall thoughts abo...ut this first episode and what it feels like to be back in the world of 'Game of Thrones' (07:05). Then they dive deep into the events of the episode, giving rich insights into all of these new and exciting characters (19:49). Later they offer up their own episode awards (02:44:39) and dive into book lore to give further insight into the season ahead (02:56:40). Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Mallory Rubin Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman Social: Jomi Adeniran Addition Production Support: Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, my name is Dave Gonzalez, and I haven't read any of the books in George R. Martin's The Song of Bison Fire. I'm Joanna Robinson. I've read every book in George R. Martins, a song of ice and fire. And I'm Neil Miller, and I have also read all of those books. We are headed back to Westeros to cover the Game of Thrones spin-off series, House of the Dragon. We'll be answering your question, so send us a raven at trial by content at gmail.com. Take some bread and salt and join us Thursdays on the trial by content feed, and don't worry, you're safe. The reins of Castamere hasn't even been written yet. With adults with Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis symptoms, every choice matters.
Starting point is 00:00:38 Trimphia offers self-injection or intravenous infusion from the start. Tramphia is administered as injections under the skin or infusions through a vein every four weeks, followed by injections under the skin every four or eight weeks. If your doctor decides that you can self-inject trumphia, proper training is required. Tramphia is a prescription medicine used to treat adults with moderately to severely active Crohn's disease, and adults with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis. Serious allergic reactions, increased risk of infections or lower ability to fight them, and liver problems may occur.
Starting point is 00:01:12 Before treatment, get checked for infections and tuberculosis. Tell your doctor if you have an infection, flu-like symptoms, or need a vaccine. Explore what's possible. Ask your doctor about Tramphia today. Call 1-800-526-7736 to learn more or visit Trimfairadio.com. episode is brought to you by WeatherTech. Everyone knows winter is the MVP and making a mess. You don't need Weather Tech floor liners in the summer unless you hit the beach or go camping. Then you'd want a cargo liner or a road trip goes sideways, ketchup goes rogue, ice cream drips.
Starting point is 00:01:46 Yeah, you'd be pretty happy about those weather tech seat protectors. So just to be clear as the mud, you're inevitably going to step into the summer. You don't need weather tech unless you plan on doing summer. Visit weathertech.com today. What do you see? I suppose I see us. Tell me. Everyone says Dalgarians are closer to gods than to men, but they say that because of our dragons.
Starting point is 00:02:16 Without them, we're just like everyone else. The idea that we control the dragons is an illusion. There are power men should never have trifled with. One that brought Valeria, it's doom. If we don't mind our own histories, it will do the same to us. Targaryen must understand this to be king, or queen. To the ringerverse,
Starting point is 00:03:06 here on the Ringer podcast network. I'm Mallory Rubin, and it is my absolute pleasure to invite you not only back to the Red Keep, but to join us on the Ringer's Nexus podcast feed for all things fandom. Here with me today, now that she's reminded me,
Starting point is 00:03:29 that we must all mourn in our own ways. It's my house of our Mark King title. Co-host, Joanna Robinson. Molly, I don't know if you heard, but the hierarchy of power in Westeros is about to change.
Starting point is 00:03:51 Oh, my God. Incredible stuff. I love it. Some real crossover merch potential right there for us. I'm into it. very into it. We are here today, at last, to chat about the long-awaited House of the Dragon premiere,
Starting point is 00:04:10 The Ayrs of the Dragon, written by Ryan Condal, directed by Miguel Sapotchnik. Now, before we mount Caraxis, Caraxis, Vega, into our deep dive. We have some programming reminders for you. Talk the Thrones is back. now as a pod, now right here on the Ring ofverse,
Starting point is 00:04:32 every Sunday night after the latest episode of Hot D-Raps, Lord Commander Chris Ryan, Master of Whisperers, Joanna Robinson, and I will be there in your feeds. Chris and Andy will also be with you on Sunday nights on the watch, broadcasting live from the street of silk. I'm excited for them to Google that and discover what that means. Do you have to listen to that podcast? glimpsing it through a gauzy curtain or some lattice work.
Starting point is 00:05:06 Latus work for sure. Absolutely. And then, as you know, if you're listening to this podcast today, Joe and I will be with you here on Tuesdays for our House of Our Deep dive. Deep, deep, deep. And then Joe will be with Neil and Dave on the trial by content feed on Thursdays for even more House of the Dragon. Goodness. This mailbag, lore looks, book talk. It's all coming.
Starting point is 00:05:35 It's all coming. If you're wondering, are there going to be any podcast about things other than Westeros? The answer is yes. The Midnight Boys will be with you tomorrow right here on the Ringervverse. Then we will have another She-Hulk pod on the feed this Thursday. And then at the end of the week, Friday, Joe and I will have a very special Rings of Power preview for you with. a very special guest.
Starting point is 00:06:02 We are incredibly excited. I'm so excited for that one. Oh, boy. How can you follow all of that? You might be wondering. And we're glad you asked. You can follow it by following the pod on Spotify or wherever you get your podcast. And by following the ringer versus myriad social feeds were everywhere.
Starting point is 00:06:21 We've got updates for you. Jomi will have memes for you. Video breakouts. It's all coming. Last programming reminder note at the top here. is, as always, our friendly neighborhood's spoiler warning, which is multifaceted today. Today's podcast will, of course, feature plot details
Starting point is 00:06:43 from the series premiere of House of the Dragon. That's a given. We're talking about everything that happens in this episode. Got it. We will also be accounting for plot details from the entire television series Game of Thrones ever heard of it. Anything that happened in Game of Thrones on the table. We got an email from someone who said
Starting point is 00:06:58 that they're watching House the Dragon without watching Game of Thrones. But said, don't worry about spoilers, obviously. Like, obviously, this is what I'm sent up for. But I think it's a wild ride and I'm excited for that person. I love it. I love it. On the book front, we will, throughout our chat today, be incorporating book canon from George R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire saga.
Starting point is 00:07:21 And we will be pulling from Fire and Blood the historical fictional tomb, fictional history, on which this new television series is based for lore insights and historical context and parallels, all that jazz. The first portion of our podcast today will not feature any future plot points from Fire and Blood. We are not telling you what is going to happen later in this story. We will be talking about later Fire and Blood events
Starting point is 00:07:52 in a separate, dedicated section at the end of this podcast that we will clearly announce and demarcate for you before we get there. because one of the things that we are looking forward to doing is exploring how the show is setting up what we know will unfold. But that will be a separate thing. You don't have to worry about dodging in and out of sentences. We'll signal that when we get there.
Starting point is 00:08:12 Anything else that you wanted to mention on the spoiler warning front show? No, you covered it. Shall we begin? Let's do it. Now it tends. Yeah, let's channel our best Arthur Dane and young Ned Stark voices here. Okay. We are going to open, as we often do, with a quick snapshot.
Starting point is 00:08:35 Joe, let's rally the realm. Great stuff from Steve. Steve is pulling out all the bells and whistles. And wait, wait, Steve, do you have a Malloruban Dragon scream for me? I might, but I think that comes at a later time, at a later segment. Oh, boy. I can't wait. I'm so excited.
Starting point is 00:09:04 Oh, my goodness. Okay. Well, I have a very just kind of broad and sweeping big picture question for you, Joe, which is, how does it feel? How does it feel to be back in Westeros? So you and I have been like sort of dipping our toes into this for a little while since we got to go see the premiere a little while ago. We've been covering the trailers. But nothing really prepared me for how it would feel Sunday night. And I texted you that I felt giddy, which was true. It was just so exciting for everyone to be watching.
Starting point is 00:09:35 You know, now we know some of the numbers, like huge numbers, biggest HBO premiere ever. Ten million. 10 million people. And so you could feel it in the air. And by the air, I mean, Twitter. Like, it was just, like, helpful. Everyone was watching the episode. I was so excited.
Starting point is 00:09:56 So, yeah, like, the feeling of being back here with all of our listeners, with you, getting to talk to Chris, getting to talk to all kinds of folks from the, like, you know, Thrones blogosphere. It was just true, true joy, exhilarating. like writing writing bear back on a dragon Mallory Rubin how has it been for you?
Starting point is 00:10:21 I feel the same way exhilarating is the exact word that I would use it's just a thrill it's a thrill to tap back into the not only joy that I as a person who loves watching this story and reading this story feels being back in this world
Starting point is 00:10:35 but that shared community around the story to like feel that spring up again in real time was was a thrill. It really was a thrill. And I feel a sense of euphoria that we are just now at the beginning, the dawn of a new shared experience
Starting point is 00:10:54 and a new shared ice and fire journey. I couldn't be happier. I'm so excited to talk about this show every week. I'm so excited for all of the other spinoffs we're going to get. George is just back out there on the interview circuit talking about this epic sprawling yarn that he has spun. What a time to be a Game of Thrones fan.
Starting point is 00:11:15 I am hyped. I was wondering, Joe, if... You know, again, we've talked about this on prior pods, but for anyone who's just joining us today for the first time, you could give people a quick snapshot of your relationship, specifically to Fire and Blood. Yeah, it's interesting.
Starting point is 00:11:34 When Fire and Blood came out, it was before the end of Game of Thrones, a TV show. And when I remember the first time I read it, I was really just doing that like eagerly minding it for any hints of what's to come. You know, it's like, oh, good Queen Alicane like flew over the wall. What she see there? Like, what's going on? So that was my first read of it was sort of, you know, in the, like speed reading it in the context of that. And then later going back through it and really enjoying it and enjoying all the like details that like the reason.
Starting point is 00:12:09 The reason it's taking George R. Martin so long to write his books is because they're so intricate. And I really love Fire and Blood. I don't think it's required reading for this show at all, nor did I think a song of Ice and Byer was required reading, but I think it enhances your enjoyment. And this one is, Fire and Blood is, as you say, it's much more of a history. You've talked about this a couple times. It's more of a bare bones story. You'll have like a sentence in the book will be a whole entire long scene in this. first episode. So that's sort of what we're dealing with here. It's a different relationship than a song of ice and fire was. And then also, as we've talked about a couple times, crucially, this history written by an archmaister from various sources, some of them unreliable, or maybe all of them unreliable. It's hard to say. But basically, you know, the narrator of the book will
Starting point is 00:13:05 lay out a scenario and will say, so-and-so killed so-and-so. so. Or did this person kill that person? Or did this person kill that person? Or did they just fall out a window by accident? You know? And so there's there's about nine different versions of all the different twists in terms of the events. And what the people behind this show, Miguel Sapachnik, Ryan Condal, and Georgia Martin himself have said that this is supposed to be what we're watching here now, the definitive history. So it'll be really interesting to compare which route they choose through this story that is like almost choose your own adventure levels of of twists and turns available to them to get to the end goal, which is, you know, this big
Starting point is 00:13:47 Targary and Civil War. Well, you had a brilliant idea to do some tail-of-ta-tape tracking over the course of our adventure here, you know, is this a point for mushroom? Is this a point for Eustace, etc? The unreliable narrator aspect of reading Fire and Blood is so entertaining. And it is a really exciting thing at the beginning of this new show because we, have these beats and this sense of key events, but so much room,
Starting point is 00:14:16 not only for the definitive account, but for all of those moments that we as Game of Thrones fans are so drawn to in love, the conversations in between, right? The relationships, the bonds that people forge, that lead them to make certain decisions in their lives. I think that Fire and Blood is really fun to read.
Starting point is 00:14:37 Like, it's a credit to George as it always is. how captivating it is given the, this is a Targaryen history, nature of the pursuit. I have never felt that House Targaryen is the house in all of the Canada that I am most personally interested in. But when you read Fire and Blood,
Starting point is 00:14:58 you can't help but fall under the spell of the intrigue. And there are so many different mesmerizing characters. characters and dynamics and crucial moments across the run of this dynasty and thus this essential stretch of West Jersey history. And it's just really exciting to see this part of the timeline fleshed out in full on screen. So I am very excited.
Starting point is 00:15:27 I'm very excited. I think the key part of this section specifically, because you mentioned Mushroom is one of the sources. And he's a shout out Mushroom. Yeah. He's a fool. He's like a, you know, he's a fool in the. court. And he's like a, and he's very bawdy. And so all of his versions of every story are very
Starting point is 00:15:43 salacious. But I really like this line from fire and blood where, where it says, what happened in the years that followed happened behind closed doors in the privacy of stairwells, council rooms and bedchambers, and the full truth of it will likely never be known. Until each be oh now. Until now. Until the streaming wars necessitated IP expansion. We're here for it. Also, even just that, even just what I did, which is pick up a physical book on my desk and open it to read a line, makes me really excited. It's part of, like, why I'm so thrilled to do this with you, Mallory, because... Same, pal.
Starting point is 00:16:19 It's book talk. No spoilers. I'm overjoyed. Okay, before we get into our episode Deep Dive. Yeah. Your quick overall impressions of this premiere. Yeah, I really liked it. I think we're really nervous going into it because we knew we were going to cover it no matter what,
Starting point is 00:16:35 and what if we didn't like it. Oh, no. And so we really, we liked it. We walked out of that premiere really liking it. And that's exactly where I'll put it, which is like really liked it. But in the rewatch that you and I have done, I don't know if you experienced this, but like, I think Early Thrones is a masterpiece. And I don't think this show is quite a masterpiece yet, but it has so much that I really enjoyed and a lot of room to get there if it wants to. Game of Thrones is a show that I think came out like so hot and strong.
Starting point is 00:17:07 and then burned out. And if this follows a more traditional TV path where, like, season one is where it's fully finding its voice and its footing, and then it grows and grows from there, that's a more ultimately satisfying trajectory, perhaps. So I like it, and I'm really eager to eventually love it. And even just preparing to talk about it with you, may me love it more, digging into the corners and the details and the nuance
Starting point is 00:17:32 made me love the episode more. How about you, Ma'am? Just hearing you say hot and strong, makes me think of breakbones, you know? Harwin, hot and strong. Your break bones, sure. I love it. I really, really, really enjoyed the premiere, you know,
Starting point is 00:17:52 this melding of these familiar touchstones and these fresh new things felt really well balanced. I thought it was a smartly structured and crouched. episode in terms of orienting Thrones fans, but also giving us a sense of the new story that is about to unfold. I think that Ryan Condal's writing and just, you know, hearing him give interviews, reading his interviews, he's just such an incredibly passionate fan of the story and has such a real grasp and mastery of the world that George has built. And that's always a starting point that gives me, like, great peace and comfort as a fan and as somebody who cares
Starting point is 00:18:40 deeply about the story. It's like being shaped by somebody who feels that way, too. And I think you could really feel that in the first episode. The score, you know, the beats of the familiar, iconic score, again, blended with these new notes and this new composition. Sopachnik, who was responsible for some of the most fabled and iconic Thrones episodes at the helm directing this, of visual signifiers. This is an incredibly, incredibly well-acted episode. And the cast is sensational.
Starting point is 00:19:16 I mean, we were ready to just be bowled over by Matt Smith, Zaman Targaryum. And we were. We were right there in the joust. Ready. Ready for the charge. And it was fun to have the payoff.
Starting point is 00:19:36 of the performers that we were really anticipating and knew we're going to be great and then to see how great they were. But also, like, I was just blown away by Millie Alcock, for example, young Reneera, who was not a performer I was nearly as familiar with, obviously, as Matt Smith. And to see their performances shine,
Starting point is 00:19:57 particularly in the kind of thrown scene and setting that we are so partial to, the conversations in L.A. room as our guide, Tyrion Lannister would say so much of this episode was character-focused and intimate in that way. And that really gripped me immediately and gave me a lot of hope for how this dance of the dragon saga is going to unfold. So I am hyped. I am ready to go beat by beat with you right now. In our deep dive here today, we're going to go chronologically through the episode. Of course, there will be spots where we move around in time, but we're mostly going to
Starting point is 00:20:36 follow a chronological order as we go through the episode here. In future weeks, we might go character by characters, storyline by storyline. But today, day one, episode one, we just, we don't want to miss a thing. Honestly, there's just so much to talk about. In the, the immortal words of the barred, Aerosmith. Don't want to miss the thing. Let's do it. Steve, did you have that cute up on your soundboard? Were you ready for an Aerosmith bench? For Stephen Tyler? Sound cute. Next week, I promise. Oh, boy.
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Starting point is 00:21:48 This episode is brought to by Whole Foods Market. Spring is here, so celebrate it with fresh, juicy, seasonal produce, and some very tasty, limited time flavors. New Whole Foods, Market Peach, Apricot, Rose, Italian soda. Perfect for a picnic or brunch, as is their trending mango, Yuzu, chantilly cake. But if you're on the go, new 365 strawberry pretzels make a great sweet snack. That sounds delicious. Get savings with yellow sale signs storewide and everyday low prices on 365 brand items. Enjoy the fresh flavors of spring. Save at Whole Foods Market.
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Starting point is 00:23:22 That is a genuine sound of like joy and despair, strangulated joy and despair that Mallory Rubin made in anticipation of covering the series. Oh, my God. Thank you, Steve. You're incredible what you do. Remarkable stuff from Steve Aldman. Steve Allman, the old king here at the ring ofverse. And that brings us to the great council of 101AC, the opening prologue for this episode. in Heron Hall, of course, makes us think of season two of Game of Thrones,
Starting point is 00:23:59 all of our wonderful time there with Aria and Tywin, this melted fortress. You think right away of Agon's conquest, his defeat of Heron the Black, those melted towers, a testament, the state of Heron Hall now to the might of the dragons. There's also just the practical need to find a place that could house this many people for the Great Council. But what a fitting setting it is. How did you feel about the choice to start the episode here years before the events that are the primary focus of the episode? Great counsel. First thing you see.
Starting point is 00:24:35 Yeah, it's really interesting. It's interesting in conversation with Game of Thrones where Weiss and Benningoff were so resistant to anything resembling a flashback. So much so that they cut stuff from the pilot episode of Ned's brother and dad and their death. They cut that flashback. and they didn't go to flashbacks at all until season five. And so Ryan Connell has said his interviews, and I think in the after episode, he's just like, I love a prolog. I don't know what to tell you. So, yeah, it's a little prolog.
Starting point is 00:25:07 And it just feels a little bit more, to your point about Condal's kind of fandom or Martin's involvement, hopefully only to the benefit of the show, this is, like, I think a very Martin way to start things. that Martin would be like, well, we have to say the Great Council of 101. How can we see what comes after we don't see? And I think it's important to have it here because it sets an interesting precedent in terms of succession. They could have had people talk about it. But to show it, to show Rainies there and her disappointment, to show Vassaris there, to show Vesaris's wife, Queen Emma there, who's hugely pregnant with a baby that does not make it if we're doing our math correctly. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:25:52 That's one of the many pregnancies that she's talking about that doesn't come to term. And so all of those pieces in place there. And it gives you a very deep sense of all this has happened before and will happen again. Yeah. Shout out Battlestar. How about you? Yeah, I just thought this was perfect. I mean, frankly, I would have been content with an entire opening episode focused on the Great Council.
Starting point is 00:26:19 I love the Great Council. I think it is fascinating and delicious, and so much of what spawns in the story connects to what happens here. You know, in our preview pods, we've both quoted this line a couple times from fire and blood that is the line that sets off this stretch of fire and blood that covers this stretch of the story. The seeds of war are oft planted during times of peace. So it has been in Westeros.
Starting point is 00:26:45 This is an essential thing that, you know, they don't call Jaharis the first Targaryen, the old king and the conciliator just for shits and giggles. He lived a really long time. He reigned for decades and it was a peaceful reign. So you pair that with some of the insights that we got in this opening voiceover about how the Targaryans are at the height of their power here, an idea that is then reinforced with what we see in the opening sequences, but also complicated with the nuggets that we hear about the state of King's landing at the time, the disrepair that the city in which they rule is falling into, in those days, House Targary and stood at the height of its strength,
Starting point is 00:27:30 we hear, with 10 adult dragons under its yoke. No power in the world could stand against it. King Jiharis reigned over nearly 60 years of peace and prosperity. Well, we don't linger for long in the good times, because what's the concluding very, ominous note of that opening prologue, the only thing that could tear down the house of the dragon dun dun dun, was itself. I thought that this was really the perfect choice for the opening of this story. And it should be said that, like, King de Harris, for all that he's a peacetime king, he's a peacetime king,
Starting point is 00:28:13 because he can smell his stuff on the wind. And it's not, it's not there was a thought of war in fire and blood. It says that Corlis Valerian was amassing ships in defense of, you know, the claim of his family, which is slightly different in the books, but like the claim of his family. And it says, well, hot-tempered and quarrelsome damon was gathering support for his brother, right? So like already the sides are building up their pieces on their ends of the chessboard as we go. into this. And so it's not, it's not, will there be a war? It's the war is starting. Let's head it off at the past year. Right, right. Absolutely. And there is the crucial element here, this tone-setting element
Starting point is 00:28:55 for the episode and for the series for the story, this decision, the choosing of Viseris, cements the precedent that the succession will move through the male line. Rainis, a woman, would not inherit the Iron Throne, we hear the lords instead chose Vissaris, my father. So when you look at Reneas Targaryen, and you just alluded to some of the tweaks from the book to the show here, the 14 claimants, the finalists in the show here are Reneas and Vassaris going head to head. Lenore, Corliss and Rene's son, is the finalist in the book, and that's sort of how Reneas's claim is continuing is through her male heir. And that is one of the rejections and resentments that Corlis carries with him. But Renice had been slighted before, which is an important thing
Starting point is 00:29:55 to mention, the second quarrel. Something that we love. This is just a great Georgeism. The second quarrel, it's just incredible stuff. George, you did it again, buddy. The queen who never was, as we will hear Renice referred to, later in the episode. Shout out the Baratheans. Stirring the shit already here on day one. Yeah. Just shit talking on attorney ground. I mean, we're better, honestly. You got to bring the trash stock out of the attorney fields. Amen was initially Jaharis's heir. When he died, Baylon, the second son, was chosen as the new heir over Rainis, who was Amon's daughter. That was considered, again, a cementing or an initial solidification of the necessity of a male inheriting
Starting point is 00:30:50 the throne, but also sparked a lot of this resentment for Renice and not just Renice, which is key. Here's a quote from fire and blood. The most prominent dissenter was good queen Alassane, who had helped her husband rule the seven kingdoms for many years and now saw her son's daughter, by the way, Alessane and Jan Harris, siblings, in case you're wondering, shout out the Targaryens. now and always. And that way, that's the last moment of incest of the show, right? Yeah, well, and we'll never come up again. We wanted to mention that here because we're never going to talk about the incest again while we cover hot D. Correct.
Starting point is 00:31:23 Oh dear. Dear. Damn me. Now saw her son's daughter being passed over because of her sex. A ruler needs a good head and a true heart, she famously told the king, a cock is not essential if your grace truly believes that women lack the wit to rule. Plainly, you have not. no further need of me. And then good Queen Alessane. Fuchs off. Peace out.
Starting point is 00:31:45 Fucks off for two years. And it's called... Amazing. It's like a quarrel. Love that it's called the quarrel. And then they're reunited after two years, but like it was never the same again between them. Yeah. Because of this, because of what happened.
Starting point is 00:31:59 And I think what's so interesting... Those are those seeds of war. I think what's so interesting about that is that it's... So, Rainees, Eve Beth, with her really good... cool, insane defying gravity wig, right? Gets passed over twice. In the book, the second time that she gets passed over, I love that it. It's her son that's up for the gig here, the second time.
Starting point is 00:32:24 And they're like, no, not even a man from a woman is going to hop the line here. And there's so many, like, excuses, right? Oh, he's seven. Yes, Saras is 24 up. The Sarah rides Blerian, the tread. But what I loved about that, is that like Vesaris wrote Balearion, but then he didn't ride a dragon again after Balearion.
Starting point is 00:32:46 That line to me about that he wrote Balearine and the never another dragon, whereas Lenore was a dragon rider, that to me seemed a mark against Vassaris. And also we should say that in the books, there's like Vesaris's uncle Vagon, the dragonless, is one of the, like he is actually the most, like the best claim.
Starting point is 00:33:07 He's the third brother. He's the best claim. But George has this such shade for someone of Targaryen who never had a dragon. He says his very existence had largely been forgotten by the seven kingdoms. And he was just like, even as a child, he was never very popular. Like nobody cared for him. He was a Targaryen without a dragon. What's a Targaryen without a dragon?
Starting point is 00:33:29 And so that's like, that's a little like ding on Vassaris too, I think, because this whole question of Vassaris was a dragon rider, wrote Ballerian the Black Dred, one of the biggest most famous dragons and all of Westeros. and then he didn't anymore. I sort of like, hmm, okay, Baceres. Like, what's a Targaryam without a dragon? I have questions. Certainly no accident that many of the crucial moments in the episode that we will be breaking down later, crucial lines in the episode that we'll be breaking down later
Starting point is 00:33:53 are uttered in front of Balearion's skull. Looms Lodge. Any other great counsel thoughts? I mean, we could talk about the great counsel for hours. It's a rich text, but it really is the tone-setter. It is funny in contrast to those other scenes that are like based off one sentence in the book. This is many graphs in fire and blood.
Starting point is 00:34:12 And it's like it took a year and a half for thousands of lords to assemble. Some of them got there after the voting. It already happened. You know, there's a whole cottage industry that crops up around Harren Hall because people basically live there for half the year.
Starting point is 00:34:25 So, yeah, it could have been a whole season of the Great Council of 101. But a very satisfying prologue, I thought. I agree. Last thing I'll say is I think that it's smart to, make this Vesaris versus Renice in this and not get into all of the Lenore dynamics because it focuses things while keeping the central motivations and upshots of the decision in play
Starting point is 00:34:53 and really does zero in on the gender politics that defines so much of this episode and the story moving forward. So very, very smart. We go from there to a good. To a good. Golden Targaryen sigil. Censure on our screen. And that's it. No opening credits. Though, we have since learned via many news report
Starting point is 00:35:22 that they are coming. They're just not in this first episode, but we will be getting them. Winter and opening credits are coming. We got an email about this. So I'm going to go to our first email. You want to send an email to us? Hobbits and dragon.
Starting point is 00:35:44 at gmail.com. We got a ton of great emails. We're going to sort of pepper them throughout here. This one comes from Larry. And it's actually a sentiment and I've seen repeated all over the place, which is, is the reason we don't have an opening credit sequence because Viseris hasn't finished making the little models for it yet. Great, great email, great joke. Incredible stuff. Quick point of clarification as I push my glasses up my nose. The model that Viseris is building in his bedchamber is old Valeria. It's not Kings Landing. Though we could have the camera swooping around Old Valeria for the opening credits, it doesn't make a ton of sense to me necessarily. But maybe, maybe we'll get his model, or maybe we'll get the revamped map, because I do think the map was
Starting point is 00:36:30 hugely helpful to people every week. Granted, it's going to be a lot of Kings Landing. Just brace yourself for just circling the Red Keep, but maybe we'll get... But we could go like chamber to chamber. You know, we zoom instead of from one kingdom to another, right into the tapestry of the dragons, fucking the people and the orgy. Great. So many possibilities. Love that for us. But I think it could be cool to, I love the clockwork aspect of the original map, but it could be cool to make it look more like the model that Vesaris is building here. So maybe.
Starting point is 00:37:06 But that is old Valeria. I love the model. I loved the stone. Totally a model. And I had like a real, wow, Vesaris, just like me, sitting in my room late at night, building a Lego model. Do you two wear a voluminous, like, nighty while you do it? Yeah, just a very loose hanging night shirt. Great.
Starting point is 00:37:34 Love that for you. No, as you know, because you see me in my pajamas on almost every Zoom, I wear Nike yoga pants and Game of Thrones t-shirts. You have like a wide array of Jim Jams, though. You're like the Jim-Jam queen, honestly. Wow. Thank you. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:50 Mother of Dragons and Queen of the Jim Jams. Yeah. We'll add it to your resume. Oh, God. We then go from the golden Targ Sigil into this
Starting point is 00:38:07 opening title card. Quote, it is now the ninth year of King Viseris I first Targaryen's reign. 172 years before the death of the Mad King, Ares, and the birth of his daughter, Princess DeNaris Targaryen. And then a lot of the words fade and it goes to 172 years since DeNaris. We are leading into establishing the time frame. But again, that's Danny's birth, not the end of Game of Thrones, in terms of the 172 years.
Starting point is 00:38:43 In case anyone was wondering about that, even though it clearly says the birth right there. Did you think we needed that? Like, what was your feeling in general on that very overt tie to Danny in the original show timeline? Is that just a purely helpful and reasonable thing? Did it feel like unnecessary?
Starting point is 00:39:06 I felt like you and I didn't need it, but I felt like some cash viewers might and that's fine because cash viewers are viewers too, and they, you know, they need their hands held sometimes and maybe they haven't been pouring over books and trailers and stuff like that. And so they just fired up the old HBO Max
Starting point is 00:39:22 and it crashed. Then they fired it up again. And they were like, wait, where are we? When are we? And there's a handy little title card for them, you know? On the timeline matter. Yeah. We can only work off of what we know
Starting point is 00:39:35 inside of this first episode. But already there are a couple small book versus show distinctions, which is a very normal thing in a Game of Thrones adaptation. You know, many of the characters in the original show were aged up. Thank the gods. And here, you know, in Fire and Blood, we know that the Great Council is 101, and then Vassaris and Harris' crown in 103. It is not clear if that two-year time jump happens or if when we're saying we're in the
Starting point is 00:40:03 ninth year, we're in 110 AC, and it's just nine years since the Great Council. We're either in 110 AC or 112 AC for this episode, though. That's broadly where we are. And a lot of the events that we're witnessing in this premiere are aspects of the canon that are set earlier in the book, 105 AC, 106 AC, which I think it's just worth mentioning because it's worth anticipating always that these things will slide around, which I think is fine and often actually helpful when adapting the tale. We also, given that we get this time range here, we got a lot of.
Starting point is 00:40:37 of emails, by the way, about whether there's a possibility of other Thrones connections or cameos here. So we are long in the past, and this is similar to our question about rings of power, who could possibly turn up hundreds of years in the past of a story that we're familiar with? So most of the emails we got were about Melisandra. Will we see Melisandra at some point, given how old our Bay Melisandra is? will we see the Knight King based on
Starting point is 00:41:10 the mention that we get that we will talk about at length at the end of this episode will we see Baran bopping around through time at some point of course we don't know the answer to any of that
Starting point is 00:41:21 but my question is Mallory do you want any of that interesting I don't think we should see the Knight King we'll obviously talk at length later about Viseris's reveal of Agon's prophetic
Starting point is 00:41:36 dream, but the Knight King emerging in any way in this aspect of the timeline would, I'll remain open-minded as I always tried to, but I don't think that would. Yeah, to do what? To just like walk around in a circle north of the wall? Like, what is he going to do? I think we know when winter returns. We had a whole show about it. That show began in 298 AC.
Starting point is 00:42:01 So I'm going to say no on that. Melisandro, though, I think is in play. I mean, which is fun. If our gal is 400 years old, anything's possible. I would love to see Mel. I always love to see Mel. What about King Brandon Stark himself? I'm going to go now.
Starting point is 00:42:22 Why do you think I came all this way? He says. Who do you think sent the wind? Just a gust of wind, realizing it's brand peeping on the dagger. Sure. Why not? That's no. That's a no from us then on brand. Oh, God. You know, hey, I'm ready to rock with it if it happens. I'll give it a go.
Starting point is 00:42:45 So in the book, Renira is born in 97 AC. We were discussing right after we watched, what if we're trying to figure out this exact math, what age does this make Renira? Our buddy, friend of the pod, Kim Remphro has confirmed 14 years old for Renira. And Allison. And that's a change. That's a big difference because there's supposed to be sort of like. a 10 year difference-ish between them. Yeah. Speaking of young Rainera. Yeah. We then go into the skies.
Starting point is 00:43:19 Soaring on Dragonback. Renira flying into the dragon pit above Kings Landing on Syrax, her mount. I thought this was a strong and smart way to reorient us to Kings Landing, a city that we are very familiar with, but a city that is existing here two centuries prior to the time we've previously spent there. There are some filming and technical and set differences for how this was made that maybe you can walk people through here and I think you can feel a little bit of that visual distinction as well. I also think that this really effectively established that dragons are a routine part of life in Kings Landing. But you have like, again, this very deft dissonance at play here because
Starting point is 00:44:04 people are walking through the king's landings with a dragon flying overhead and you can feel that this is a site to which they have grown accustomed, but also that there's a difference between accustomed and comfort, right? Because when Rainer actually lands in the dragon pit, we'll talk about the dragon pit more in a second,
Starting point is 00:44:21 Sir Howard Westerling and Allison Hightower are like, absolutely not. This is not for me. And we feel even with some of the people closest to Reneira, closest to the Targaryen dynasty, that the dragons are a source of supreme separation between our silver-haired rulers and literally everybody else.
Starting point is 00:44:44 Yeah, to your point about what King's Landing looks like, we should recall that in early seasons of thrones they went to Dubrovnik and other places and they were in real castles and real cities. And eventually they stopped doing that mostly, I think, to, there were some Croatian politics involved, but also I think to fend off sort of like spies on set, like leaked photos and stuff like that. So they went to like a lot of digital locations or middle of nowhere and they added
Starting point is 00:45:10 digital effects. And so this is a largely digital city. And I felt that in this opening, you know, I missed the like cobbles of Dubrovnik and stuff like that. So I think that's a big difference. We do see, as you say, familiar locations. You see you get like a, the camera lingers that like where the clip. a game bowl happened in the bells.
Starting point is 00:45:36 And I think it's interesting to think about this shot of the dragon over Kings landing. There's two references that come to mind. One is, of course, like, Dineris and the Bells. Like, you know, and there's flying over the city. Yeah. There's a strong visual connection between Dineris and Reneira here. Reneira is wearing sort of gray leathers the way that Dineris often did in later seasons and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:45:58 But also, um, Brand's vision of the shadow of the dragon over Kings Landing. You know what I mean? And so I think that's great iconography to start with because it puts us in three spaces. It puts us in dreams. It puts us in terror. It puts us in a time of peace. But with that layer of unease underneath it, I think it's really smart.
Starting point is 00:46:23 Agreed. I love the visual parallels there. How did you enjoy your time with our first dragon of the series with a beautiful golden cyrax quite visually distinct from Karaxes who we meet later in the episode unless you were Chris Ryan
Starting point is 00:46:39 who said on talking to Thrones that he could not tell these two dragons apart, iconic stuff from our guy's CR. That's not Chris Ryan's job. It's not his job to tell the difference of two dragons. I love you, Chris.
Starting point is 00:46:53 How did you take to Syrac's? Yeah, I feel like I need to get to know her a bit better to understand her personality. But I love all the trappings that come with the Dragon Writers in this. As you mentioned, the Dragon Pit, which we saw at the end of Thrones in ruins, is fully intact. We've got, we've talked about this already on a couple trailer episodes, but, you know, there's a whole Dragon Rider infrastructure. You know, you've got these, you know, handlers, you've got saddles, you've got all kinds of stuff going on. You know, just to really quickly establish for us. the dragon culture at the time and how different it is from DeNaris just trying to figure it out on our own. What the hell do I do with these things? You know, so absolutely. And we will again be taking, you know, everything in Game of Thrones into account here. And we know that this is a
Starting point is 00:47:48 prequel set a couple centuries before the bulk of the time that we have spent with these characters to date. But a thing that we know to be true is that the, not just that the dragon pit is in ruin, in Game of Thrones, but that it stands then as a symbol of the fall of this dynasty. And we have that great Danny line to John in the season seven finale where she is really grappling
Starting point is 00:48:12 with what this signifies. This place was the beginning of the end for my family, she says. A dragon is not a slave. They were terrifying, extraordinary. They filled people with wonder and awe, and we locked them in here. They wasted away.
Starting point is 00:48:27 They grew small, and we grew small as well. we weren't extraordinary without them. We were just like everyone else. And it was impossible for me not to think of that line and that moment and the importance of it when returning to the dragon pit here because while that infrastructure speaks to the power and while that idea connects to something that we will hear Reneira and Viseris discussed later,
Starting point is 00:48:49 this idea of Targaryens is closer to gods than men because of the dragons and what they represent can't shake the fact that, these signifiers of power and might and strength and the full extent of their established entrenched rain, like you see the bolt on the side of Syrax's neck. You see the saddle on her back. You see the dragon keepers speaking in Valerian, these commands, and leading Syrac's into this tunnel where we know a dragon does not belong and should not be. We have seen Viserian and Regal in the catacombs of Marine. So I again thought this was like an incredibly effective opening note to
Starting point is 00:49:35 establish that apex status and to help us recall what the long term, and again, this is like a very, very, very long term future is for this family. Well, I think it's significant, too, that they kept the dragon pit ruins there in Kings Landing. You know what I mean? As you say, as like a reminder, because Targaryen kings reigned for a while with the ruined dragon pit there. And so I think you could easily tear that down and refurbish it and build something new, but as like a cautionary tale of varying degrees of power out of control, I think is what the dragon pit represents ultimately. Present to greet Rainira, Sir Harold Westerman, and Allison Tye Tower.
Starting point is 00:50:22 Allison right away, we are leaning in to the show version of this relationship. Besties. Give the people a little snapshot of the change here because this is not our understanding of the relationship in the books. Yeah, you know, as we said, like, Rainier is much younger than Allison in the books. And while Alicent is a fixture in the court and we'll get to some of like her history with the, with Targaryen family, there's no mention of her relationship with Reneira before something that hasn't even happened yet, like later. And it's just sort of like, they're friendly enough or whatever.
Starting point is 00:51:02 But it's not these girls had a very close, you know, inextricable bond. But this episode does a lot both in this scene and then the later scenes to show them as best friends. I think it's a brilliant update on this story. I always think that women should have more friends, honestly, in stories. But I think, you know, for where everything's going, I think this is such a brilliant update. Alicent is, as you said there, for many key moments.
Starting point is 00:51:31 You know, she is dressing Reneira when it is time for the Lords of the Realm to pledge fealty at the end of the episode. We get the study time sequence, et cetera, et cetera. But she is also by Reneera's side, right in the next scene when Reneera goes to visit, her mother, Queen Emma. We make our way through Kings Landing again. We get a little bit of like a nice walking tour.
Starting point is 00:51:56 We pass a dragon statue. We make our way through the Red Keep. It's fun to see which aspects of the castle look distinct. There was just so much fire everywhere, which feels a very fitting for a Targaryian stretch here. Totally cool. Not ominous at all. Very fine. Oh, God.
Starting point is 00:52:21 The targs. The targs. Queen Emma. Yeah. Emma Aaron. Viseris's cousin. Yes. Again.
Starting point is 00:52:31 Oh, wow. Okay. Only two, though. That's just those two. It's just those two. Those two incestuous relationships and then that's it. Then we're done. This is actually the last time that we will mention incest.
Starting point is 00:52:42 Yeah. Fun fact, Mallory. How old was Emma Prezema when she married Viserius? The marriage in the books. is 93 AC and she, if I recall, was 11 years old. 11. But don't worry, the marriage was not consummated. She was not consummated until she flowered two years later.
Starting point is 00:53:05 Yikes. Like big, big yikes. My God. There's this quote from, in fire and blood from around that idea of Emma being married when she's 11. Some Masons felt she had been married and bedded too young. Some Masons were like, is that too young? But maybe that that's connected to some of the problems that she has with her births later on. Right.
Starting point is 00:53:33 Right. So obviously and thankfully aged up considerably here in the show. Again, yes. Emma Aaron, but you see the silver hair, you can tell right away. Targaryen blood. This is Rodric Aaron and Della Targaryen's kid. Emma is like Vissaris, a grandchild of Jeharis. The exchange here between Emma and Reneira is a seismic tone setter for the episode,
Starting point is 00:54:06 the season, and the entire proposition of this television show, this story. Emma says, you will lie in this bed soon enough, Renira. This discomfort is how we serve the realm. and Reneira says, I'd rather serve as a knight and ride to battle in glory. We talked about this a bit on Talk to Thrones, but it just so strongly evoked for me, Aria and the That's Not Me moment that she has in season one with Ned. And of course, makes us think of numerous women who we spent time with in Game of Thrones, Aria, Brian, Danny, Zanzah, Circe, etc.
Starting point is 00:54:40 These characters who challenge the norms and the expectations that the realm has for how they will lived their lives. When Emma says we have royal wombs, you and I, the childbed is our battlefield. We must learn to face it with a stiff upper lip. Now, of course, that is a harbinger of what is to come later in the episode. It also makes us think of other aspects of Thrones lore. I found myself recalling Leanna and the bed of blood. And what I think is really interesting in this Allison Reneura relationship is that when I first saw Alicent emerge from the little carriage she was in waiting for Reneer to get off her dragon, in that pale blue, virgin Mary blue dress looked so much like Sonsa to me, like Sonsa on the Kings Road. Sonsa, you're spoiling
Starting point is 00:55:35 everything era Sonsa wore a dress in the same shade. And so I feel like, you know, if we're setting up Reneera as an Rana. comp. We're setting Allison up as more of Asansa comp in terms of dutiful, you know, when Queen Emma says these things, you get the sense that Rainira is like, is that our duty? And then you get the sense that Allison is like, yes, that's our place in the court, you know, and I think that dynamic is really interesting. It was also just important to see the tenderness and the affection between Reneira and her mother. Like, Reneira has the moment
Starting point is 00:56:14 when she's walking in, she says, you know, everybody's focus on the babe. Who's tending to you? And she is a character who thinks that way. And, of course,
Starting point is 00:56:27 a lot of that is informed by her own experience. You know, so much of the episode is centered on Viseris's certainty that his male air is about to arrive,
Starting point is 00:56:39 including in sequences, like the scene we'll talk about next, the first small council meeting, where he's speaking about the damnable hand-wringing about to come to an end with Renera standing right there. Like, this has been a defining reality of her life. And in some ways, the obsessive focus on the pursuit of a male heir has allowed her to think about being a knight or riding on Dragonback or just never testing, I should say, about cake. the great line that we get later, the burden of rule is a new aspect of her life that comes into her reality at the end of this episode. Here, she is a character who is thinking about her
Starting point is 00:57:28 mother and whether she is okay. And I think that's a very human note in an episode that is full of a lot of horror and a lot of pursuits of ends at the expense of any sort of tender feeling or relationship or love. And so you need a moment like this as a counterweight. I also think they did a great job of in just two scenes, that one and the bathtub scene, establishing Emma as an interesting character with an interior life and her own.
Starting point is 00:58:01 Like, I just thought that they established her well so that we feel the loss of her. Absolutely. And it's a really amazing performance from Sean Brooke. Really, really amazing. We go next to our first small council meeting. We get a lot of time with Vissaris and his small council in this episode. And it's never enough.
Starting point is 00:58:23 The small council scenes are wonderful. This is so much of the throne's DNA that we long for and crave, the plotting and the scheming, every character has an agenda. How much of it can we deduce in real time? How much of it can the other characters at the table deduce? it's delicious. Equally delicious, you know, the egg that Viseras is just peeling and snacking on.
Starting point is 00:58:46 Love to just peel eggs at a team meeting. And also with a little, you know, totally work-appropriate small council meeting joke. So I sent him to end. This is how you start every ring or versus Zoom, Joe. I mean, well, you are forever peeling eggs on your side of the Zoom. So we all have our sins, Mallory, our Zoom sins.
Starting point is 00:59:10 Oh, my God. In your gym jams, peeling eggs. Yeah. Okay. Here's the biggest question out of the small council meeting. It's a question on everyone's lips. We got an email from Joshua. What were the orbs that were in front of the council?
Starting point is 00:59:26 Were they in Game of Thrones too? What are these small council balls? We find out via Hollywood Reporter article. The balls were just a cool piece of set design that basically is like punching in. You're clocking in with your small council ball. I have some follow questions about the balls. And we're going to talk about them again. I'm just going to say balls many times I can,
Starting point is 00:59:45 but also we're going to talk about it again in the book reader section. But there have different designs. My question is like, do you think you get to design your own ball? Like when you're appointed the small council? Do you design your own ball? Or if you're like master ships, you have to have, you know, the ball that looks like that. Yeah, some sort of like color coding associated with the position would track. I would like design.
Starting point is 01:00:10 my own ball. Yeah, I like the idea that it's like a pottery class and everybody gets to really like put their own personal touch on their, you know, tend to their own balls as, as people should. Yeah. Well, I'll say two things. One, great. Cool set design. It gives this counsel its own individual, visual and aesthetic flavor. Great. Cool. Cool. However, I refuse to accept that the balls will not have a role to play. I could see in a Game of Thrones tale where, you know, murder and treachery is routine. Maybe someone will bludgeon somebody else with a small council ball. Could we get a small council murder with a ball? What do you think? Your small council ball theory, which you floated to me earlier.
Starting point is 01:00:58 I bet, yes, I have another theory. is my is like I love that you have a small council ball theory and that's how I know Thrones is back yes absolutely someone could get killed with those balls and I hope that's the case because if it's just set design why is the camera lingering on them so long I know I feel like those balls have to do something here's here's a more spicy theory for you though
Starting point is 01:01:20 oh now on the one hand we know that you know Damon is left on Keraxis at the end of the episode but what's to stop our guy, Damon Targary and Prince of the City, from popping back into the small council chambers, taking those balls, and bringing him over to his next orgy.
Starting point is 01:01:41 On the street of silk or elsewhere, the boys had hero-gasm. Maybe Hot D will have small council ballgasm. Let's get him in the mix. Why not? No? Forever unclean. Forever unclean.
Starting point is 01:02:01 Unclean like Renira when she gets off a dragon. Okay, so Renira comes in Stinking You Dragon. Love that for her. But also. Multiple comments about the smell. Yeah. Also, another Aria comp is, of course, Renera acting as Cup Bear here in the Small Council,
Starting point is 01:02:15 as Ariah did in Heron Hall for Tywin. Can I ask you, though, what you think dragons smell like because it was remarked upon by both Emma and Vassaris? And it was remarked upon in a, like, you stink way. Really strong horse. Okay. Really strong horse smell.
Starting point is 01:02:30 I don't like this. I think the dragons should smell like a caramelized dessert. No, like a like a like a like a, like a, like a, smore or something, you know, they're breathing fire. That's some real Harry Potter energy from you. I don't know. I mean, the, the night's watch is burning its own dead talking about how great the corpses smell when you char something.
Starting point is 01:02:50 It smells delicious. No? I could like I could, maybe it smells like lighter fluid on a barbecue. But I don't know about. like burnt caramel. I'm sticking with it. I'm sticking with it. If that were true,
Starting point is 01:03:03 why would anybody need to be after that? You'd just walk around smelling like a wonderful candle. Sounds great. It would be like, you stink of dragon. It'd be like,
Starting point is 01:03:11 hmm, come closer. Yeah, it's like, the holidays around here. Lovely, lovely. What did you, what did you make of that Aria cup, Auer Comp?
Starting point is 01:03:19 And just the, the nature of that station for Rainier, because I think you can interpret it a couple different ways in terms of what she's privy to and also how Vassaris is thinking about her role in his life and his kingdom.
Starting point is 01:03:34 I mean, it's important to say that, you know, she's their only child. They've tried to have so many children. She's the only child. She's known at this time as the realm's delight. That's her name. The realms delight, Reneerat Targary. Her parents don't on her. Vassar's dotes on her.
Starting point is 01:03:50 And like, you know, whatever conversations we have, however much you must, you want a son. And however that makes her feel, which is. less than second class. He adores her. And there's a line in the book about how she was ever by his side because she's his cup bearer. But it just set her up
Starting point is 01:04:09 to be in a position where she knows much more about politics, etc. Because she's been in the room where it happens. Exactly. Yeah. I think that you know, maybe some people interpret that position as, you know, if you're just coming to the story as, oh, she's just there to serve the drink.
Starting point is 01:04:27 But as you said, that affection, that doting is so palpable and so central to their relationship, you know, she is like the great joy of Vassar's life and that desire to have her near and to have her bear witness. Even to the extent that it's not always a conscious thing for him, you know, you think of, of course, as you noted, Aria and Taiwan, and how much Aria, like the bonding that unfolds in those incredible all-time pantheon sequences, but also just quite literally how much Aria hears and is able to bear witness to you. because you were privy to so many consequential exchanges if you were in a small council meeting and how Reneer has just been absorbing not only information by her presence, but a sense of who these people are,
Starting point is 01:05:11 a sense of their dynamics, a sense of what they think about each other. She knows what Otto Hightower thinks about things because she has been in the room for so many of his speeches and monologues. I mean, yeah, speeches and monologues. It's a great one. It's perfect.
Starting point is 01:05:30 And I also thought a little bit about John and Lord Commander Mormont because, you know, John is, of course, so resentful of Thor's intervention and not being a ranger. But the way that Sam is able to ultimately assuage John is by reminding him that Mormont's decision to choose Mrs. personal Stewart. And yes, I understand that the cup error is not an exact one-to-one to his sort, but I think there are parallels, right? He's like, hey, dummy, you're being groomed. For command, exactly.
Starting point is 01:05:59 And so I, even though it's, it takes a while for Viseras to have the epiphany that Reneera is the right choice to rule and there is this horror, this, this, this just stretch of horror that unfolds before we get to that moment, there is not only affection, but respect in having her here. The other members of the small council quickly. Hand of the King, Sir Otto High Tower. We will be talking about him more in ensuing small council scenes. Stay tuned. Grand Mastor, Melos, Master of Ships, Corlis Valerian,
Starting point is 01:06:34 the sea snake. Master of coin, Joanna's favorite. Beesbury. Lord Beesbury. A star making turn from Beesbury in the premiere here, truly. Master of Laws, Lionel Strong, and then Damon as Lord Commander of the City Watch,
Starting point is 01:06:52 gone through other positions, coin and law previously, not always occupying his chair, shows up in a later scene, has an incredible showdown with Otto Hightower, we'll talk about that soon. We're going to talk about all these characters more, including in this episode, but that is a quick snapshot of who is here. And one of the things that we see right away
Starting point is 01:07:13 is that folks are not on the same page in terms of just what is the priority of the moment. Corliss is efforting to focus the conversation, and the attention on the threat of the triarchy in the stepstones. Everybody else just wants to talk about Damon and the city watch, which we'll return to, or planning the airs tourney, including Viseras, who is very excited to focus on the airs torny. Corliss keeps trying to return to Chekhov's Stepstones, Chekhov's Triarchy, check.
Starting point is 01:07:51 striarchy, Chekhov's Scrabfeater. What did you think of the emphasis on this? Well, we should talk about Corlis Valerian because it's a very interesting figure.
Starting point is 01:08:00 In Fire and Blood, Martin pauses for like several pages to talk about Corlis Valerian. But it's important to know that Corlis is kind of a self-made man. Like House Valerian
Starting point is 01:08:11 existed. The Valerians were from old Valeria and they're really hitting that Valerian pronunciation so we don't confuse it with Valerian. But House Valerian, You wouldn't want to have any confusion between similar-sounding names in House of the Dragon.
Starting point is 01:08:27 What would we do then? Agon's thick on the ground. But anyway, House Valerian came to Westrose before the Targaryens. But they weren't a rich house, at least not of late, until Corlis Valerian in his youth, via sailing the high seas, working the trade routes, all this sort of stuff amasses this massive fortune. And I think it's really interesting that only recently the Valerian's eclipsed House Lannister, we know that they're rich, and House High Tower, Otto's house, as the richest house in the realm. And so if you're looking for some of the source of the tension between Otto and Corliss, I think this idea that Corliss is like, I'm now the richest bitch in the room is part of it.
Starting point is 01:09:14 The High Towers were the richest. Now they're like second or third on the list. And then also it's a fun adaptive change to have Corliss on the council here because Corliss actually quit the council the first time his wife was passed over for Queen. He was so pissed off. Or in Martin's word, Roth, that he fucked off the small council. And he was like, no, thank you. I'm out. I'm out of politics.
Starting point is 01:09:39 You guys are sexist bastards. But there's this other great line about Corliss that I loved because, you know, they were saying that Martin says that House Valerian. Targaryans control the sky. House Valerian controls the seas. Right? And so it says, of Corlis Valerian, his sons and daughters would soar through the skies because they're half Targaryen. Lord Corlis expected and one day one of them would sit the Iron Throne.
Starting point is 01:10:03 This is his expectation, his ambitions for his children. And so, but that key part is he's made his own fortune. He's like Nouveau-Riche, right? He's relatively new on the scene. But it all depends on the sea. and the trade routes and all of that going according to plan. And so this fraca in the step zones is threatening to fuck with this fortune is essentially what's going on. If those shipping lanes should fall, it will beggar our ports, he says.
Starting point is 01:10:34 And that is a personal concern in addition to being a concern for the realm. Yeah, that sky and sea quotes is a great one. And, you know, it is worth noting that even though they came from old Valeria before the Targs, this is not a dragon riding family in history until the union here. And I think it's interesting. I mean, I could be wrong and up my own ass about this and sometimes I am. But, like, you know, there's been conversations about, like, the fact that they cast the Valerians, as a non-white family, right, which is a difference from Thrones, a welcome, like,
Starting point is 01:11:13 influx of non-white faces into the cast here. Yeah. But I don't, I think some people are calling it colorblind. casting, and I'm not sure I would call it exactly colorblind, because I do think there is some of this, like, again, Nouveau-Rish, not quite one of us, vibe that hangs around Corlis that, like, I think interacts with the way that they decide to cast this family, of, like, Auto High Tower, feeling much more like he deserves to be there than Corlis because the history of his family. So, I don't know, I haven't read any interviews where they talked about that, but I thought that was kind of a Well, we'll chat more about Otto and some of the dynamics that he has with the other characters in a subsequent small council scene. But we go from this first small council meeting to Renira greeting Damon. Sir Harold Westernling takes her there. And again, we have a couple sequences in this episode. A few. We have the Dragon Pit one, this, her asking him about Sir Carson Cole later at the tourney, really establishing Westerling as Renera's close confidant, always present in her life, aware of her. her secrets because Viseras doesn't even know that Damon is here, but Westerling is taking
Starting point is 01:12:24 her there, building up this familiarity. Who trusts whom? You know, this is an establishing opening note of consequence. And a much better, like a much better, so this is Graham McTavish, who a lot of people know from Outlander. Yeah. Yeah. Extremely handsome, distinguished man.
Starting point is 01:12:40 I will say, Lord Harold Westlerling is such a better, like, confident. Because when she turns to him at the tourney, it gives me Sonsa and Littlefinger at the tourney, right? And so, so her getting her info from Westerling is so much better than Sansa getting her info from Littlefinger. It's not a very pleasant story. That's exactly how he said, though. I think that's the first I've ever heard your Little Finger impression. Well, everyone's different because every episode, Little Finger had a new accent, you know, part of the fun. That's true.
Starting point is 01:13:17 When we enter the throne room, we see not only this more book-accurate Iron Throne, which we've chatted about before, the statues of Targings of Old on the pillars, but we see Damon Targaryen seated on the Iron Throne, establishing the rogue prince energy that we need right from the jump. We get an instantly iconic, gods be good, from Western. when he sees this, which killed me. It's so funny. And this, this palpably evokes Jamie Lannister and Ned discovering Jamie in the throne room.
Starting point is 01:13:59 It was just impossible not to think of that. And of course, a fellow rogue being alluded to there is just perfect. What did you think of our first glimpse of Damon here? Love it. Love him. Perfect. No, no. Maybe one or two notes.
Starting point is 01:14:14 Like the way he put this Valerian Steel necklace. on his 14-year-old niece. So in Fireblood, they talk about how Reniro was just absolutely captivated and fascinated by her uncle. And it says, whenever he crossed the narrow sea, he brought her some exotic gift on his return, right? So this is just he's forever bringing her trinkets. Yeah, so I have some notes about that for sure. But as we've established, there's only two instances of incest and we've already covered
Starting point is 01:14:41 them. So this is fine. Oh, God. We're fine. I do love in the, I will say in the necklace, and I love the way that he says, now you and I both on a small piece of our ancestry, beautiful, like the ties to old Valeria
Starting point is 01:14:55 and the ties to this history are very, very, very present throughout this entire episode with numerous characters, including some we'll get to later when we chat about the big Viseris reveal. They're speaking also Old Valerian. Like they are just conversing, Damon and Reneer throughout the episode
Starting point is 01:15:16 in their mother tongue, it is a casual routine part of their life and their bond. And I also thought that that was an effective establishing note. As is just showing us right away how Damon doesn't really take
Starting point is 01:15:32 any of it seriously, right? They again, don't call him the rogue prince for nothing. He calls court dreadfully boring. Who can argue? And says, I already are, Your father was hosting a tournament in my honor. The tournament is for his air.
Starting point is 01:15:48 Runeira replies, hmm, just as I said, we're getting that troublemaker, shit-stir energy right away. Just the breakout star of the episode, unsurprisingly. Damon is such a rich character. This is the perfect introduction to him. I had some people say, like, how could you love Damon when he is such a piece of shit, which she is? And I'm like, I don't know.
Starting point is 01:16:13 Jamie Lanister pushed a kid out of a window in season one episode one of Game of Thrones and I, my heart belonged to Jamie Lancaster. So like... Things we do for love, you know? You know. The things I'll tolerate for a roguish character. Oh, God.
Starting point is 01:16:30 We are next with Renera, again with Allison, studying in the shade of a wherewood tree, Joe. Tell me. An incredibly rare glimpse of a wherewood at this point in the time, down south, the bulk of them having, of course, been cut down long ago. I guess this is supposed to be a godswood. You know, it looks quite different from the godswood we're accustomed to seeing later in the timeline where Sonsa spends some very upsetting time in the wake of the Red Wedding in Game of Thrones. It was an interesting way to pluck a bit of Thrones iconography there.
Starting point is 01:17:11 also say, we're in a different point in time. This is not a set on Kings Landing it. That is exactly something you've seen before. What does you make of that choice? Yeah, I think it's interesting. The wherewood tree in when Sonsa is there is a stump, not necessarily this tree, but she's a stump of a wherewood tree. And so this idea that the religion of the north, the wherewood tree and two people under
Starting point is 01:17:39 the wherewood tree made me think of Catlin and Ned under the wherewood tree and the premiere, the series premiere of Game of Thrones. Tell me. But that idea of the old, you know, when you say the old gods and the new, like it's important to remember the old gods, the way of the north, all of that sort of stuff, the werewood tree, that was eradicated largely from the south. And so, you know, this is an interesting remnant of a religion that's not really practiced by anyone, certainly not by
Starting point is 01:18:10 Allison or by Reneura. But there's also like the wherewood tree as like a way for people, like the spy network of the wherewood tree. Like, you know, so there's you know, so there's like one in King's Landing
Starting point is 01:18:26 is interesting. Yeah, to me it just felt like they wanted there might be more explanation later, but to me it just felt like they wanted a little bit of that iconography. Like you're back in the throne's world. Here's a whereward tree. Yeah. Speaking of connecting to events from the past,
Starting point is 01:18:44 Allison is quizzing Reneira on Nymeria's arrival in Dorn. The choice to mention Nymeria here fascinating for a few reasons. There's a meta, you know, 10,000 ships, spin-off as bait-oos. Right. So one of the spinoffs that is theoretically has development is about Nymeria and the 10,000.
Starting point is 01:19:08 and, you know, all of that sort of stuff, the story you hear. So maybe we're planning a seed for the future. It's also, again, under the wherewood tree that's familiar to us. I mentioned of Nymeria, a name that is very familiar to us because of Aria's dire wolf. Yeah, of course, names her beloved wolf. But why does she choose the name Nymeria for her wolf? It is because Nymeria, this figure, is a hero to so many women in the realm and her arrival in Dorn. not only like cemented the Roinish customs in Dorn
Starting point is 01:19:43 in this real distinct way of life inside of Dorn compared to elsewhere in the kingdoms, but particularly the way that Dorn thinks differently about women in society. And we get some of that in the primary series through Oberin. Dorn accepted a woman as leader and ruler. Fun fact about Dorn at this, you know, so Dorn is not part of, you know, the realm at this point, but Dorn did send an envoy to the Great Council just to, like, observe. And they sent their princess is who they sent to observe.
Starting point is 01:20:19 And that's just like an indicator that, yeah, like women, women are allowed agency and rule in Dorn. So, yeah. Namiri, I, like, frankly, that potential spinoff is top of my list. what I would love to see. This is, of course, another aria comp, you know, in terms of, like, Alison being concerned about what the septa will think about a page. I mean, I'm actually kind of pissed that Rinera ripped a page out of that beautiful book, but whatever.
Starting point is 01:20:49 I'm not, she's, fuck the septa and fuck me, I guess, is how she feels. But also makes me think of one of my favorite scenes that's such beautiful, efficient storytelling from season one of Game of Thrones, which is Bran and Macer Lewin in episode five talking about like the houses and their words and the sigils and how much brand. Family duty, honor. Is that the right order? His mom left. He's upset.
Starting point is 01:21:15 That's actually one of my favorite brand scenes. I thought, I think it's so good. But just that like, I don't want to study energy coming off with these kids. I love it. I absolutely love it. And that's also where we get the great exchange about position. And Reneira says here, when discussing. the prospect of Asseris's heir.
Starting point is 01:21:37 I hope for my father that he gets his son for as long as I can recall it's all he's wanted. And Allison says, you want him to have a son? Roan Niro says, I want to fly with you
Starting point is 01:21:49 on Dragonback. See the great wonders across the narrow see and eat only cake. I'm being serious. I never just about cake. Me neither, though I particularly
Starting point is 01:21:57 never just about pie. Lemon cakes. You love lemon cakes. Mmm, delicious. This connects to a lot of what we already chatted about with that that's not me palpable vibe here. I'm curious for your read on how sincerely Reneer believes this. And I think that there are a lot of different complexities at play here.
Starting point is 01:22:25 But I love this moment so much because, first of all, I think inside of a great story, people's motivations can change all the time. This feels like, again, more than one thing can be true at once kind of moment. And I think that Reneira has her real hurt and sorrow and resentment for the way that her father is so solely focused on the pursuit of a male heir. And also does actually feel a passion for these certain aspects of her life.
Starting point is 01:23:00 And it makes me think of Georges. And this is, of course, not just a George tendency. It is a fantasy staple. But George's inclination to focus his stories on the reluctant ruler. You know, the character who is not on day one seeking the crown and saying, that's the thing I want, the one who comes to it because it is what the realm or somebody needed and required. And then maybe finds, again, this is a story trawling to just and across many. of our favorite tales that they are actually well equipped
Starting point is 01:23:36 for that responsibility and that burden. In summary, I don't want it. Yeah. You're my queen. I don't want it. All right. So the reluctant leader trope is so interesting to me
Starting point is 01:23:50 because I think that I don't love that George leans on this so much. I don't know that I love this for Renira. And there's more to come as we talk about the prophecy thing that's unveiled at the end of this episode
Starting point is 01:24:05 because I kind of like, like, what's wrong with a little ambition? You know what I mean? Like, there's this idea that, like, to be an ambitious leader or to feel at least that I would do this job really well, that there's something wrong with that. And I think that that's, I don't know,
Starting point is 01:24:21 I don't love that that's always the case, it seems like, you know? Yeah, I think it's a good point. Is it that there's something wrong with thinking you do the job well? Or is it that there's the distinction between that self-awareness and introspection and the pursuit of power, which connects to that auto line we get elsewhere in the episode about how the gods have yet to make a man who doesn't have the taste for absolute power. Like, you know, one of the things that I always enjoy hearing George talk about is that ruling is a responsibility and a burden. And even if you do think you
Starting point is 01:24:57 could do it well, it shouldn't be something that you seek people. purely because you are then in a position to decide on behalf of everyone, right? It should be something that you realize you have the capacity to do well and responsibly and how few people actually possess that capacity, really. Yeah. Reneer as like a reluctant leader is never really the vibe
Starting point is 01:25:22 in fire and blood. And so this is an interesting addition here. And I'll be curious to how... That's why I wanted to know how, like, sincere you thought it was. Is this kind of a... I think she, I mean, Insight or, I,
Starting point is 01:25:34 well, I think at this point, it's not even a glimmer in her eye. She's like, there's no way I'm going to be king. So let's just have fucking dragon adventures. You and me. My best bud,
Starting point is 01:25:43 my roommate, my, my pal, definitely not my girlfriend. It's fine. But I think that, and I think also this idea of her wanting a son for her father,
Starting point is 01:25:55 it's like, she's resentful, but at the same time, she's like, she's picking out an egg for her baby brother. Like I think she's excited about the idea of having a baby brother. Like this is an interesting thing.
Starting point is 01:26:06 But per Emma, she's picking out that egg for a baby sister. Oh, sure. And saying I wanted to be, her to be named Vesnia. That's true. That's a good point. So, like, I don't know. It's, um, do you think, you think she's just saying this for Allison's benefit?
Starting point is 01:26:21 No, no, no, no. I don't. I was just curious if, uh, if you thought it was possible to interpret it that way. It is. I think it is. Um, I love the. I'm a elected ruler trope, so I'm leaning in. I'm always down for more of it.
Starting point is 01:26:35 I like it sometimes. I just don't like that, like... That's fair. I like that Reneer in the book is a bit more like, I deserve this and I feel like I would be good at this. Oh, so to be clear, I am not discounting that. And I think that is, of course, an essential part of any good arc. And particularly inside of this story where so much of the realm is dead set against women
Starting point is 01:26:59 ruling, the women in question. saying, actually, I'm the one who can do this well, whether it's Renira or Renice or any number of other characters, is elemental to the appeal and the central focus. So I'm certainly not discounting that. I think that's central. That I just don't want to get lost in a whole, like, well, if I must, sort of thing. Do you know what I mean? Yeah. To go back to my pals, Allison and Renira, just hanging out like gals do under a tree, we got an email from listener Larry who asks, are Reneer and Allison lovers or nah? Lovers or nah.
Starting point is 01:27:36 I don't always pick up on unstated queer attractions, but the way they stare at each other in the first scene, the way they're sitting under the tree in the garden, with Reneer resting her head on Allison's lap is not so subtle. Also, Allison gets upset at Reneer and not taking her position seriously. It came off like a spouse upset with their partner. Isn't trying to get better their career. I guess it could be that she sees another woman not asserting herself
Starting point is 01:27:54 and is projecting a bit. Friend of the pod of Kim Renfro asked Millie Alcott and Emily Carrie, play these two young women about this, and they both said, yeah, we were playing that up. So it's not, you're not imagining it. If you see it there, you're not imagining it. It's intended in the performance. So I love it. I love it too. I love it. I dig it. Speaking of digging, let's go dig into the festering wound on Vassaris's back. What a cut. Game of Thrones never misses an opportunity to dive in, not only to the lore, but, you know, the pus oozing out of some sort of keeping wound. Very tough. Very tough.
Starting point is 01:28:39 Sarah says it's a small cut from sitting on the Iron Throne. It's nothing. The maesters can't crack this one. Sample has been set off to the Citadel for study. They're forced to suggest cauterization to heal it. Auto, very focused on nobody learning about this, nobody hearing about this. We're going to talk about this more later today in our book section, but here, I think we could just say that the idea of anybody in the realm being aware that one, there was any sort of weakness afoot in the ruler, but also, too, that the throne, this idea of the throne potentially judging you, which is a big part of canon across the various, characters and tails.
Starting point is 01:29:32 So it's not something you want people knowing is happening. And we see him slice his finger later when he's exiling Damon. So we get two sword barb cuts in one episode for our guy, Vassaris. At least two, because when we see his back, he's got other, like, scars on his body. So, yeah. And I love how the young master's like, should we cauterize it? And the older one's like, oh, yes, should we cauterize the wound, my lord?
Starting point is 01:29:56 Like. I love that because even though we do see Vassarra, later holding his hand in the candle flame for, you know, longer than a normal person would. Cotterizing the wound was a great moment for the, the Targaryens are not actually fireproof. Sure not. Cannon. So that was great. Let's chat about Viseras visiting Emma in the bath.
Starting point is 01:30:20 We talked about this a little bit already, but this is just an absolutely heartbreaking scene. She is recounting all of the children that she has lost before. She is apologizing to him for failing to give him an air, a horrible thing that she would feel like this is something she had to say. And saying to him, is this the last time? Asking if this can be the last time that they try. She says, I've mourned all the dead children, I can. So there are a few really consequential things here.
Starting point is 01:30:55 Obviously, everything we hear from Emma there. We see the real tenderness and affection between, Invis Harris and Emma, which makes what unfolds later in the birthing bed all the more painful and horrific and tragic? How did you feel about this sequence in terms of their bond? We'll talk about the dream in a second. I think it's really interesting that she says, I'm sorry. I don't think she's asking. I feel like she's telling it.
Starting point is 01:31:29 This is the last one, and we should say that, like, Moon Tea exists in Westro, so she has. has, like, you know, access to birth control. And yeah, she's like, this is it, man. So last time I put my body in a bath as the only, like, way I can feel any sort of comfort. You do get that real connection and tenderness between them. Again, this is another great performance from John Brooke to establish Emma as a character that we will miss. But I think that, and as you noted, you know, Reneira wanting a sister and wanting to do. name for Vesnia. And like, that's really interesting.
Starting point is 01:32:07 Do you want to talk about this Vescenia in exchange? Yeah. Yeah. So Vesaris responds that by saying, God's be good. This family already has its Vesenae. There's some different opinions on who this might refer to, which I think is fun. You and I had different interpretations. I was slacking with Riley and Kram about the episode.
Starting point is 01:32:22 They had different interpretations, too, which is always interesting. So who did you think that this was about? So I thought this is about Reneura. Okay. Why? Just because, so Viseña being one of Aegon's sister wives, being like a very spirited, maybe like disobedient woman sort of thing. And I don't know, I just think of cutting from Reneira saying like fuck the Seta to this eventually made me think that he was talking about Reneira. Who is your candidate here?
Starting point is 01:33:01 So I like that. My assumption was that this was about Damon. I think in part because Vecenia as the older sister to Agon the Conqueror, Renice the Younger. Again, both of them were his wives, totally normal family stuff for the turks. Just three instances of incest of the Targan family. That's right. Oh, God. So part of the reason I thought it was Damon was because there's the like sibling aspect to Viseris, maybe making that reference about his own brother.
Starting point is 01:33:40 But also there are just so many parallels between Damon and Vesnia in some ways that are quite overt. He carries and wields dark sister, Vesnia's fabled Valerian steel sword. But to that like difficult kind of difficult sibling aspect, you know, that that certainly I think fits. Damon to like the kind of troublemaker in the group. And also, you know, Vesnia, and I'm sure over the course of this season, we'll talk more about Magor the Cruel and Anus. Now, if it's, if it's Reinius, it must be Aeneas, but I will always say Anus because the fact that it's AE.N, L.
Starting point is 01:34:24 But George named a king here, Anus. Because this is hot D. We've introduced our small ball theory. King Anus. Now you're going to talk about anis, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. The second Targaryenian king. Vecenia, Magor's mother, Reynes, Anus's mother. What did you, okay, what did Riley say when you slacked them?
Starting point is 01:34:50 He thought it was about Reynese. Hmm. And Cram thought Damon. That's fun. Yeah. So a lot of different, but yeah. So Vecenia as Magor's mother, even though. So anus was the heir and the next to become king after Aegon,
Starting point is 01:35:05 Vesnia had a lot of thoughts about the succession. And so that also felt like a Damon tie. The way that Vassarra says, Gaws be good, this family already has as a Vesnia, gave me real. Also, they mentioned Damon right after that. Emma asks about your brother immediately after that, so that was the other.
Starting point is 01:35:22 When Viserra says, God's be good, this family already has as Vesenae, it gave me strong Ned Stark war was easier than daughters. But that's what I felt like to me. No, that's, that is definitely true. Viseris, speaking of his views on children, shares then the dream. Now, we have heard snippets of the stream, edited ones, though, in the trailer. We get it finally in its full form here.
Starting point is 01:35:46 This child is a boy, Emma. I'm certain of it. I've never been more certain of anything. The dream was clearer than a memory. Our son was born wearing Egon's eye and crowned. And I heard the same. A sound of a thundering hoves, splintering shields and ringing swords. And I placed our sun upon the iron throne.
Starting point is 01:36:19 As the bells of the Grand Septal, and all the dragons roared as one. Okay. So we're going to talk, I think, more later when we get to the Agonne Song of Ice and Fire Dream reveal about the Targaryens and dreams and prophecy and the role of that in this family, though we certainly can do it a little bit here too. I think there are a couple different ways to interpret this dream, and I'm curious how you did. I think that there's one interpretation that we'll save
Starting point is 01:36:48 and discuss in the book section later, and I'll say I'm partial to that one. I think there's also the interpretation here of the Agon's Iron Crown language. Again, I was chatting with Riley about this in Slack. The rubies on Agon's Iron Crown signifying, this bloody birth, the tourney, the hooves, and the shields. There is a way to read this as an in-the-moment interpretation of this dream. Is that where you land, or do you land in interpretation too, which we'll discuss later, or somewhere else?
Starting point is 01:37:23 I think that I love about dreams and prophecies is that it could be multiple things at once. And what I love about how often these ideas of... of, like, when we're talking about the Valancar, and then we talk about, like, the small hands choking, and then we're talking about, like, the Tyrion's chain, or, you know, the chain, time has changed, choking Shay. We're talking about the golden crown for Vassaris, and it's, like, molten crown that killed him.
Starting point is 01:38:01 I think there's this idea, this idea of, like, bending the idea of jewelry to fit different interpretations and lethal interpretations. I love that idea that the Ruby Crown is like the, you know, this child was born through a cesarian, bloody, disturbing. But the thing that I placed our son upon the Iron Throne, that's the part that doesn't fit unless, you know,
Starting point is 01:38:33 he did at one point put that baby on the Iron Throne before it went on the pyre. You know what I mean? And in which case, I feel like they would have shown it to us. So it feels like there's something else there. I guess you could interpret that line more metaphorically about his obsession and how he is so hell-bent in his own mind on placing their son on the Iron Throne. And the decisions that that leads him to make. And I think that that's going to be one of the real themes and through lines of our Targaryen discussion as we break down Hot D is where this belief.
Starting point is 01:39:06 in prophecy, where this obsession with dreams and with this obsession of their own status as saviors. And again, we're getting to this more when we talk about the Agon Dream later, the fact that they put so much stock in this, it leads them astray so often. And that is, again, I'm glad you mentioned the Valancourt. Like a great George and general fantasy story telling tradition is that how often the character is a pursuit of this end that they think they are predestined to achieve and up setting into motion the course of events that may be they would seek to avoid or whatever the case may be, Circe, Maggie the Frog.
Starting point is 01:39:40 Yeah, the self-fulfilling prophecy is my favorite kind of prophecy. But I think that's a really smart point, that idea of placing his son upon the Iron throne as more important than anything else. Because in the scene, as much affection as we see between Viseras and Emma, there are moments where he's just not hearing her. And the pained look on her face when he's like, this is a son. know it is. And she's apologizing for not giving him an air. You know what I mean? Like, and for him to not understand the tremendous pressure that he's putting on her to be like,
Starting point is 01:40:16 this one is a son, I know it is. It's devastating. Absolutely devastating. All right. We'll be coming back to the dreams. We go next to the City Watch's campaign of carnage, freshly cloaked in gold by their new Lord Commander, Damon Targaryen. Boy, if you've been watching Hard Knocks and enjoying Coach Campbell's pep talks, check this out from LC Damon Targary.
Starting point is 01:40:46 Now you're a back of hounds! This was, even by the standard of Thrones extremity, the camera zooming in for the fart, the castration, the cartful of
Starting point is 01:41:05 severed limbs all leading us into the next small council sequence where Otto is campaigning against Damon and his tactics, his impunity, and we then see Damon sitting there ready to bring this confrontation between these two characters who hate each other so much at last. I'm more to say about this later. But right now I hashtag defund the gold cloaks, I think is how I feel about this this sequence we see here. This is straight out of the book that Damon loved to mix it up in the streets. He was Lord of Flea Bottom.
Starting point is 01:41:40 He loved to be down on the streets in the brothels, mixing it up. And mixing it up also entails like slitting the nostrils of thieves and gelding rapists. Like this is a thing that Damon Targaryen does. Yes. But before we chat about the
Starting point is 01:41:53 exchanges that Otto and Damon share in this small council sequence on the morning after, the city watch's carnage, here, just a quick note about House High Tower that I think is worth keeping in mind more broadly. You know, you mentioned the richness of the family and how that compares to the rise of House Valerian, et cetera. When we see a character like Otto in this premiere, I think it's natural to think of a character like Littlefinger and like a real striver inside of the Thrones universe,
Starting point is 01:42:30 but Otto High Tower is not a little finger figure. And House High Tower is not a house that has to style its own sigil and make its way through the great house isn't up that ladder. It's complicated. It's a little – it is and it isn't. I wouldn't put him in a little finger bucket. But despite the fact that House High Tower is extremely rich, David Huss's limernery says Otto High Tower,
Starting point is 01:42:56 second son who stands to inherit nothing he doesn't seize for himself. Well, takes one to no one, Damon. Exactly. That's exactly how Damon might describe himself. That's what I was about to say. So, like, of course, Damon is, like, looking himself in the mirror when he says that. But I think hand or the king obviously affords a person a lot of power and influence in the realm, obviously. But it's not quite a coveted position, right?
Starting point is 01:43:22 What is Robert say about the hand, the king shits, the hand wipes, right? Jamie says there are days are too long and their lives are too short. like Hand of the King is a really dangerous position to put yourself in. And Otto Hightower has put himself not just for Vassaris, but he was Hand of the King to Jaharis as well. And Jaharis was in such decline in the last couple years of his reign that Otto effectively ran the realm, like Shadow ran the realm for the last couple years.
Starting point is 01:43:52 It's a like Otto, Otto's not a little finger because he's not as fun as little finger. He's much more uptight. the bookish guy, like that's sort of his thing. But it does feel like he has taken this job in order to confer some shine on the second son of a family. You know, we see Lord Hightower, his brother, is who shows up at the end to swear fealty to Reneira. He's not... And Otto's son gets, you know, dusted by Damon and... Right, you know. So I think it is a source of resentment for Otto to see Damon fuck up again and again and again.
Starting point is 01:44:28 and Fasarist would be like, oh, well, that's just my brother. You know, so I think that that's part of it. And I think it's a very interesting theme because we already talked about Corlis Valerian as like a self-made man. This idea of rising up the ranks, I think it's an interesting theme to sort of settle on for a show that is so focused on the royals. Like this is more, this is closer to succession or the crown or the Kardashians or whatever than it is to what Thrones was, which was a cross-section of society, right? We're not, like, we meet Masaria, but like we're not meeting a lot of people who aren't lords and royals. And so to zero in on the strata within that layer of society, I think is interesting. Yeah, for sure.
Starting point is 01:45:16 And I think that, like, that's also why House High Tower in particular and then Auto's role within the family, as you noted as the second son, is a really compelling lens through which to parse a lot of that. because like House High Tower is the seat of power in Old Town. And Old Town is the, the city, the biggest city and most consequential city in Westrose before Agon, the Targaryens and Kings Landing unseated. Right? So you have both of those things, this understanding of what it means to be at the top and then to move down one rung. And there's a lot of really rich history.
Starting point is 01:45:55 between House High Tower and House Targaryen and the Targaryens in Old Town more broadly, also the location of the Starrecept and House Targaryen has a very complex history with the faith. So there are a lot of different strands at play there. And Otto is a character who understands what real power looks like and what it means to be incredibly proximate to it, but to still need to reach out to take the part of it that you want and to wield it the way that you see fit. And the rivalry that we get to witness right away between Otto and Damon is so riveting and fun, in part because you can just feel how visceral and deeply rooted this mutual disdain is. But also because even though Otto tries to get in his barbs, you know,
Starting point is 01:46:48 if only the prince would show the same devotion to his lady wife, he can't keep up. Like he can't keep up. He's just simply not a match for Damon in this exchange of wit. And that is a really notable thing. And that's the sort of like stiff, book-learned sort of guy who Otto High Tower is. And I think, you know, for folks who don't remember, like Old Town, that's where Samuel Tarley goes in, you know, in Thrones. Like, this is the source of all the, like, learning. That's what Old Town is.
Starting point is 01:47:22 And so that's sort of more who Otto High-Tower. is, which again is, I think, demonstrally different from who Littlefinger is, though there's still some machinations at play here, for sure. We also, it's not just Otto and Damon in the scene, we also get a really interesting glimpse into the dynamic between Vassaris and Damon,
Starting point is 01:47:41 because there is this scolding paired with this affection. There's support, but not complete indulgence. And it's ultimately all, yet another illustration of a couple key pillars for the story. One, and we'll get to the
Starting point is 01:48:03 great throne room sequence between these two brothers when Vassaris exiles Damon and Damon talks about how thick the blood of the dragon is. Well, sometimes the thickness of the blood is so
Starting point is 01:48:19 that it can obscure you to the truth right in front of you, right? but then also what happens when you do cut it and it starts to spill out. And more broadly, the way that Vassaris, who has inherited Jaharis's peaceful reign and peaceful realm, while a well-intentioned king and ruler, and in many respects a good king, is ultimately unable to make hard choices and how damning and costly that is for him, when his ultimate final word on everything that is unfolded is, well, King's Landing has been in decline since my grandmother passed.
Starting point is 01:49:01 In the end, this new city watch might be a good thing. You recognize that this is not a ruler who has been in the position often where he has needed to make a difficult decision and where he has gotten the affirmation that he is capable of making those decisions well. And what's also interesting in that, packed into that line, is this idea, and we talked about this a little bit with Chris Ryan, but this idea that like when Jahris was the ruler, his wife, good Queen Alassan,
Starting point is 01:49:27 the woman who fucked off for two years because she was pissed about something, she co-ruled with him, right? That's something that she did. And so the idea that the Kings Landing goes into decline once she dies indicates that she was the real power holding that like the peaceful reign of King Jaharis together was very much due to Alisans. influence, you know, in all of that.
Starting point is 01:49:52 I think that is so important and so interesting to keep in mind not only in the context of a woman in a position of power in this universe, but also when we talk about the Agon dream later, like when you are willing to share and bring other people into your trust and into your confidence and have them carry that burden with you, we don't know all the details of Jarris and Alassain and who knew what about the Song of Ice and. fire, but I think we do see quite clearly that Viseris guards. He definitely told. Jehers definitely told Alessane about the song of ice and fire.
Starting point is 01:50:30 You would think, right? Yeah, yeah, 100%. Joe, can you take us from the small council chambers to the street of silk? As we mentioned, Prince Damon Targary and a man of the people. Loves to mix it up in the streets. So his main squeeze and all of this is Massaria, a lady miseria. okay lady misery, aka the white worm.
Starting point is 01:50:52 And this is a woman who's been sort of bought and sold a million times that she is, you know, and this reminds us of Tyrion, right? And his journeys to the brothel. But she is very much in David's camp. He is not having a great time
Starting point is 01:51:08 in this interaction. In fact, it ends with him sort of wrapped in a shroud of sadness. But his cloak of shame. Nothing to be ashamed about, you know. You are demon Tagarian. Rite of Karex's willow of Dark Seester The king cannot replace you
Starting point is 01:51:25 This is the big thing that sticks out from this up A thing that sticks out from this episode With me, Mallory Rubin, Sanoia Mazzuno, who plays Masaria Wonderful actress have seen her And a million different things Have seen her in interviews have talked to her in person This is not what she sounds like, this is not her accent She has made a strong, strong accent choice here
Starting point is 01:51:44 And I have questions, comments, concerns, and notes about this Oh my gosh! How are you feeling here in Accent Corner, Mallory Rubin? Remarkable stuff from Lady Misery in our first meeting here. You know, look, if we fast forward to the end of the episode, when we see Damon exiting King's Landing on Cang's. Lady Misery, right there by a side. So I'm expecting a lot of Accent Corner talk in future episodes.
Starting point is 01:52:14 I can't wait. I just want to say about the brothel sequence. Vintage Thrones. Everybody watching through the holes in the wall. Prince of the city indeed. Real man of the people here. Letting everybody partake and bear witness. Really something. He likes a crowd. And that brings us to the tourney. The air's tourney, where we have so many parallels to the tournament, the hands tourney at the beginning of season one of Game of Thrones. And one of the real points of contrast amid the parallels is Viseris's real euphoria compared to Roberts'
Starting point is 01:52:50 just supreme disinterest in the entire affair. Viseris prematurely unwisely is holding the tournament in the first place for the air, right? But also announcing that Emma is in labor, saying, when I look at the fine knights in these lists, I see a group
Starting point is 01:53:06 without equal in our histories. And just when you hear that, you're like, based on what? This is a peacetime rain. And then that is reinforced very effectively elsewhere on the tournament sequences in a way that really strongly recalls Cat at Renley's camp
Starting point is 01:53:24 Knights of Summer. It's been 70 years since King Magor's end. Rainey says this is to Coralus. The knights are as green as summer grass. None have known real war. Their Lord sent them to the tourney field with fists full of steel
Starting point is 01:53:39 and balls full of seed and we expect them to act with honor and grace. It's a marvel that war didn't break out at first. blood. That again gives you that feeling and that reinforcement that we are on the precipice, that the realm and the rulers and all of the inhabitants have grown unaccustomed to moments of tension and difficult decisions and that everything is at the boiling point ready to spill
Starting point is 01:54:06 over. What does you make of that? What does you make of all the sigil spotting? We get some Barathean action. We get a Dendaryan mention, a Stokeworth mention, of course a Tarley sigil. Wonderful stuff. First of all, we got an email from Emily, who asked if we noticed that the overhead shot of the tourney looked a bit like, let's say, a Georgia O'Keefe painting. I did notice that. And you can Google that if you don't know what that means.
Starting point is 01:54:38 So, you know, to prepare us for the parallels that are to come. But also, our guy Chris Ryan on Talk the Thrones had asked a question about, like, What are the rules of attorney here? Like, how is it that we are allowed to start bashing people's heads in? So I did a little bit of research about what's going on here. So in the book, there's like a couple, there's jousting at attorney, and then you can also have melee fights in the attorney. And a melee fight is usually where you get the accidental deaths.
Starting point is 01:55:10 In fact, in Game of Thrones, there is this indication that the lanisters were going to try to get Robert killed in a melee fight, right? That people fight, they fight with blunted weapons, but accidents can happen in a melee, and King Robert wanted to fight in the tourney, and everyone's like, no, no. I mean, Ned especially, it was like, no, you can't fight in the tourney.
Starting point is 01:55:33 No one would, everyone would be afraid to touch you. Don't, yeah, don't do it, right? But in terms of the jousting, the jousting and then calling, like doing blunt weapons, fighting after that, that exists. It's not supposed to end in death or massive bloodshed the way that this does. Even though, yes, Damon Targaryen did fight with his Valerian sword in Turneys. That's canon.
Starting point is 01:55:59 That's in the books. But you're not supposed to fight with, like, edged weapons. You're supposed to fight with blunted weapons. It's supposed to be that. And I think possibly what's going on here is to your excellent point about what Rainey says about everyone is just sort of head up and hot and bothered and just needs to get like their violent rocks off or whatever. But also, when the worst of the violence happens in the, in the, in the, in the tourney, Facerus isn't there. He's been called away. So this idea of an absent
Starting point is 01:56:27 king, a king who's not taking control of his people. Meanwhile, Bobby Barathean of all people in the tourney in the beginning of Game of Thrones says stop this madness in the name of your king. So even Bobby Barathean is going to stop and calm the violence. where Vesaris absentee king is not taking control of the violence of this tourney. I think that's interesting. Tourneys. Sir Christ and Cole had no reservations about laying hands on the Prince of the City, Damon Targaryen. And Damon, you know, not quite as regrettable of a decision as our beloved Oberyn, certainly,
Starting point is 01:57:11 but celebrating prematurely. victory that he had not, in fact, earned here in this sequence. And in general, the meeting with Sir Kristen Cole is clearly one that is meant to draw our attention to not only the fact that this is going to be a character of consequence, but to how little people know about him. Reneera asks Westerling about him, as we mentioned earlier. And all I can say is, I'm told Sir Kristen is the common born son of Lord Dundarian steward. But other than that, and the fact that he's just unhoused both of the Baraphaean lives, I really couldn't say. By the way, on the Barathean lads front, I would humbly ask the favor of the queen who never was,
Starting point is 01:57:49 leading to the Otto Vesaris. You could have his tongue for that. And Vesaris is like, chill, dude. Tongues don't change the succession, let them wag. But you're getting some Barathean influence. The reminder that Renice has this standing as the queen who never was in the realm. They are cousins, of course,
Starting point is 01:58:12 as we hear her say, cousin. There's a lot of groundwork being laid here in the tourney. Kristen. And that's Lord Borman Barathean, who will see again at the end. And I will just object to Westerling's use of the word lad in relation. That's our own boys will be boys in relation to like a 40-year-old man there. But okay. Kristen Cole, we don't know much about him until he takes his helm off.
Starting point is 01:58:41 And then what do we hear Allison say, Steve? God, he's Dornish. I got it. Most important piece of information we get in the entire. This is something that you and I had talked about in the lead-up to because he's not quite Dornish in the books. He's from the Dornish marches, which is different. The fact that they just made him Dornish, great stuff. Love that for him.
Starting point is 01:59:05 But also it points to his slightly outsider status. Again, as we mentioned, the Dorn is not part of offensive. part of the realm yet, right? So, like, he's Dornish. He's an, he's not of the main court. He's not of a house that has any major standing, Kristen Cole. And yet, he best Damon Targaryen. He best Damon Targaryen. Remarkable stuff from Sir Kristen. He asked Renera for her favor. Damon had previously asked Allison for her favor leading to a truly hilarious exchange of glances with her father, Otto High Tower, who despises Damon, as discussed at length. Some great little looks.
Starting point is 01:59:42 I always love a scene that relies heavily on a quick bit of side eye. We get a great little look between Corliss and Renice after the Bormann Barathean, Queen who never was, Favorask. This is like a really rich initial stretch of the tournament. It is then... Rainis, yeah, Rainis also looks at her nails at one point. That is very Olenna Tyrell to me. I just really loved it.
Starting point is 02:00:09 Speaking of nails, Allison, chewing on her nails. Yeah. Throughout the episode. Totally fine. She's fine. It's fine. So the, the,
Starting point is 02:00:21 we talked about the tournament in, in its totality just now, but in the actual episode, we are weaving in and out of two scenes. The tournament scene is intercut with Emma's birthing bed and, Viserys' fateful choice. This is an extremely, extremely graphic and upsetting sequence. Of course, this calls back to Emma's Our Battlefield line about the childbed
Starting point is 02:00:58 in her earlier scene with her daughter, Renera. Melos, the Grand Maester, tells Viseris, it sometimes becomes necessary for the father to make an impossible choice. Well, speak it, Vesera says, to sacrifice one or to lose them
Starting point is 02:01:16 both. And as we watch what unfolds, Vassar is making the choice to move forward with the Cessarian to not tell Emma what he has decided to not
Starting point is 02:01:32 discuss it with her. She has no agency. It is not her choice, and it is this hideous, horrible thing to witness, that Viseras, in pursuit of his male heir, in pursuit of that destiny that he thinks is guiding him, is willing to make that choice at all, is willing to sacrifice his own wife and ends up losing his son anyway, very, very, very, very, very painful to watch. We have the most emails about this, and I saw them, you know, this is definitely the moment
Starting point is 02:02:09 that most people are talking about out of this episode. A lot of people are very upset by it. A lot of people are perturbed by it. A lot of people are curious about sort of what this presages for the overall treatment of women on the show because that's been a question. I'm of a couple different minds about it because I think what's true, if you read Fire and Blood, so many women in that story, both before this, like Emma's, you know, I think it's Emma's grandmother. also goes through something terrible like this. Before this and after, there's so many women who die in childbirth. And it's usually just sort of mentioned or glossed over, right?
Starting point is 02:02:54 And so to show the horror of it, I don't know. I agree with some people that maybe there should have been like a warning. I've never given birth. I know that a lot of women who have given birth had a really hard time with this. I think there's an – but I don't think it's here just for. sensation at all, as opposed to some things that I would identify in Game of Thrones. I don't think this is here for sensation. And I think there's a really interesting theme at play here that I want to talk about really
Starting point is 02:03:21 quickly bouncing off an email he got from our listener, Michael, who, to clarify really ically, Ryan Condal is set of this scene in the post episode interview. He says it's made very clear to him that Emma is going to die either way, right? So he has, there's nothing that's going to save Emma here. She could have more milk of the poppy, but the macer says we can only give her so much before we start hurting the child, essentially. So he holds back more milk with a poppy in order to save the child, which he doesn't anyway. That's a choice Viseris makes, right? Michael says, the way I see it, it is the fact that Vassaris is there with her holding her hand, telling her he loves her, that makes the scene such an indictment of his character.
Starting point is 02:04:06 While this isn't exactly a past a sentence swing the sword situation, Viseris struck me as possible. passing the sentence and then just pretending that he hadn't, acting like he was just supporting his wife as she died naturally in childbirth. His choices throughout the scene expose his frankly gross combination of ruthlessness coupled with cowardice. He is largely ineffective. How long was Damon in the city before Vassar has caught on? And only chooses to take action in the worst possible way and the worst possible moment. So I wanted to talk really quickly about one of my favorite overarching Thrones themes of that starts with Ned's He who passes a sentence must swing the sword. This becomes an ongoing evaluation of a leader in Game of Thrones.
Starting point is 02:04:50 Because when you've got someone like Joffrey saying Sir Ilyn bring me his head, right? And then you have someone like John say, Ed fetch me the block, meaning John's going to go do it himself like Ned did. And Joffrey has someone do it for him. Deneres has someone do it for her. Theon butcher's it badly. Rob does it for himself, just like Ned did. This is an ongoing, are you going to take responsibility
Starting point is 02:05:15 for the hard choices that you have to make? Something that I think is really interesting in this episode is I love this idea that Michael wrote in about like Viseris says the cowardly executioner was the name of the email. And I love that concept. And as it contrasts with as disturbing as Damon in the streets of the gold cloaks was,
Starting point is 02:05:36 that's Damon passing the sentence and swinging the sword in a certain way. And I'm not saying that's the ideal way to do it, but I think that is a very, that's a key difference between these two brothers at the end of the day. It is a real moment of horror. And some of that, of course, is, you know,
Starting point is 02:05:53 they're leaning into it and inside of the episode with the juxtaposition of the tournament and the birthing bed and, you know, leaning into the idea that it is wrong and unfair that this is the reality in the realm, that the battlefield for women is the birthing bed, that that should not be how it is. And you see these knights at play,
Starting point is 02:06:20 and you see the real visceral horror of this decision that Fasaris makes. And it's an impossible thing for him or his family to recover from. I think it's very important that the show lean into examining that seismic regret. You know, he is, when we go to the funeral after, like he is shattered and we can hear the impact in his later conversations with Renera
Starting point is 02:06:48 that this loss has had on him, you know, I think of a character like Stannis and the sacrifices of his own family members that he has made from Renley to, of course, Shereen in his pursuit of a destiny that he thinks he needs to achieve. I think of another moment that we've talked about before, Amon, saying to John
Starting point is 02:07:06 up at Castle Black, you must make that choice yourself and live with it for the rest of your days. Vesaris is not prepared to live with this. It will not be able to ever be the same person, nor should he be, that he was before after making this choice and losing his family, losing his wife, losing Baylon named for his father, of course. And I thought also then of Brianne and what she said to Pod, you know, nothing's more hateful than failing to protect the one you love. Viseras did not protect Emma here, did not
Starting point is 02:07:43 protect his family. And that will and should haunt him. Yeah. And it's the way that like, again, if Emma was not going to survive either way, I think there's a choice that they could have made together to save her son. It's the way her body is yanked down the bed, the pillows are pulled away, She's forcibly held down and she's screaming, no, no, no, no, no. And she's given no choice in the matter. And she's going to die afraid alone despite him being there and betrayed. And that is his legacy. Terrible.
Starting point is 02:08:23 Terrible. At the funeral, we see that he can't even bring himself to speak to Renira. We hear her say later, you haven't spoken to me since mother died. Damon is the one who. who reaches out to Reneira to comfort her. We hear her say, I wonder if in those few hours my brother live, my father finally found happiness, one of the most tragic moments of the episode.
Starting point is 02:08:48 I mean, that is just so deeply, deeply, deeply sad. She calls Syrax down, utters Dracharis, and burns the funeral pyre, but that I will never be a son. That that is something that has to be on her mind at all as she is grieving her own mother. The fracture of her family is just devastating. I think it's really important here that Damon steps up in a meaningful way.
Starting point is 02:09:17 Like we see him behave reprehensibly here, there, and everywhere. But there are moments. What makes Damon an interesting character is there are these moments of soulfulness in him. And he comes through here in this scene in a less creepy uncle kind of way. So a nice uncle kind of way. Otto, not really one for tenderness or reflection, launches immediately into the I consider the Magger Urchin, that of your succession sequence.
Starting point is 02:09:43 Again, this is like a vintage Game of Thrones. Everyone has a play to make, setting the stage for all of the factions and fissures to come sequence. There are a few different camps. There's the case for and against Damon. Lord Strong, as Master of Laws, is viewing it. The succession is set by press,
Starting point is 02:10:03 and law. Corlis initially agrees. He's the one who first names Damon, says it aloud. Melos, Otto, they're advocating against Damon. They fear for the realm should he be in control. He is meanwhile watching through a peephole, again, vintage thrones and smirking as Vassaris says that Damon doesn't want to inherit the throne. This is where we get that auto. The gods have yet to make a man who lacks the patience for absolute power, your grace line, which certainly feels like one of the mission statements of this endeavor. Otto says that Damon could be a second, Magor. Magor again styled the cruel for the atrocities
Starting point is 02:10:39 that he unleashed on the realm. I thought that when Otto said that about absolute power, it was a real, you're telling on yourself, my guy, kind of moment. And the fact that he doesn't possess the self-awareness to realize that is so rich. I think the parallels between Otto and Damon are really richly drawn here. And I think also later we see when Alicent is going to talk to Otto, he is like writing a scroll to send to Old Town.
Starting point is 02:11:11 And this is straight out of the book that Otto sent this letter to his brother to he says, he shared his fear about what kind of monarch, Prince Damon would be if he ever ascended the Iron Throne. On no account can Prince Damon be allowed to ascend to the Iron Throne? you be a second mega the cruel or worse. Better the realms delight than Lord Flea Bottom. Otto really strikes me as a guy who would repeat second Megar the cruel line, like thought it was really witty. He's like, oh, I said this in the council.
Starting point is 02:11:42 Can't wait to email my brother. This is really funny thing I said. But I think it's important to show again that House High Tower's reach is not just in the reach, but like extends beyond Kings Landing that he had to. to write the letter to his brother is all part of like the house high tower machinations that are constantly insured, you know? And he's he's scribbling, you know, we hear him say to Old Town at once for that first letter, but he's scribbling beyond that.
Starting point is 02:12:14 It made me think, of course, of Tywin scratching away at his red wedding plans as he's, as he's engaging in conversation with his children. And Otto has brought Allison after he is the one at the small. council meeting to say, you know, Reneira strong, Lord Strong, protesting. Renira, girl, no queen has ever sat the iron throne. He has that line if order instability so concerns this council. Perhaps we shouldn't break 100 years of it by naming a girl heir. Corliss moves from Damon to Raynees. Always have to seize the opportunity when you can. And Viseris will not hear it. He says, I will not be made to choose between my brother and my daughter. Now, he is in a moment of extremely
Starting point is 02:12:58 grief and extreme guilt and shame, but this does still again reinforce his indecision, his debilitating indecision. Now, he will make this choice eventually, but it will be, it will be sparked by his rage, not by any sort of methodical, careful planning, or intention. His reluctance, ultimately, is part of his failing. He does not know how to make a choice, how to balance his personal feelings with the weight of Agon's dream. And it is really disturbing to watch in the next scene, Otto send his own daughter to Vassaris's chambers and say, I thought you might go to him, offer him comfort. But we are still then getting a really direct contrast in that adjacency between indecision and a character who is ready to act, even
Starting point is 02:13:58 if the way that he is acting is foul. You don't think it's perfectly normal to send someone in their dead mom's dress to go visit the cave? You'll be glad of a visitor. No problem. No prop. No prob. Viseras doing his totally normal, like, late-night Lego project, right? And Allison walks in.
Starting point is 02:14:14 She brings him, you know, not only the books, but the condolences show. And great dress, by the way. And a departure from this virginal blue that she's been wearing, she's wearing green for the first time. Green, how the color of how she's. High Tower, right? So that's an interesting moment. And we should say that Allison did this for old King Jehires as well. This is not the first time that Otto has asked his daughter to go console the king. Allison was reading to King Jehires when he died. That's what she did the last couple years of his life. The timeline makes that a little iffy. I don't know if it works in the current
Starting point is 02:14:57 timeline, but that's okay. No worries. Typically, book context, you know, very helpful, really enriches and widens our scope of understanding. That's one where it's like, it diminishes how creepy what he does right here in the show is. I don't know that it diminishes it. I think it just means like he's just ever using his daughter at no other one age. Yeah, as a way to sort of manage all the kings that he's been handed.
Starting point is 02:15:27 too. Well, speaking of managing Kings, we move then to the air for a day sequence and Otto's latest plot here to remove Damon from the sphere of influence. We see Damon speechifying amid this orgy that he's organized at the brothel.
Starting point is 02:15:43 I just have to say, to everybody who stopped mid-thrust, mid-suck, mid-crank, admirable focus. Really team players there. Damon has everybody's full-intest. attention. It's remarkable to behold.
Starting point is 02:15:59 Well, he bought out the brothel, right? Yeah, all his pals, yeah, that's... All expenses paid. So when the boss starts to give the speech at the Bukadabbo dinner that he is paid for or whatever, like you got to put down your fork and pay attention. It's true. It's a requirement of the evening.
Starting point is 02:16:18 It's understood when you walked in the door. Now, we do hear some of what Damon says, but we do not hear the specific line in question, him styling Baylon the air for day. That is Otto's recounting. He says he has it confirmed from multiple sources. Many people are saying that Damon said this, by the way. Though Damon does not deny it. So on the one hand, there's an interesting kind of leaning into that unreliable narrator's
Starting point is 02:16:47 aspect of Fire and Blood storytelling. And on the other hand, Damon had an opportunity to say this is not a thing that they did. and he doesn't. And it unearths for us this really crackling sequence between brothers, Vesaris confronting Damon, summoning him to the throne,
Starting point is 02:17:07 sitting the Iron Throne, holding Blackfire in front of him. And that is such a fascinating bit of set design. And even when you think about Viseras making that choice himself, in addition to the showrunners, Damon is the character we think of as the sword-wielder.
Starting point is 02:17:23 Vesaris has to bring this set dressing with him to exude strength in front of his brother. It's all so deliberate. Yeah, it looks more like a crutch than a weapon. He's leaning on it like a walking stick, even as he's sitting. Exactly. It's an aid for him there. And Viseris feels, there's this mutual sense of betrayal. Veseris feels betrayed by Damon's comment, by his lack of gratitude for the support that Viseris has
Starting point is 02:17:53 continued to extend him. Vassaris notes that Damon has no support save his at court, which is not totally true, by the way. Damon is, you know, not popular in some corners, but has quite a bit of loyalty and other aspects of Kings Landing. Damon feels betrayed. The Vassarist trusts Otto more than him. And he says, you've only ever tried to send me away to the veil, to the city watch, anywhere but by your side. Ten years you've been king. And yet not once. have you asked me to be your hand? Why would I do that? Because I'm your brother
Starting point is 02:18:29 and the blood of the dragon runs thick. This is such a tragic, not only inside of their relationship in this moment in the timeline, but a signal of what is to come, the intra-family war. Yeah, my chosen interpretation of this, and maybe this is just the Damon apologist in me,
Starting point is 02:18:47 is that he did not say that thing about Air for a Day, but he's so hurt that his brother would believe Otto Hightower over him that he said that, that he doesn't bother to deny it. Well, when he says we all mourn in our own way, that morning could be present here as well, mourning that his brother would think him capable of such a thing. I think that Damon is a character who's capable of a lot and a lot of showmanship and bravado,
Starting point is 02:19:13 even when it's false bravado. And I think that's part of what makes him an appealing and interesting figure. But his love and affection for Vassaris is, I think, quite sincere. And that is what makes this so heart-wrenching, because characters who ultimately should fight for each other and support each other and find a way to align against the people who are so clearly trying to wedge and tear them apart, ultimately end up being the ones who are suffering this fracture. And when you have not everything is as strong as Valerian Steel, right, including relationships. And when that crack sets in, it becomes a chasm. And then everything and everyone falls into it. And that's the story we're about to watch.
Starting point is 02:20:00 I'm putting them on a t-shirt. Everything is as strong as well-eared stealing. It's true. Except for our relationship, Mallory. It's that our, our relationship and our beautiful bloodworm, Caraxies, caraxies, taken Damon out of town. If you had to be exiled from the city by a beloved family member and had to just, like, piece out immediately being able to leave on Dragonback
Starting point is 02:20:19 with your lady misery. But worse ways to go, honestly. Yeah. Yeah. Anything else you want to say about the Vesarius-Demon confrontation before we chat about Vesaris naming Reneera ear
Starting point is 02:20:32 and sharing this massive song of place and fire with you? That's a huge bombshell. No, can I give some historical reference context for Vesaris and Reneira here at the end? So Viseras names Rennira, his heir, not only that, but he makes these lords. Lord's swear fealty, and we get a Barathe and a Stark, a high tower, Valerian, like all bending
Starting point is 02:20:56 the knee and swearing fealty. Georgia Martin has been very open about the historical inspirations for many of his works, War of the Roses as part of the War of the Five Kings, all this sort of stuff. So this is a reference to the Anarchy, which was an English civil war that lasted from 1138 to 1153, in which King Henry the first wanted his daughter emperor. Matilda to take the throne. And he made his lords swear not once, swear not twice, but swear three times that they would put his daughter on the throne.
Starting point is 02:21:30 And spoiler alert, they did not do that. And it was very complicated. And there was a long civil war called the anarchy. And something that I want to say about the anarchy is my favorite thing about it, is that Chronicles stated that at the time Christ and his saints were asleep during this period, meaning it was just fucking chaos in the kingdom. And then there's another, and what's fun is that another incident later in the anarchy where one of the male heirs just mysteriously dies was the inspiration for Joffrey
Starting point is 02:22:02 at the Purple Wedding. So George has been long fascinated. One of the heirs just dies and that ends the Civil War because they're like, oh, well, I guess it's the other guy then, never mind. And like all the chronicles are like, he got a sudden illness. And George is like, did he? Did he get a sudden illness? Or did someone put something in his pie?
Starting point is 02:22:22 I don't know. Or his drink. Who knows? Anyway. Oh, Jeffrey. That fucker. Never a bad time to mention Jeffrey. Last point of order.
Starting point is 02:22:31 In the story of the anarchy, all the women, all the women are for some reason named Matilda. So if you want to look at like George naming all of the Targaryens Aegon, there is historical precedent. For all the Henrys and Charles's and Matilda's running around the place. Correctsies, correcties. Exactly. Oh, George. So we get spliced with those oaths of fealty. This very, very interesting conversation between Vesaris and Reneera in front of Balarion the dreads skull.
Starting point is 02:23:11 One of the things that Vassarra says is, I'm sorry. He says, I'm sorry, Reneer, I have wasted the years since you were born wanting for a son. Now, that apology is about the past, but there is also a weight of apology for the future for the Egonne reveal that is coming and the burden that he is passing down. But Viseras also understands, having been named king at the great council over Reneas, a woman, what he is asking of her and the position that he is putting her in in the realm. He knows what awaits. And he understands that that is not an easy seat to sit regardless. This is no trivial gesture, Ranira. He says a dragon saddle is one thing, but the iron throne is the most dangerous
Starting point is 02:23:57 seat in the realm. There is this really intriguing exchange when he is asking her what she sees when she's looking at the dragon skulls. And he is insisting that it is important, insisting, tell me, tell me. And she says, I suppose I see us. Everyone says Targaryans are closer to gods than to men, but they say that because of our dragons. Without them, we're just like everyone else. To which he replies, the idea that we control the dragons is an illusion. There are power men should never have trifled with. One that brought Valeria, it's doom. If we don't mind our histories, it will do the same to us. That is really fascinating in a couple different reasons.
Starting point is 02:24:50 We have a lot of aspects of the episode that reinforce Vesaris as a student of history. Of course, everything we learned about the AGON dream. Allison's, I do know how passionate you are for the history is lying earlier in the episode and the chamber sequence. What did you make of Viserys' statement here about the dragons, the source of House Targaryen's power? So we had an email from listener DJ who says, Did King Viseris confirmed that a dragon was the cause of the doom? This feels like a huge lore confirmation they just brushed over. Let me know.
Starting point is 02:25:23 So to recap the doom of Valeria briefly for folks, right? We've talked about Valeria before. Valeria, a huge thriving, ancient city, supposed to be like the Roman Empire. And they were mining. Delt too dangerously and too deep For gold and silver They use spells to tame the 14 flames Which were the volcanoes here
Starting point is 02:25:52 But there's also some other stuff at play here The faceless men were probably involved somehow In terms of assassinating the masters Because the masters of Valeria had a lot of slaves The faceless men that Aria eventually trains from Came from the slave ranks of old Valeria So the idea that like faceless men plus, you know, and then the volcanoes erupted and it was like basically Pompeii
Starting point is 02:26:18 is essentially what happened to Valeria, right? So how are dragons involved in this? And I feel like this idea, there's a couple things. First of all, my favorite theory in the world about Valerians is that they like bred themselves with dragons to create like dragon riders. And I know you never fuck to bear and I know you never fucked a bear. And I know you never fucked a dragon, right? Yeah. Yeah. Like, you know, were we cross-breeding dragons with humans? So it was going on. Basically, creepy dragon magic is what was rife in Valeria.
Starting point is 02:26:52 So I think that that's a rather, and using that magic to keep the volcano flames at bay in order to mine the volcanoes for more money. And that idea of, like, as you quoted, Tolkien, like, digging too greedily and too deep, just wanting more, more, more, more, dragons, power, money, gold, all that sort of stuff. I think that's an indirect way you could say that dragons are responsible for the doom of Valeria. Do you feel like there's a more literal interpretation of it?
Starting point is 02:27:21 I think it's possible that there could be and that we could find out because I think that invoking the doom this often in this episode and everything that we learn about Agon and his dream and the larger history of dreams, dragon dreams inside of House Targaryen. And the survived... The fact that House Targaryen is the dynasty
Starting point is 02:27:38 that it is because they were the one dragon riding Valerian family that escaped ahead of the doom, I think it's not something that we can mention too often. It's not something that we can forget that there's this tie to all Valeria and that richness and that magic and that might, but also that the Targaryans are the, they're the ones who escaped to become the lone dragon riding family. But I think also the fact that the doom is, that the source of the doom is not definitively known in the is also like, it's really fun to speculate and theorize about, like you said, the faceless man. And I think that it's very intuitive, much like everything we learn about this Aegon dream, that this is directly tied to the dragons in some way because of the fire mages and the warring between the dragon riding families and this, this greed and this hubris.
Starting point is 02:28:30 That all, like, feels really logical to me. What's interesting to me about it, though, is that Viseris' interpretation of that is that. is not, huh, we're the ones who didn't get fucked over by that, who weren't wiped off of the face of the planet. It's, this is a mistake that can happen again if we don't pay heed to our own history. And I think that inside of, like, this connects to the dance. I always think of that Stannis-Sherine exchange
Starting point is 02:29:02 where his daughter has to tell him about the dance of the dragons. and the thing that he sung up on is, why do they call it a dance? Because he's so literal, not, are there lessons that I can heed from warring against your own family? I think the idea that the doom of Valeria is hanging over, Vassarra said, he's literally building this model of Valeria and his nighttime hours, like, all that sort of stuff, is so that it clouds, that this idea of a dream of putting his son on the throne so clouds his judgment that he's not listening to his wife, that he's putting it above all else, is so important. as you and I have discussed.
Starting point is 02:29:39 And then we find out that there's this of a future doom that's also looming over him, that that was the doom of fire and now he's focusing on this doom of ice that has been foretold by Agon. This is a huge, huge lore moment as we talked to Chris Ryan about a little bit on Talk the Thrones in terms of this big bombshell idea, that Ragar had a dragon dream. This is Ryan Condole said, oh, sorry, let me say that again, that Agon had this dragon dream of, you know, presaging the invasion of the White Walkers, and that this is George R. Martin's idea,
Starting point is 02:30:21 that Agan the Conqueror was a dragon dreamer. This is what Ryan Condole's said. That this is George R. Martin's idea was that Agon was a dragon dreamer, and this was the motivation for him conquering West Rose. And again, that changes the idea from ambition to I'm just trying to defend the realm. You know what I mean? Which is a completely different flavor for who Agon the Conqueror is. So that's a huge thing.
Starting point is 02:30:50 And then Condola said it was sort of their idea. Okay, Agon had this dream. Okay, it was their idea that the dream be passed down from Targaryen leader to Targaryen leader. As you and I have mentioned, we have some notes about a few. The transition of this information. Yeah. I might want to mention the looming apocalypse to more than one other person. Especially when all of your family members are constantly trying to kill each other.
Starting point is 02:31:15 And if you look back over the last few Targaryen kings, they're just always dying. And just as Danis foresaw the end of Valeria, Egon foresaw the end of the world of men. It is to begin with a terrible winter, gusting out of the distant north. I, Rickon Stark, Lord of Winterfeld. Egon's are absolute darkness riding on those winds. And whatever dwells within will destroy the world of the living. When this great winter comes, Runero, all of Westeros must stand against it. And if the world of men is to survive, a Targaryen must be seated on the Iron Throne.
Starting point is 02:31:55 A king or queen. Queen, strong enough to unite the realm against the cold and the dark. Egon called his dream the song of ice and fire. Okay. All right, so we got an email from Sam, who said, in regards to the song here, I personally think it works for the Lord for Egon the Cocker's motivations, but the one if he point from me was how it fits with what we saw in Game of Thrones and the fumbling of the plot at the one-yard line, trusting Mal to translate the sports.
Starting point is 02:32:28 metaphor here if necessary. Vassaris makes a point of saying the Song of Ice and Fire prophesied a Targaryen must sit the throne to fight the White Walkers and that the Targaryens would be the one to destroy the others. I think that might work for book lore, but it feels in conflict
Starting point is 02:32:44 with the fact that, one, a Targaryian king- queen was not on the Iron Throne when the walkers came knocking in Game of Thrones, and two, a Targaryen was not the one to use the dagger to halt the walkers in Game of Thrones. You know, and just for So folks, remember, first of all, Aria Stark with the cat's paw dagger in the godswood, right?
Starting point is 02:33:05 And number two, De Nairis never once put her incredibly delightful but on the throne. Never once sat on the throne. No Targaryen sat on the throne and gave a throats. Got melted to a puddle before that. So Mallory Rubin. Yeah. How do you account for this? So I have like 100 things I want to say here about the prophecy, but to answer Sam's email first,
Starting point is 02:33:28 I don't really mind this because I think that this is probably going to fall into the showrunners made a different choice than George might eventually make in the books camp. And it actually feels to me like part of joy. It is messy, but part of maybe George's active effort here now to reclaim the story a bit, I think it's very much in play that somebody other than Aria, perhaps even a Targaryen like. Egon, aka John Snow, or Danny could be involved in the ultimate confrontation with the Night King, but like we should remember
Starting point is 02:34:06 when we're talking about one-to-one interpretations and comps. Like, the Night King is seen in the show is not even a character in the books in that exact rendering. So it's just different. It doesn't exist. It's just different. And I think that that is, as you say,
Starting point is 02:34:17 messy, but also the reality. I think that's fine, but like it's fine. I'm not mad about anything, obviously. But it is tricky for us. It is. But if George felt compelled, to change his ultimate intention for the story because of the choice the showrunners made in season eight, I would be devastated about that.
Starting point is 02:34:37 No, I'm fine with the books being different, the ending in the books being different. I think it's just tricky to watch a TV prequel to a TV show, but actually watching a TV prequel to some books that haven't been written. Well, so this is the next thing I was going to say, though. I like that part of it, too, because it's an area where I think it's actually like handy for us, especially given the weight that dreams and prophecy seem like they will bear on this story. to remember that the characters who receive these dreams or who have these dreams receive these prophecies
Starting point is 02:35:05 often misinterpret them to their peril and to the realm's peril. The fact that the Targaryen in power at a given moment always thinks that that person needs to be the one to fend off the doom and to save the world is part of their hubris ultimately. Why should it have to be just to the Targaryens? Well, that's the question, though, that's the question is, like, what is the wording?
Starting point is 02:35:33 We're getting Vassaris's recap of Agon's dream passed down through the generations. But what exactly is the wording? Because, like, wording is so tricky and precise in a prophecy, right? And so, like, what did Agon see about needing to be on the throne? And can we see it easily interpreted as Targaryen hubris to believe that person has to be a Targaryen? you know. Absolutely. I mean, I'm assuming that at some point, and again, this is not in the book, so this is a totally new thing for the show. I'm assuming at some point we will get the exact word for word
Starting point is 02:36:09 letter here of what the dream is and how it is passed down, but I think there's so much room for interesting interpretation. When you say of like, when you mention just exact phrasing, though, even independent of the contents of Egon's dream, It makes me think of another thing that was really interesting in this sequence, which was the end note of,
Starting point is 02:36:32 Viseris has that dagger, we should say, on him throughout the episode and he has his hand on the dagger as he is recounting this to Reneira. So they are inviting that question that we received in the email, asking us to think about
Starting point is 02:36:46 how that dagger will be used by Aria against the Night King, but then what do we hear? Promise me this, Reneira. Promise me. Well, we think of Ned and Liana and the truth of John's birth
Starting point is 02:36:57 and that promise at the end of Roberts Rebellion and the dawn of that next aspect of our other story, what that promise bore? And what is that promise happening because of? Ragar and Leanna and their child, Egon, John. So then that makes me think of all of these other aspects of this that are so interesting with the Targaryan family history
Starting point is 02:37:22 with dragon dreams and prophecy. You know, you gave that great rundown of the doom, Well, how did the Targaryans escape the doom? Because a member of their family, Denise the Dreamer, dreamed of this great cataclysm. And they left and went to Dragonstone 12 years before the Doom claimed every other dragon riding family. We learn here that Agon is also a dreamer. We know that Darren the drunken is, his life is destroyed by the dreams. and the weight of the dreams that he has.
Starting point is 02:37:59 Damon Blackfire. Vesaris obviously has his own dream in this episode, the Egon Iron Crown Dream. Mastor Amon is a dragon dreamer. There's that really heartbreaking line in the books to Sam where he says, my brother's dreamed of dragons too, and their dreams killed them every one. I think that is so crucial here.
Starting point is 02:38:17 There is the look at this secret that we and we alone are entrusted to carry and pass down and protect the realm against. And then there is the, the, the, the, the, the, the hubris of thinking that you alone should try or that you are the one who is destined to save everybody and all of the people who get hurt along the way, which brings us back to Rhaegar. We should say, of course, Danny also has many dragon dreams in the books. Ragar, I want to also quickly mention before we talk about Ragar, because I think we'll chat about Rigar for a few minutes. read if you haven't yet Riley MacD's excellent column on this today on The Ringer.com. I was mostly focused right after I heard this in the show on Ragar and all of the implications for Ragar. Yeah, me too.
Starting point is 02:39:07 Riley said that the first thing he thought about was Summerhall, the tragedy at Summerhall, 259 AC. And that is also incredibly rich text of parsier. And he wrote about this really wonderfully in his column, so check that out. But this idea that Egan, the 5th, would have been trying to have to have. that dragon sparking this great tragedy because he thought that he needed that dragon, needed that magic and that power to ensure that he would be in the position to enact this prophecy and fanned off this winter. Well, that's a little bit of that dragon, doom, Viserius talk right there. It changes everything that we know about every Targaryen leader
Starting point is 02:39:51 leading up to this. And like, I think the Ragar moment that's so interesting comes from world of ice and fire when Martin writes about the fall spring of 281 AC, right? So the fall spring lasted less than two turns. As the year drew to a close, winter returned to Westrow with a vengeance. On the last day of the year, snow
Starting point is 02:40:15 began to fall upon King's Landing and a crust of ice formed to top the blackwater rush. The snowfall continued off and on for the best part of fortnight, by which time the blackwater had hard frozen, and iceicles draped the roofs and gutters of every tower in the city. As cold winds hammered the city, King Aris II, turned to his power-mancers, charged them to drive the winter off with their magic's huge green fires burned along the walls of the Red Keep for a moon's turn. Prince Rhaegar was not in the city to observe them, however, nor could he be found in Dragonstone with Princess Ilya and their young son, Agon. With the coming of the New Year,
Starting point is 02:40:49 the crown prince had taken to the road with half a dozen of his closest friends and confidence on a journey that would ultimately lead him back to the riverlands, not 10 leagues from Heronhall, Raygar fell upon Leonis Stark of Winterfell and carried her off, lighting a fire that would consume his house and kin and all of those he loved and half the realm besides. So two things. Number one, the idea that the mad King Eris is as mad as he and awful as he might have been, the panic that winter coming to King's Landing would have sparked for both King Eris and his wife. wildfire, and Ragar, who was convinced because of his own dragon dreams, that he needed three sons, and that's why he carries off Liana.
Starting point is 02:41:28 So it's not just that Ragar found this prophecy in a scroll or elsewhere and was like, oh, God, this is coming. It's that winter literally came to Kings Landing, and he freaked out because of this prophecy. I love this. And everything that this opens up for us about thinking about Ragar's character and the choices that he made and everything that unfolded from that is like I can't wait to, you know, we've been revisiting obviously key passages. I can't wait to just do a complete reread now with this in mind and see what stands out differently because so much will. Ragar we knew was obsessed with prophecy, was obsessed specifically with the prince that was promised. And that's another thing that I think is worth just repeating in the context of the Targaryians choosing to guard this secret so closely.
Starting point is 02:42:20 The long night happened. Now, in Game of Thrones, you know, maybe the best embodiment of this is Sam's conversations with Archmaister Ebrose and others at the Citadel and the challenge that Sam in this seat of learning and the theoretical wisdom has convincing people to mobilize an act. The Prince was promised, Azura High, all of the different versions of the prophecy. These are things that are out there in the world. It did not originate here with Agon's dreamer House Targaryen, but it connects House Targaryen and their dynasty to this existing history and existing legend. And that's another thing that unlocks these additional layers. So, you know, we've talked in some of our preview pods
Starting point is 02:42:57 about that great passage from A Clash of Kings and Danny's trip through the House of the Undying where she sees Ragar and hears, will you make a song for him? The woman asked. He has a song, the man replied. He is the prince that was promised, and his is the song, Vice and Fire.
Starting point is 02:43:13 And then later in that passage, we get the dragon has three heads. And this idea that Ragar, I'm like team, and I think you are too. Rhagar and Leona really loved each other. But this idea that once he could no longer have another child with Elia in that marriage felt like he had to. Again, there's a parallel here with Fierrez, had to go pursue this heir. No matter the cost giving us John, another Agon, Well, then we think of another passage, this great one from, named at the time Still Whitebeard Selmy in a Storm of Swords,
Starting point is 02:43:51 giving us this great insight into a moment of key transition in Ragar's life that we now think about completely differently after this episode of television. Quote, as a young boy, the Prince of Dragonstone was bookish to a fault. He was reading so early that men said Queen Rela must have swallowed some books in a candle whilst he was in her womb. Ragar took no interest in the play of other children. The maesters were awed by his wits, but his father's knights would jest sourly
Starting point is 02:44:18 that Baylor the Blessed had been born again. Until one day, Prince Ragar found something in his scrolls that changed him. No one knows what it might have been, only that the boys suddenly appeared early one morning in the yard as the knights were dining their steel. He walked up to Sir Willem Derry, the master at arms, and said,
Starting point is 02:44:38 I will require sword and armor. It seems I must be a warrior. There is no question. No question now that this is what this is about. And I love that. How much that is all tied into Azorahai, the prince who was promised, because we get this language, you know, in late season thrones, there was that conversation about translation error, right? And then we get this, you know, prince or princess who's, you know, like,
Starting point is 02:45:07 gender newch like could be DeNaris is the point but we get this line from Vassaris here right where he says as he said if we don't mind our own histories it will do the same to us Targaryen must understand this to be king or queen and that gave me like real Prince who has promised energy
Starting point is 02:45:24 here but again this changes every single Targaryen we've ever met that ambition or cruelty or whatever however it might be there And it's there.
Starting point is 02:45:37 They're Targaryens. It's there. But it's mixed in with family duty honor, I guess. Yeah. And then also the element of the fact that, like, it doesn't reach Danny. You know, this is not knowledge that she has that passes to her.
Starting point is 02:45:51 And there is something, I think, so deeply, deeply, like, tragic and Shakespearean about the fact that she ends up deeply entwined in the Song of Ice and Fire and the Battle Against the Night King, the battle to fend off winter and save the realm. without the awareness that every prior would be ruler or heir and her family had inherited,
Starting point is 02:46:13 it really reinforces how alone and separate she was at the end. And conversely, as I think Condal pointed out, how there's dramatic irony here for the audience, dramatic irony being like us knowing more than the characters do. So, like, Viseras is being ruled by this prophecy. when we know it won't happen for another couple. You know. The dagger on his hip at all moments because in any second he needs to be ready, right?
Starting point is 02:46:40 Right. Yeah. And we know that there's hundreds of years to come. So he can just calm down and it's not, you know. And so and that the only person who doesn't have them this ruling their waking days is DeNaris, who's the one Dineris, Turgarian leader who ironically could have used this information. So. George.
Starting point is 02:47:01 You did it again. buddy. You did it to us. I love digging back into lore prophecies. I love it. I love it. I'm really excited to see how big of a role this place. It was very, they put out a new trailer at the end of the episode to, you know, tease what's coming the rest of the season and a lot of prophecy talk in that, in that season look ahead. So I'm excited to see how often we spend in in Agon's dream of ice and fire. Okay. We always knew it was going to be a long. one today. There's just so much to talk about. We're at the beginning of a new journey. I'm having a blast. It is time, though, for some awards.
Starting point is 02:47:48 We are going every week to make the eight with our rapid fire episode awards. Joe, let's head to the tourney grounds. Boy, we have to start with the Joanna Robinson special here. This will be a staple of our coverage. Yeah. Wigwatch. Best worst wig. What a time for Wigwatch.
Starting point is 02:48:23 I mean, thriving, honestly. My picks here might be a little controversial. Okay. I'm excited. I don't feel controversial about the worst wig, which I think belongs to one, Mr. Viseras Targaryen. Paddy Concedeen, wonderful man. This is not my favorite.
Starting point is 02:48:39 Do you have a worst wig? What's your worst wig? With, again, Nothing but love for Matt Smith's performance. Damon is a compelling character. My pick is Damon's wig with the... The Legolas wig, as you've been calling it. That's just...
Starting point is 02:48:53 We've seen from trailers that we have new haircuts coming, and I'm ready. I'll say that. I like when he... I love when he's sitting on the small council and it's all must, and he's got, like, sit in his face from, like, a long night of gilding rapists,
Starting point is 02:49:05 and it's like... I don't know. It's... The best, again, this... I think this is controversial, but I'm giving it to the... Queen that never was Rainey's because I just love how bizarre. I have studied that wig from every angle.
Starting point is 02:49:19 I don't understand it, but I love it. That's my pick for best, too. It's great. Yeah, great. Oh, God. All right. Our next one, Fit Watch. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:49:31 Best, worst fit. Worst. Yeah. Facerus is Lego 90. What's yours? My, my, this is a bit of a cheap, but my pick for best and worst. is the same pick because I think it is absolutely befuddling but also kind of amazing. And it's Demon's Dragon helmet at the tournament.
Starting point is 02:49:53 I'm like, I couldn't decide if it was my pick for best or worst, which I thought was notable. So I decided to do a shared honor here. I love that. It is preposterous. It looks. So funny. The whole get-up looks very inefficient, impractical. I'm just saying for Viseras, you're the king.
Starting point is 02:50:13 You can have a brocade night. you don't, you know, like you can have a robe. Like, Hugh Heff it up a little, not the Depression 90, okay? Best is Reneera's coronation look. Like, it's on all the promo material for a reason. It's incredible. It looks almost Spanish. And it is unlike any of the fashions we've ever seen on Game of Thrones in Kings Landing,
Starting point is 02:50:35 etc. I thought it was glorious. Wonderful. Our next award. It's the... They got bigger. And big a... Splash, splash, splash, slash.
Starting point is 02:50:50 Best bit of dragondom. What was your favorite dragon moment of the episode? I would say, why use a big lighter on your mother's funeral pyre when you can just have your dragon light on fire? And actually, there's a serious reason I have this year because I was thinking about the use of dragons in here. And I was thinking about, remember how disappointed we were that Thrones very barely used. used its dire wolves. Do I remember how disappointed I was by one of the great disappointments of my life as a historic consumer?
Starting point is 02:51:22 Yeah. And there were like a couple reasons why they did that budgetary or they also thought it looked silly or it's hard to work with wolves or whatever. But one reason was like they were like, well, the point is sort of magic is, we don't want magic to feel so prevalent. It should feel special and spare and rare, right? Whereas meanwhile, they're just like, oh, call your dragon down to light. his funeral buyer.
Starting point is 02:51:47 Like, that's, dragons, oh, do you need a cigarette? Let me call over Cic Syracus to light your sick. Different pronunciation of Dracarus here, too. There was like a, that was fascinating. I think of all the people I've ever heard speak High Valerian,
Starting point is 02:52:02 I think Millie Alcock is like convinced me the most with her role to ours. And she's just, should we try to learn High Valerian this season? We could on Duolingo. We could do the Duolingo, you want to? You made me download a Dragon app already on my phone. These will be two of the things we incorporate in future weeks, how our dragons are doing and how much Ivalarian we've learned.
Starting point is 02:52:21 Have you hatched your dragon yet? I thought we were going to sync up with Chris and do it on Talk to Thrones, but then you hatched your dragon and Chris didn't even respond. So I don't know where we landed on that. And for all parties. Joanna's over-eager. Oh, my God. I love it. Oh, I think my dragon might have died because it started me over in a new experience.
Starting point is 02:52:45 Oh, wow. Well, that's devastating. but it does give us an opportunity to set out of a new course here together. Oh my God. My favorite thing, this is not a specific thing, but I loved how distinct Syrac's and Keraxies looked because we're getting nine dragons in season one. We're getting 17 overall during the show.
Starting point is 02:53:08 And we're going to need to be able to tell them apart. It's cool even just like going frame by frame in the, you know, still to come. And we can see so many dragons in there already. And I'm like, oh, is that? You know, and I just, I can't wait for all of them to have very specific and particular visual renderings and personalities because they should end. Seas Smoke. Vega. Vega.
Starting point is 02:53:34 Vermax. I love it. Okay. Fittingly, given that we are referencing a very memorable Game of Thrones season one bathtub sex scene, our next award is the doctrine of exceptional. Weird sex stuff, FK.K.A. incest slash brothel corner. What's your sexy moment of the episode? As you already meant, I mean, is it sexiest? Is that what we were going for? Because that's not what I picked. What I picked was my guy who was, as you mentioned earlier, mid-thrust and did not bother to extract himself from his lady, just stood there, just, no, knelt there, and turned his head over his shoulder for the length of, uh, Damon's speech.
Starting point is 02:54:18 What's yours? For the length of indeed. Mine is, we already talking about it, but Damon hiding under the cloak. Remarkable. One of my absolute
Starting point is 02:54:31 favorite moments of the episode, and it was coupled with the ensuing Masaria line, you know, offering, hey, you want me to bring in another, perhaps a matter, perhaps several,
Starting point is 02:54:42 and then I could even arrange one with silver hair. because the Targaryans love to fuck each other. Oh. Okay, guys, there might be more incest than I earlier. So amazing. Oh, I'm sorry. Can you not maintain your erection because you need to be fucking a member of your own family?
Starting point is 02:55:08 What a television program. Can't wait to continue to cover Incest Corner with you in the future. All right. The next one is one I'm really excited. for every single week. This is, if this show had Netflix subtitles, aka are, in essence, if you haven't watched Stranger Things, Stranger Things has these remarkable subtitle descriptions of the sound design.
Starting point is 02:55:30 So this is our best sound design, but really what we're just going to do is we're going to suggest a subtitle that we would have liked to see had the Stranger Things team been making House of the Dragon. Do you have one? Okay. The moment I picked is obviously the moment that inspired this because we were talking about this this one specific moment. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:55:48 Which is when the Masons are scraping the pus off of Vasaris's back, right? Oh. Are you ready? Pustule scoops moistly. I mean, that's horrible. That's awful. That is just like so. I'll never recover from hearing that.
Starting point is 02:56:05 What do you have? Cruel. I have quivering Enis amidst fearfully. It's king anus to you. Mal I ruined. Oh, God. Great stuff. I'm looking forward to this new tradition here on the pod. Next. Archmaster Ebrose can never. Best quote. It's a real toss-up for me, but I'm going to go with my guy, Lord Beesbury, for saying, Damn me.
Starting point is 02:56:43 Love it. Oh, my God. Yeah. That's a great one. Absolutely fantastic. Honestly, that's probably my pick, too. That was so funny. I guess in terms of like plot, I really did like the opening. The only thing that could tear down the house of the dragon was itself. That was just great. But I'm going to go with I never jest about cake.
Starting point is 02:57:09 Very, very true. You know, cake is serious matters. It is. It is delicious. Okay. Next. Leo, pointing meme. Most excitingly familiar location or object.
Starting point is 02:57:22 The map room. Hmm. So when we're walking through the Red Keep, we walk through the map room before the map was painted on the floor. So it's just got the arches. But I could just like, as soon as they walked through there, I just my mind flashed to Circe and Jamie because I think 50% of their scenes were in that map room in the final season. So, you know, yeah, it's the old map room.
Starting point is 02:57:45 How about you? I love it. There's not many choices here. I want to go with Harenhall. Good. I always love to see Harenhall. I got a real kick out of being in the, uh, voluminous ample space.
Starting point is 02:58:00 That was really fun. I guess it is also just, it is fun to see, even though we've seen it in the trailer so many times in the marketing material, the silhouette of our original series, Iron Throne, inside of this new vast sprawling Iron Throne.
Starting point is 02:58:15 That's my pick, I guess. That is fun. Finally. Yeah. I ask your favor. Who won the episode? Speaking of. It's Reneira Targary.
Starting point is 02:58:28 Princess of Dragonstone and heir to the Iron Throne. The realm's delight. Okay, not only is Millie Alcock incredible. So good. Reneer ends the episode on top. Dad always wanted his son. J.K., you're the air. Amazing.
Starting point is 02:58:44 Also, we didn't like underline this, but Emma Darcy, the older actor who's playing Reneura voices the prologue at the beginning. my father, they say in the prologue. And so that puts us inside, like, if you're asking who's the main character of the show, I mean, Reneira. Reneer is on all the promo material, you know? Like, it's got to be Reneer. Damon, too, kind of, but like, you know,
Starting point is 02:59:15 yeah, Renira, how about you? So I'm inclined to pick Damon because I think Damon was really like the breakout sensation of the episode. But I think in terms of that, contrast at the end of one of them being named Princess of Dragonstone, heir to the Iron Throne and one of them being exiled for the city. It's difficult not to land on Renira there. So yes, I will go with Young Renira as well. Okay. Three hours into our pod today, we have arrived
Starting point is 02:59:48 in a section that in future weeks will be one that comes earlier in the episode and we spend more time on. It is time for a dance of dragon dreams of our own Joe Some prophetic analysis based on what we know is coming in the book So here it is We said there would be another spoiler, here it is If you do not want to hear about things that happen in fire and blood To the characters in this show, bounce You already had three hours of pod
Starting point is 03:00:15 You're free to go I exile you You're free to go Hop on career Go Direct cease If you want to hear us chat about things that are going to happen later in fire and blood and how this
Starting point is 03:00:29 episode sets up some key future occurrences. This is the section for you. Forgot we have an amazing sound effect. We got to we got to start here with the cuts from the Iron Throne. We have to go back to not only the island, but to Phasaris's gaping wounds because this is so gross. The revolting back wound, the thing. finger slice on the throne. Yeah. We, this was actually one of the moments when we were watching this premiere together. We like turned and like gasped and grabbed each other's arms because it is, it is such a rich portent.
Starting point is 03:01:10 In fire and blood, Viseras cuts his, cuts his, cuts his fingers in hand to the bone, nearly dies. Is only saved when Reneira brings her maister to come treat him and remove some of his fingers, stave off the fever. never sits the iron throne again. Meanwhile, Allison is like, this is fine. Unbelievable. Fester away. Why does this matter? Because we alluded to this a bit earlier.
Starting point is 03:01:44 But this is like a really big thing that the iron throne, there's this idea that the iron throne can judge, can reject, can even kill you. One of the one of the most incredible examples of this to chew on in fire and blood itself is about Magar the Cruel who was found dead on the Iron Throne The passage reads quote
Starting point is 03:02:06 Pale and dead his robes soaked through with blood His arms had been slashed open From wrist to elbow on jagged barbs And another blade had gone through his neck To emerge beneath his chin Many to this day Believe it was the Iron Throne itself That killed him
Starting point is 03:02:24 And love that. Delightful. Have you ever seen the movie Deathbed, the Bed That Eats? I think you know the answer to that question is no. It's about a bed that eats people. It's tremendous. Anyway. I have not, nor will I ever.
Starting point is 03:02:38 Deathbed, colon, the bed that eats. Okay. Anyway, Reneira. When Reneira finally gets to sit on the Iron Throne as the Queen of Westeros, she walks away and her legs are all. cut up and people see it and they're like, the throne is rejected. It's a big deal.
Starting point is 03:03:01 And this is the kind of read that the realm has that carries on into the future. Like there's a Joffrey cut, right? But I think the Game of Thrones timeline era example that is most pertinent is the Mad King, who got cut so often by the throne, was so unworthy of the throne that they called him King Stab. There's that great Stannis line to Stan.
Starting point is 03:03:24 King Scab. Did I say Stabb? I mean, also would work, honestly. They called him King Scab, and there's that great storm of swords, Stannis line that also brings back Magor into this that I'll share here. Have you ever seen the Iron Throne, the barbs along the back, the ribbons of twisted steel, the jagged ends of swords and knives all tangled up and melted? It is not a comfortable seat, sir. Aris cut himself so often. Men, took to calling him King Scab and Magor the Cruel was murdered in that chair by that chair to hear some tell it. It is not a seat where a man can rest at ease off times. I wonder why my brothers wanted it so desperately. Not a seat where a man can rest at ease and not designed to be. Oh, woman. What I think also this idea of the throne is this living thing. Yes. One of my favorite sort of lore holes that I went down at the end of Game of Thrones is this idea tying the Iron Throne to the Ring of Power in lore of the rings. And this idea that the throne corrupts that it like, you know, they stop short of like
Starting point is 03:04:41 putting Eldridge whispers on it every time you like cut to the throne. But essentially like it has a supernatural pull on people. It warps them in a certain way. Parto-I-Rogne needed to melt it. Yeah. the only way to stop all of this is to melt it down the way that the ring of power is melted down. And so this idea that it cuts, that it wounds, that it scars, it all feeds into that idea of this is this, like, living magical thing.
Starting point is 03:05:07 I love it. Like, one of the first things we learn about the ring, of course, is it wants to be found, this idea of the sentient magical object. So, oh, the best, the best. We got so excited when this happened in the premiere. This is great. On the Vassaris front, can we circle back to his dragon dream about? his heir and that, his heir and that other interpretation, which this is how I interpreted this.
Starting point is 03:05:27 Again, we have said it, you're in book, spoiler territory, you've been warned. I think that there's a clear way to interpret this as being about Egon. Egan the second, Vassaris's eventual son and heir with Alicent and the dawning of the dance of the dragon. The war of succession between Reneira and Egan. And all the dragons roared is one. Yes. In battle against each other. Yeah.
Starting point is 03:05:56 Against each other. He implies, he interprets that they all, they're all united. And what we're saying is, no, they're screaming at each other. Yeah. I mean, I think I laid my son on the Iron Throne. I do love that crown of ruby stuff. I know. They're both very compelling.
Starting point is 03:06:15 Reneira. Yeah. Okay. So Reneer and Damon, I think any, even the most cash viewer is picking up on this. person who watched this premiere is like, are these two going to fuck? What are these two going to fuck? They are folks. Oh, she's 14.
Starting point is 03:06:28 Oh, no. Oh, my God. Well, thankfully, it's, you know, the actual marriage and cementing of the union. They've got, they've each got some other relationships and marriages to get through first. Just a few marriages to plow through first. But Renier and Kristen Cole is also, I think it's really fun that at the tourney, Damon asked for Allison's favor. and Reneer like gets Kristen Cole, Chris and Cole as for Roanier's favorite.
Starting point is 03:06:55 I'm forgetting. Where's Kristen Cole from, Steve? He's dormant. Not relevant to what we're talking about, but I couldn't resist. So good. But yeah, so that like Kristen and Damon are approaching the opposite sides
Starting point is 03:07:13 of where they will land, right, eventually. Also, on the Kristen Reneer front, there's this fun in the Damon Allison front. There's like, you know, if, I don't know, mushrooms to be believed or whatever, Damon deflowered Allison Hightowered. Because his favorite thing was deflowering version, something that they left out of the show. Thank you very much.
Starting point is 03:07:34 For now. But then also did Kristen Cole, did Damon deflower Renira? Did Damon help Renewer practice to seduce Kristen Cole? Did Kristen Cole seduced Renira? Like, all these foursome, they should just have all gotten together and gotten it of their system, the four of them. Again, we have a lot of gaps to fill in, maybe. Frit, damn me.
Starting point is 03:08:00 Gaps to fill in. Oh, God. Oh, my God. Okay. Kristen. Boy. Okay. For Allison, though, we got this email from listener Jay who said, is there
Starting point is 03:08:13 book context where Allison feels about her father, whether the brief favor given to Damon at the tournament indicates a longer flirtation with Damon either naturally or as an FU to Otto. So I think a couple of things. I don't know. Correct me if I'm wrong. wrong. I don't have a deep, deep sense of how Allison feel, like if there's resentment, there's definitely this pressure. We see her chewed up fingers. But in the books, I don't feel like there's
Starting point is 03:08:35 resentment towards her father that we see. There's loyalty to her father. But I don't know if there's resentment. But I like the idea if the book is to be believed in Damon takes Allison's virginity, extra fuel for the auto-hate. Damon fire raging in all of this. Anything you have to say on the Alessent auto relationship front? I think just more broadly that it's exciting that we're going to learn a lot more about Allison and what motivates her. Because, you know, it connects to what you were explaining earlier about how this relationship
Starting point is 03:09:13 between and this deep friendship and affection between Allison and Reneera is really like an update for the show. And it gives us this opportunity right away to learn much more about a character who is one of the most central figures in this story moving forward. And, you know, on the Allison Renera front, there was a lot here already, even amid that affection. And I think, like, in a compelling way where you can interpret it in a few different fashions, but like that opening sequence in the dragon pit where we hear Allison say when Renera's like, oh, let's go ride this dragon together. I believe I'm quite content as a spectator. Thank you. I loved that because it's like, not for long.
Starting point is 03:09:55 Allison's not a character who's content to be a spectator and won't be in the future. And so I love that note here. The look on Allison's face as she's dressing Renira and readying her at the end, I mean, is it jealousy? Is it resentment? Is it fear for a person she loves? Is it all of those things? And she's still trying to grapple and assess what is in her heart at that moment? There was a lot here on that front already. And when she says, you know, aren't you afraid, concerned for your position if a son should be born, that means that Allison's thinking a few steps ahead on the chessboard in a way that Rainira isn't. We had an email from listener Lorne who asked about the age difference, right? So as we mentioned earlier in the non-book reader section, like Allison's, Renier has aged up, Allison is aged down, so they're the same ages. I think that is to introduce the extreme awkwardness of your best friend, your son. stepmom being your best friend who's your exact same age. Yes. Versus like a woman you know who's like 10 years old than you.
Starting point is 03:10:57 Right. You know? On that front, I love it. I have some math questions about how we're getting grandkids in the right timeline here. We need not only kids, but grandkids soon. There's going to be a lot of time hop, skipping, and jumping. So we'll see. Yeah. Yeah, I guess it's, you know what, like if, so if Allison, I'm kind of working through the math in real time here,
Starting point is 03:11:23 If Allison's supposed to be 18 in the books when she marries Vassaris, and that's in 106 AC. Yeah. And she's 14 in the show in 110. That's not that, that big of a difference when it comes to, like, is it possible to get grandkids in a position where they need to be a certain age for terrible things to happen? I mean, especially when, you know, looking at you, blood and cheese. Emma, Emma was 11 when she got married to Allison is like, if Allison gets married at 14 or 15 and starts popping out babies immediately, like. or on track, you know. For those babies to grow and then have babies of their own.
Starting point is 03:11:58 Yeah. Lena is also aged down. And that's a good question. I don't know. I don't have a good answer for that. They're adjusting a lot of the ages. Yeah. We got a lot of story to cover here.
Starting point is 03:12:13 I mean, we've got 28 years to get through in season one. Speaking of Lena, I wanted to talk about marriages and difficult births to come. because like just so just in the context of this scene here, I don't anticipate the miscarriage, the Cisarian scene here. I don't expect that we're going to get that level of grim going forward. But should be said that like Lena Targaryen dies in childbirth. Reneira, Reneira, when like when her father's dying,
Starting point is 03:12:47 when everything is happening, shit's going down at King's Landing. She's at Dragonstone in a terrible birth that almost costs her life. And so I can see the season ending with Reneira going through a terrible childbirth. Maybe not like the closing, but like I think the closing is a double coronation,
Starting point is 03:13:07 but like I think that that is going to book, like echo this first instance here. I mean, I think that makes sense. The timeline certainly works with that happening in like 129 AC, that's where we think the season will end because that's the dawn of the dance. Yeah, yeah, I think that sounds right.
Starting point is 03:13:25 Let's talk about the Barathians here. You love these guys. Fucking Borman Barathean. Okay, so let's talk about Borman Barathean. At the tourney, shit-talking, Queen who never was. But this is his cousin and there seems to be some warmth between them.
Starting point is 03:13:38 However, when he's asked to bend the knee at the end for Reneera, who is the most reluctant, Borman Barathean? And in the books, his son Boris Barathean, who has been cast in the show, crucially does not back Renira, even though they expect him to because House Barathean is so closely aligned with Reynus Targaryen, who is on Team Renera, the Reds and the Blacks. Right.
Starting point is 03:14:04 The Barathean supported Renice at the Great Council. Yeah. And Lenore, like, backed both, like, both times they were Team Valerian. You know what I mean? And so Reneer sends her son to him, expect. that the Baratheans will be on their team because they have been historically does not go their way.
Starting point is 03:14:26 I love that we got so much Baratian action in this episode, even though it was all kind of quick, because first of all, there's just like a really long and complex and interesting history between House Barathean and House Targaryen. I mean, Oris Barathean's rumored bastard brother, first hand of the king. Obviously, then we go all the way in the future to Robert,
Starting point is 03:14:44 usurping the men. Mad King, I, thinking ahead to Boros and Storm's End and a setting for Luke and Aitman and some of the most consequential moments in this story, it was important, I think, to say the Baratheans are here right away. I really liked it. Or baby Luke. Terrible stuff coming. Heartbreaking stuff coming.
Starting point is 03:15:09 Oh, Jesus. But what I will say is that I think that pause is going to be something that we can go back to and point to people. when, yeah. Roneiro looks, right? She notices. Yeah. I think it's a real, it's going to be like a real, like, I think they're setting it
Starting point is 03:15:26 to feel sort of like a Waldrere moment, like a red wedding moment. You know what I mean? Like, we're going to go to the Baratheans. The Baratheans are definitely going to support us. And then poor Luke, aka Rob Stark, is going to not make it out of life. How strong? Yes. Lionel Strong is here.
Starting point is 03:15:44 Oh, my God. No, Harwin, no. Laris yet, but they're fucking coming. Oh my God, Laris. I'm so excited for Laris. In the teaser. We got a couple glimpses of Laris Clubfoot in the teaser. I love Laris so much.
Starting point is 03:16:00 Yeah, I mean, Harwin Strong is here. Very background. I think non-book readers are going to need their hands held a little bit with How Strong. And so, you know. Yeah, it's a house of consequence in this great deal. Can we return to your small balls? Sure. We should say, how strong?
Starting point is 03:16:20 I mean, I guess there's people maybe listening to this who haven't read the book, so we should say like, why how strong is. Some people are like, I don't care about spoilers. I want to listen. Yeah. Welcome. Hello. Hi. Basically, essentially, Renira marries Lenore Valerian.
Starting point is 03:16:39 But none of her kids look like her husband. Three strong sons. Strong, strong brown hair. boys that are all Harwin Strong's children. So Harwin is like the father of the bastard children of Ranira Targaryen. Also, they hold Haran Hall at this time. So a very consequential. And then Laris Strong, who is like the younger son, is that's your little finger. Yes. Tied up in an extraordinary amount of drama to come. Tied up and causing an extraordinary amount of drama to come. I don't think it's going to feel like Thrones until he's here. That's what I have to
Starting point is 03:17:15 I miss the scheme with his schemes, Mallory, and his plots. Okay. Skems and plots are the same thing. Okay, let's return now to your small ball theory, your small council ball theory. Small ball. Oh, do you have more to say about the? Yes, I do.
Starting point is 03:17:33 Bring it. What do you got? When Allison and her faction, yes. The Greens. Yep. Snatch the throne. Yes. There is a small council meeting.
Starting point is 03:17:45 Yep. And my best friend, Lord Beesbury, dear me, is faithful to Reneera. I know where you're going and I love this. There's many versions of what happened to him. Did he get thrown in the black cells? Yeah. Did he trip and fall out of window? Did Kristen Cole slit his throat with a dagger?
Starting point is 03:18:09 Or did Kristen Cole beat him to death with his small ball? I love this. Oh my God, I'm so into this. Maybe he just, maybe one was on the floor and he slipped on it and fell out the window. Sure. I really, I really think Kristen Cole is going to beat this man to death with the ball. Oh my God. Or like, make him choke on it or something like that.
Starting point is 03:18:33 Yeah. Those balls have to come back, right? Have to. Absolutely have to. Check off small balls. So, uh, death watch on my best friend. Lord Faisbury. I love it.
Starting point is 03:18:45 Speaking of Death Watch, what else do you want to say about Damon and his gold cloaks? I think we just wanted to mention them here to say that like when it comes to the greens, which is Team Alicent and the Reds and the Blacks, which is Team Renera, a major chip on the side of the Reds and the Black
Starting point is 03:19:01 because Damon is also on Team Renera is the gold cloaks, which is a fun surprise, by the way, we can say here in the spoiler section, so many people are like, can't wait for this season, Damon versus Reneera. And that's like a fun. set up, but that's not what it is. It's Damon and Renera versus Alicent and Otto and all of her
Starting point is 03:19:18 fuckers over there. So, like, I'm not even sure what team I'm on, which is the whole beauty of the Dance of Dragons, but Renira, Damon, their team, they got some loyalty from the gold cloaks on their side. It's, to Otto's credit, he was right to say the city watch is fiercely loyal to him in Army 2000 strong. Numbers game, you know? Though, I guess that would make us think of Sersie and Robert and which army is stronger. One. God, I love that scene. What holds the realm together?
Starting point is 03:19:53 Our marriage. Or power resides where men believe it resides. You know? Okay. Oh, my God. Great stuff. And as we said, in future, this section will be a little healthier. Yes.
Starting point is 03:20:08 We just went very long. No surprise. No surprise. No surprise. Dear me, tell me. You know, speaking of Steve, we'll just say we hope you don't have to maim half our city to achieve this episode's edit because that's a wrap. And that's where you come in, Steve and like Damon, you say time will tell.
Starting point is 03:20:35 Thank you to you for listening, of course. We are so hyped to talk about this show every week all season long. And thank you to our dragon lords, Steve Alman. for his work as the senior producer on this episode. Regina Ram Gapal for his work on the additional production for this episode. And Jomi Adonron for his work on the social media for this episode. We will see you on Friday for our rings of power primer. And then again on Sunday night,
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