House of R - 'House of the Dragon’ Season 1 Awards, Season 2 Book Look Ahead, and Greg Yaitanes Chat!
Episode Date: October 28, 2022This is the stuff, Ringer-Verse! Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson gather one last time to discuss their favorite moments of the first season of 'House of the Dragon' (05:22). They also share their fi...nal words and thank each other for a wonderful pod run (40:50). Then they have an in-depth chat with series director Greg Yaitanes to discuss the nuances of the first season (52:53). Later, they take a look at your emails in a non-book spoiler segment (93:10) before heading to the citadel library and looking into predicting what might happen in season two with all the book spoilers you can imagine (1:59:19). 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
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This is the stuff, Lino.
Lads have blown together, train together,
knock each other down, pick each other up.
You'll certainly form a lifelong bond, wouldn't you agree?
That is the hope you'll grace.
And welcome into the Ringerverse,
here on the Ringer Podcast Network.
I'm Mallory Rubin, and it is my absolute pleasure to invite you,
not only to gather around the painted table,
but also to join us on the Ringers' Nexus podcast feed
for all things fandom.
Joining me today,
now that she's finished telling me
that Lord Boris is an eternally
proud man who would be honored
to host two podcasters
of the realm.
It's my house of our
working talk.
Co-host, Joanna Robinson.
What a joy to be
here with you at Storm's
end, at the Storm's End of all things.
You know, I'm sure everything's going to go fine.
What could go wrong with this, the steady hand of Boros Barathean guiding our conversation?
Can you lift your glasses so I can see if there are any sapphires?
Why isn't it an emerald?
Why isn't it High Tower Green?
Why didn't he go for the emerald in the eye?
Come on, guys.
Maybe he's a tarth, a real tarth stand.
You know what I mean?
Maybe so.
Loves a tarth.
here, Joe, today.
Not only to talk about sapphires,
not only to mention the tarthes whenever we can,
but to sail and soar once more
through the skies of hot D content,
we are handing out our season one awards.
We are going to be answering some mailbag questions
from our wonderful listeners
who have been hitting up, Poppets and Dragons at gmail.com.
We are going to be chatting with series,
executive producer and director of episodes 2, 3 and 10,
the finale, Greg Yutanis,
and we're going to be looking ahead to season two,
some of what we are most excited for in season two,
and that is our book, spoiler, book look ahead section.
But before we make that short flight down to Storm's End, Joe,
just a puddle jumper.
Some quick programming reminders.
We will be back tomorrow.
Maniana, yes.
For our Andor episode 8, a deep dive.
And the Andor talks not stopping there.
The Midnight boys, pew, pew.
They'll be back next Wednesday to chat about episode nine.
It's Andor season.
Join us.
Joe, how can the people follow the Andor pods?
How can they catch up on our hot detox?
How can they keep tabs on everything that awaits in the future in the ring of verse?
This is truly a question for the ages, and I'm glad you've asked it of me, Mallory.
If you're Boros Barathean, you can't rely on scrolls to tell you where to look, right?
Because, you know, so if I were Boros myself, I would just subscribe to the Ringerverse on whatever podcast platform, probably Spotify, but whatever podcast platform, you know, I could download from out there at Storm's End.
But I also might just want to like follow the ringerverse on social.
We're on Twitter.
We're on Instagram.
We're on TikTok.
And by we I mean Jomi just like firing on all cylinders.
Did you see his and or feet tweet?
What a genius, Jomey is.
Anyway, so follow at the ringerverse on social.
And then you should be all set.
I love it.
I hope Laris saw that tweet.
No, he did.
Of course, as always, bear in mind as well, our friendly neighborhood spoiler warning.
We are looking back at the whole season, as we said.
So everything from Hot D season one is on the table today.
Everything from Game of Thrones is on the table today.
On the book front, we will be talking throughout the pod about Fire and Blood and a song of ice and fire.
When we're talking about historical context, lore dives, etc.
Anything from the future of Fire and Blood will be reserved for our book look ahead section for season two.
Okay, let's start with the awards.
Normally we say we're going to make the eight.
Today we're going to make the eight times too, Joe.
We're adding some new categories, but let's make the eight-ish.
Wow, that was a real twist.
I thought we'd be getting the usual make the eight sword clash sound of back there.
Oh, no, absolutely not.
This is going to be the end of every thing now.
This is the finale, baby.
Boy, boy.
Okay.
Who knew so many surprises awaited?
Give the people what they want, give the people what they want, which is nothing but.
pressed it through the clouds and I thought in that ray of sunshine I was going to hear a familiar sound and know and said a dragon took me by surprise. Boy, Joe.
Yeah.
We're going to do all of our usual awards, but we're adding a whole other set today as we look back. So let's start with favorite episode of the season.
Yeah, this is actually a really tough one because I think actually,
Overall, I enjoyed the post-time jump, like six through ten.
I really, really, really, really love them.
However, actually, based on the conversation that we had with Greg that folks will get to hear later,
I think I'm going to swerve and pick episode three because I really, like, we really, there's a lot,
there's actually very few diversions from the main storyline beats except for this Royal Hunt idea,
which is a show invention.
And so, like, and I really, really loved that element.
I thought it worked really, really well for helping us understand dynamics and characters.
And so, you know, when we talk about late stage thrones and the fact that they ran out of book
and it's sort of like, what do you do when you run out a book?
What do you do when you run out of source material?
And that's the true measure of an adaptation is like, what can you add that isn't there?
And so I think the hunt in episode three and that borewalk, that's what I'm going to pick.
How about you?
Amazing pick, but I think it's a little weird that you're saying the hunt is the recent.
episode three is your favorite and not your time with crabby?
Dreha.
Yeah.
That's what you like.
Craben a most about episode three.
That's your Baltimore coming through, my friend.
I remember what everyone's like,
can't wait to spend time with his crab feeder.
Yeah.
I really vividly remember just genuine, like,
a lot of time worrying about.
whether Damon had grayscale.
Yeah.
What a season it's been.
It's a great pick.
The hunt was amazing.
Truly amazing.
Saris got hammered.
There's prophecies.
There were stupid Lannisters.
We didn't know yet the depths of Laris' depravity.
Yeah.
We thought it was just a little innocent cookie nibble, how wrong we were.
Otto suggested that someone.
one marry a baby. I mean, a lot happened, and it was all pretty fantastic.
That's not going to be the last time that comes up today. I promise.
Kristen Cole very quickly offered to kill someone for Renira, and we were like,
ugh.
Really stands out on a rewatch that moment. Yeah. Really stands out. Great pick. Great pick.
My pick is, and I had an incredibly difficult time selecting between two episodes,
I could not choose between episode seven and episode eight.
At first, I was like,
it's just these are both my favorites,
but I'm going with episode eight.
I'm going with the Lord of the Tides.
Vesaris's long walk into the throne room,
the entire sequence with the petitions,
having so many members of the cast interacting with each other,
the actual incredible charge dialogue we got,
but also just a little moments with all of the looks.
The family dinner sequence,
similarly an incredibly rich and rewarding stretch.
Our guy Vassaris reached,
out in the final moment into the dark.
My love.
That's what I do every time we log off Zoom, Joe.
Just look at my blank screen and think of you and say,
My love.
I know.
And I hope you feel like you get a better reception than I'm sure Vassaris is going
to get from the ghost of Emma.
Yeah.
It's my love.
We have to talk about the way that I went out.
Before we lovingly embrace in the afterlife, let's talk about the end of my life.
Anyway, great pick, obviously.
Yeah, that's my favorite episode eight.
Chapter 7.
Definitely a contender for me, Driftmark, the looks in that courtyard sequence,
the vagar claiming, you know, one of my favorite moments of the season, an eye for an eye,
all of it.
So seven was really in the running, but had to go with eight.
Beach fucking, yeah, yeah.
Indeed.
Indeed.
Okay.
Next award.
Favorite moment of the season?
Favorite scene, favorite moment.
This one was very easy for me.
And you already mentioned it.
It's the long walk.
And Damon picking up the crown and, you know, all of that.
Come on.
Yeah.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
How could it not be?
Any runners up in the real consideration set for you?
Or was that an easy pick?
That one came to me right away, so I didn't even think about it.
I was just like, nothing's going to top this for me.
Yeah.
How about you?
Any runners?
I think the eye for an eye sequence in the Drift Mark episode and Allison's entrance.
at the wedding feast, the pre-wedding feast.
Yeah.
Yeah, those were, and Eamon claiming Vagar.
Those were all in the mix.
But yeah, this was, Vesaris's long walk was,
this was, I think, the first pick I wrote down of any of these.
Next, most astounding visual.
What's your, this is a sort way to honor our pal, Neil Miller.
What's your one perfect shot?
I love that.
It's Cyrax coming out of the fog on the bridge of Dragonstone.
an episode two.
Yeah.
When you hear Syracin
before you see her
and then she comes,
she merges up out of the fog.
Yeah.
And I love,
I mean,
like we talked about that at length,
but like the bridge,
I mean,
we got an echo of it in episode 10,
but the episode two bridge
scene shot in the volume,
the way that it captured
the low sun,
all of that.
I just thought
was absolutely breathtaking.
Glorious.
How about you?
Wonderful pick.
How much of the reason that that has really stood the test of time for you is a supreme hot D moment is because it led to the realization that Chris cannot tell the difference between any of the dragons.
Well, that's high on my list, but it also led to a nice trial by.
It led to a nice trial by content moment because that's when Dave first said they're never going to show them dismounting from a dragon and then they still haven't shown a dismount.
Like, rewatch the season and just like note every time that someone lands on the dragon and then you'll just see like boots hit the ground kind of.
something like that, but you won't see a dismount. And what's hilarious, if you watch both,
because Dave made me rewatch it this week, if you both watch that Syrax landing and the one in
episode 10, how did Renira get off Syrac? Syrac has got both of her, like, front talons on
either side of, she's spanning the bridge. So did Renira do what I called a reverse Lego loss and what
Dave called a Galadriel, like off the front of Syrac? Is that how she got off?
And if so, if there was a tremendous sort of flip move involved, why did we not get to see it?
I would love to see that anyway.
Great questions.
Great questions, right?
My pick is also a dragon moment, and it's one that we chatted about at length already this week.
But I don't think it's recency bias.
I think it would be my pick no matter when it had happened in the season.
It's Vagar soaring overhead of ARAx in the finale.
just astounding.
I feel like that's going to stand the test of time
as one of these truly iconic
Thrones visuals. You see it.
You not only remember exactly
when that was
in the course of the story, but you remember what it felt like
to see it and watch that for the first time.
So that is my pick.
You know, we haven't talked about this yet,
but we talked about all the other illusions,
but it reminds me a lot of the Game of Thrones Season 5
poster, which I always remember really well
because those are the last physical screeners that HBO
sent out. So I have those, like, DVD
cases, but it's Tyrion on the prow of a ship and then like a drogan coming out of the mist
is the season five poster for Game of Thrones.
So that's what I thought of.
But also Star Wars, obviously.
Anyway, great pick.
Most tantalizing new merch.
Like the thing in this season of TV that you see and you say, I need it.
When are they selling this?
When can I procure this from my own home?
You're the merch queen.
So I would love for you to go first on this one.
My pick's not going to surprise you.
It's Dark Sister for me.
I have Longclaw already.
And it's a cherished possession of mine,
something that I really love.
And I would love to add Dark Sister to my armory.
And not only because I love to collect Valerian steel weaponry,
but because I, you know, with my ghost pommel
and the dragon egg pommel and the winged hilt.
I would really feel like I had the Song of Ice and Fire embodied there and those two and those two swords.
I need it.
I need it.
Wow.
I can't wait for you to have it.
I know you're going to get it very soon.
I don't believe this exists, but I'm just going to manifest it.
I need a shirt that says either, dear me or gods be good on it.
I need a Bees shirt out of season one of House of the Dragon, right?
Honestly, this sounds like House of Our merch to me.
Me too.
I'm manifesting house of our marriage.
Dear me.
God's be good.
Tell me.
Oh, boy.
That'd be amazing.
Leo pointing meme.
We're bringing this one back
from the early days of the hot detox.
Your favorite resurfaced
Game of Thrones location,
objects, something that was familiar to us,
but we got to see again here
in a totally new way.
So many choices.
What's your pick?
It's not the cat's paw because I've never liked the design of that thing.
And I really can't believe it's such a key element.
Dagger of prophecy.
I don't like that dagger.
I can't.
I eat that dagger.
But, Belary and the Black Dreddress.
He hit a song in the steel.
That steel doesn't mean that steel for sure.
That steel.
Can we do a little quick redesign maybe?
It's Balairean the Black Dreads skull down in the catty.
Oh,
kids landing.
Great pick.
I love this.
It's difficult.
Early in the season,
I probably would have said
the more book-accurate
Iron Throne,
like getting to see
this version of the Iron Throne
with the sprawl
of flesh-slicing
shards
probably also would have considered
picking the dragon pit,
you know,
seeing the dragon pit intact
at this height
of Targaryen power.
I think, though, after the finale, I'm going painted table.
But, like, my question is, I didn't think that it counted because it's so different.
It's a different table.
They did the redesign on this painted table that they should have done on the fucking dagger.
You know, they plus the painted table for this.
Yeah, I mean, never mind.
I'm not going to deny you anything ever, Mallory, obviously.
But I will just say that's why I didn't pick it.
But it's a great pick.
All right.
I think we're going to have the same pick
for this next one.
That, okay.
Go ahead.
Tom and 2.0.
The performer
that we hope they bring back
from season one of House of the Dragon
and cast in a new role.
That's to be clear for the parameters here,
in case anyone's wondering,
you can't say like,
I'd love for Millie Alcock to come back.
That role was too big the first time around.
So this has to be someone
who was in more limited screen time,
a la,
Lannister and then gets to be
Tommet. I have to assume we have the same
pick here. So this is the
Dean Charles Chapman Award.
But we're going to rename it
the Tide Tentonet Award. Yes.
Because that's why it exists. The only reason
why it's here is so we can talk
about how much we love Tite Tentat as
Agon,
the second, second of
his name, and how much
we would love to see him come back as
another character.
Perhaps Darren the Daring.
Daring.
Darren. Yes.
Why not?
Why not?
Just a slightly different wig.
I think this is going to be one where this becomes such a popular, widely requested thing on the internet that it actually happens.
Oh, we're going to make it happen.
Okay.
Hashtag tie for Darren.
Hashtag tie for Darren or something like that.
Like make that happen.
His dad's coming back to Dr.
Who bring Tide Tentat back for season two, House the Dragon.
House of Tenet.
House of Tenet.
Most thronesy death.
You can interpret this really any way you like.
The coolest death, the most shocking death,
the death that completely subverted your expectations heading into the episode,
the death that got the internet buzzing, any number of ways you could take this.
What is your most thronesy death of the season?
When I think Thronesy death, I think it's got to be gruesome,
a little shocking, and kind of fun.
That's like the ideal trifecta.
So for me, it has to be
Vaman Filarian
losing his, don't lose your head.
Like losing his head in the
throne room. Yeah.
He can keep his tongue.
Yeah.
He can give his tongue.
Say it.
Say it is just an all-timer.
That's a great, great pick.
I wondered if you might pick
bees and death via small ball.
I thought about bees,
but I have more to say about bees elsewhere.
So I didn't want to.
over-be-it, you know.
Vagar eating Luke?
I mean, it's tough to top.
It's tough to top.
The little pieces of my dear darling
ARAx just
fluttering.
Fluttering down
to the stormy sea below.
No sign of Luke who has been
ingested by the largest
dragon in the realm
veteran of 100 battles.
Kind of go with that one.
Be his honorable.
mention, of course.
Okay.
I'm excited about this next one.
So the tell me a joke,
Masande of Nath,
funniest moment of this season.
What is your pick here,
Joanna Robinson?
Steve, can you hit me?
God's has been good.
I'm giving it to...
How can I not?
He's provided endless, endless.
And thanks so much to Steve.
Also, like, finger on the trigger
of the soundboard, as many people have noted.
Yeah, it's got to be the legend that is beast.
He lives on through the house of our soundboard,
and he'll be with us always.
We'll carry him with us always.
Okay.
So I know that you think you know what my pick is here.
Okay.
All right.
And it is.
It's the open club of the podcast.
Of course, this is the stuff.
The line of lads that learn together train together and knock each other down,
and pick each other up.
They will certainly form a life.
long bond. Oh, wouldn't you agree?
That is, I just need everyone listening to know that Mallory sent a series of voice memos
to Steve and me the other night.
That was just like five seconds long and it was just like five words at a time of this whole speech.
It was just clause by clause.
Wouldn't you agree?
Yeah.
That is like legitimately one of my favorite moments of the season.
Certainly the one that made me laugh the most.
and it's it's the pick.
However,
I'm actually going to pick something else.
You can't smoke.
What a smuggle?
That got the honor,
the award of being the opening clip for the episode.
So to spread out our love.
And to give this award to the other moment
that genuinely, I would say,
made me laugh more than anything else,
classic smuggle, anything else this season.
Steve, please play this.
Who do you have in mind?
I almost picked this
Prince Egon
The boy just turned too,
I don't know
Yes
But it would cease
The endless proposals
For any of his heart
Betroth them
I came here to hunt
Not to be suffocated
By all this
Fucking
Politicking
I mean
Unrivaled
I almost
I just want to let you know
I almost
I almost picked that
You and I went like
Our prompt was
Let's like
Find
audio clip and I went and rewatch that
and when you can, when I realized
that you could hear Agon like gurgle
I was like this is going to make good audio
but yeah
classic smuggle. It's so good.
The calm
the pause, the little cry
from two-year-old baby
Agon, the paws that
charged paws from Sarah simply
can't believe what he's hearing the way that
Otto says, yes.
Yes.
In the bow.
of the pleasure tennis.
And then Patty's laugh of shock is just perfect, absolutely flawless television moment.
Okay.
Fucking politicking.
Now we're into our usual categories.
We watch best, worst wig of the season, best and worst, the whole season.
A nearly impossible task.
And yet, one that you've been preparing for your entire life.
Worst, I'm going to give to Little Lane of VIII.
Valerian who had like a 20-pound wig on a five-pound body.
Like, that was just like a real tough combination.
Hair to child ratio, right?
Best, I'm going to give it to the second
Damon short blonde wig when like,
because there's like the first one and then in the next episode
is just sort of like forelocking a little anyway of the wedding wig.
Yeah.
That's a great book.
Okay.
I am going with the same one for best, the same Damon one.
And then I'm also going with a Damon one for worse.
You hate that Legolas here.
I do.
And specifically the small council scene.
I love it, but it's all must.
Yeah, even like on a rewatch now seeing the subsequent wigs,
which I liked so much more, it's, yeah, it's, that's my wig one.
Damon, wig one, Legulus, Damon is, that's a note for me.
but the ones that came after, I loved.
It's a hard pass.
Yeah.
I also just have to say, you know, it's a journey.
Always.
And I have gone through a journey of my own after a season of ridiculing and annihilating
the mid-season Vassaris Wigs.
I would just like to say that revisiting this text, the Wigs in episode six and episode eight
are tremendous.
Tremendous.
I obviously awarded the, you know, seven little pricks of strands of dental floss.
Best wig at the time for eight.
But going back to six, that incredible moment on the battlements watching the training,
it's actually amazing the way that the hairline moves over episode to episode to show you
how Viseris is aging and decaying.
It's flawless.
I recant all my prior worst wig picks for Vassaris.
Anything that has to do with Patty going,
that's the stuff, Lionel.
What you're going to work for you?
Just pointing at the wig.
This is the stuff, Lionel.
Wigs that recede, episode to episode,
make you feel the passage of time.
It will certainly hold up on a rewatch.
Wouldn't you agree?
How directly do you think hair is affected by the magical leprosy?
The magical throne-induced leprosy that Vissera says, you know?
I mean, it's pretty direct.
Clearly.
Yeah. Severely. If all of your skin is sloshing off your body, then that's going to include some hair follicles, I think.
Slash is a real choice of a word there.
Toughly, tough one.
All right. Fit watch. Best fit of the season, worst fit of the season.
I'm really hoping we have the same exact ones. All right. Best can't be anything other than the iconic power fashion move of Allison's High Tower.
in her great dress, right?
Has to be.
Without question.
Yes.
Okay.
Slight follow up.
Honorable mention,
David Targaryen's murder cloak,
okay?
Worst has to be,
and I really hope you agree.
Worst has to be
Kristen Cole's dumb hat.
Is it not Kristen Cole's dumb hat?
It's a two-way race for me,
and it's between that and the second,
here's the second contender.
I want to talk about this with you.
It's not because it doesn't look cool.
It's because it is not a response.
responsible fashion choice, and we need to take this into account.
Your guy, Laris Strong, putting his personal sigil on his murder crew.
I'm not over it yet.
Why is this the thing that he's doing?
Yes.
You just can't tell people that you're behind the fucking kinslaying and hair and all.
I mean, both of our picks are accessories kind of technically, so I can't even, like,
DQ you on a technicality.
I'm still giving it the edge to that dumb hat, though.
I can't believe you didn't pick that first Allison dress that you, uh,
that you were.
The one is she wore and wore and wore and wore and wore.
God.
And then put back on after her dad left.
Yeah.
Joe, it's time for some dragon talk.
Hmm.
They got bigger.
Mendega.
You're going to miss your baserous impression.
Best bit of dragondom in season one.
Steve Olman, can you hit me with the old
Malay Rubin Dragon Screech, please?
Oh!
Sorry.
I know I should pick something from the show,
but that screech has brought me so much endless enjoyment.
So, yeah.
An absolute honor
to be here in a house
of our Hall of Fame
alongside my pick,
which is the High Valerian
lullaby to the Bronze Fury
Vermithor.
Is that on Spotify yet?
It's a great question.
I mean, I'm already looking forward
to our six-hour off-season
revisiting all of those lyrics.
Word-by-word breakdown
of what might await.
Also, Aymn claiming Vagar.
Maybe that's my pick, actually.
I did love that so much in episode seven.
I loved that sequence.
I don't know what to pick.
How can I decide?
Who can know the mind of such a beast?
Who can know the mind of Mallory Rubin
when asked to decide between favorite drag-it moments in this season?
You know what?
I'm switching, Joe.
I'm going to, I'm going with Aiman claiming Vagar.
I loved that.
Wow.
What a twist.
What a twist in a turn.
Okay.
Sorry.
All right.
Yeah.
Speaking of twists and turns,
the doctrine of exceptionally weird sex stuff.
What was your favorite sex thing from this season?
Okay.
So there's a lot to talk about here.
Yeah.
Including Damon's fleeting impotence that was never raised again.
But I'm going to go with...
When you say never raised again.
Yep.
Tell me.
Yep.
I was positive.
and waiting for the beast that time.
Yep.
All right.
So before he moved into full monster territory,
our guy, Agon the second,
used to paint the town with his dragon seeds, if you will.
It's going to be, yeah.
Yeah, it's going to be Agon in the Tommon position,
masturbating out of a window.
Yeah.
If you just kept it to masturbating, I don't know that would have to stop it there.
You have to then say interrupted by his mother, who then continued and proceeded to have a 15-minute conversation with him.
As he sat there in his masterptorium, that's my pick as well.
How could it not be?
I mean, how are going to not be?
Oh, astonishing stuff.
Astonishing stuff.
I did think that you might, you might pit.
That's the stuff.
Wouldn't you?
Great. I thought you might go with the old pleasure den coupling. Otto.
Damon and Reniro, we're seen to get about. Coupling.
The pleasure den. Coupling.
Runner up. Run her up.
Yeah. Yeah.
Also, honorable mention for the dragon orgy tapestries.
We just have to, we have to say once again how spectacular those were. What a gift.
I mean, genuinely how dare Allison Hightower paint over them.
I know.
Awful stuff.
I know.
All right.
If this show had Netflix subtitles,
so you have two choices here, Joe.
You can take one of your picks
from a prior episode
and just say this is the ultimate one.
This is the one that stands out
above all the others.
This is the pick for the season.
Or you can give us a new one,
anything you want here.
I have a new one,
and it is informed.
It is informed by our pal,
Paula Fairfield,
who does the Dragon audio,
or House the Dragon.
So first we're going to hear it.
Steve, will you play?
this for me.
Here's what Paula sent me.
She says, I sort of asked her about, like, her favorite dragon moment, the season.
And she said, did you hear Vermax say schnork when he first saw the goat?
We don't talk enough about that moment.
I'm not saying it'll be a pivotal point in the dance.
But if I can make Vermax ever say snork again, you know I will.
And apparently she just started calling Vermax schnork.
Like, that's what she's.
she calls him. So I'm going to say
dragon snorks
eagerly. Can we hear it one more time
Steve, please? I love it so much.
If you go back and watch it, it's a great moment.
It's a great moment. It's a very
velociraptor in the window of the kitchen
and Jurassic Park moment. Like, Vermax's head
like whips around
when he sees the goat and then
his little nostrils flare out and he
snorks. So
the snorking Vermax.
It's a snack. Baby wants a
snack.
Sweet little boba.
Paula also said that
Caraxies is the most complicated
sound, right?
Of all the dragons, she says
30 to 40 layers of sound
in Karaxi's like trademark whistle
that we hear in episode 10
and elsewhere.
So, and that she was like worried.
Yeah, she was worried that people
weren't going to love Karaxis, but I think
Karexies might be the most popular dragon, just because he's
such a weird long boy and he's got that cool whistle.
People love the bloodworm.
Yeah.
the bloodworm.
I mean,
even the guy who got
smushed underfoot
Karexis down in yield
steps.
Yes, my prince.
That should have been
on my funniest moment.
What's your
astounding moment of television?
Netflix subtitle.
Your stranger thinks subterial for this.
So I'm
staying true to a lot of our
picks from across the season,
but doing like a little bit of a mashup
to capture our journey
and the totality of it.
Throne shards slicing judgmentally, sores opening gapingly, wounds spreading and festering worryingly, limbs evaporating dismayingly.
Sleeves, oscillating wingly.
Face collapsing sloshily.
Oh, okay, good. I'm glad the slashing made it.
back.
When you said Slosh earlier, I was like, oh, she should have saved that for the subtitle, but you did.
It belongs in a museum, Mallory.
Can you put that on a, like, needlepoint that on a pillow for me?
Thanks so much.
Yeah, I'll see if Helena can help me out with the needlepoint if she's through with the spider.
Yeah.
Look into it.
I mean, we'll get it.
It'll just be, like, festooned with bug imagery, but we'll get the words.
They'll just be like bugs galore in the margin.
Best quote of the season.
Tough one.
Tough one.
Almost, dare I say impossible.
I was tempted to go funny, but there's plenty of funny shit up here,
including Chris and Cole's dumb hat.
But I have to go with truth of my heart,
which is a true queen counts the cost to her people,
and yet you toil still in service to men,
your father, your husband, your son.
You desire not to be free,
but to make a window in the wall of your prison.
Have you never imagined yourself on the iron throat?
I'll be thinking about that forever.
Window at the wall of your prison.
Love it.
So great.
So good.
So good.
I love that pick.
I...
It might be my pick as well.
I'll mix it up, though.
I think similarly, I was drawn to something
really poetic and resonant
that told us something
deep and important
about the characters
who were taking part of the conversation.
And it's when Eamon says,
time to get it wet.
I'm just kidding.
Tell me.
Oh, boy.
Oh, my God.
I knew it was in trouble yesterday
when you told me you recorded a pod
and you were worried that you didn't make enough,
like, sex jokes on it.
So we're making it up for last time.
I mean,
probably my actual pick here is this is the stuff, Lionel.
I do love that so much.
But I think the two things that I've been thinking about a lot,
like reflecting on the season,
Laris's love stays.
the hand quote. And then Renees, the stranger has visited me more times than I can count,
Grand Mastry, I assure you he cares little whether my eyes are open or closed. Like, that's the kind
of line that really digs its dragon claws into me and sticks with me for a while. So I think that is
actually my pick. Men would sooner put the Torch, the realms of the Torch. Like, so many bangers from Rainies.
Yeah. Barz. Bars. I can't believe we didn't pick dear me. What's wrong with us?
Aaron got. Bees is well represented.
Okay, Joe, the most reliable narrator tracker has been, it's the tale of the tape every week.
Twist and turns.
I mean, I insisted on this.
I'm not sure it's been the like wild ride that we all hoped and expected it would be.
But here at the end of all things, I will say that the most reliable narrator in this section of fire and blood as it is adapted into the showhouse of the dragon, speaking of.
getting it wet and all the other, the mass of a toriam and everything else that Mallory has said,
it is the Mallory Rubin of Fire and Blood, which is Mushroom himself, the depraved mushroom.
Good old mushroom.
I think one of the things I genuinely enjoy most about reading Fire and Blood is that almost every time,
I have to say it's like 93% of the time a mushroom account is presented.
it is immediately followed by a parenthetical saying
Mushroom was not there.
Mushroom also wants you to know that
his members three times the size.
His penis is huge.
There's always some mushroom commentary.
There's so many parentheticals about Mushroom's penis.
Yeah, it's true.
Oh, boy, mushroom.
All right, Joe.
I ask your favor.
Who won the season?
Just need you to know that Mallor,
when we started the section,
Mallor's like, this will be quick.
40 minutes later.
All right,
actor character.
Actor,
Patty Constitian,
not just because
he's not coming back
and can no longer win this award,
but like,
you know,
George himself has said
that Patty's Vassaris
is better than his Vesaris,
that Patty brought something
to that role
that really spined the season.
So, yeah,
Patty is the actor winner for me.
But character-wise,
I actually think
it's Rainira Targaryen.
I think that
like Damon gets a lot of the press
but
the character
that Millie Alcock and then
Emma Darcy have built here
is really
fascinating especially like as we're doing
I mean and I love
Olivia and Emily and Allison
and that creation as well
but Renira Targaryen
is just a very compelling
character to me and
And I could be done very poorly and superficially and is being done with a lot of care and nuance.
So, yeah.
We have the same two picks for the same reasons.
Yeah.
You picked Renier up.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I almost picked Damon because, you know, I think we're very intrigued by Damon week to week.
But yeah, for the same reasons.
I think that this portrayal and this rendition of Renier is like a genuine achievement.
Really remarkable.
And, yeah, Patty, I mean.
So, so blind.
Wouldn't you agree?
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Joe, I think there is another winner of the season, though, and it's me forgetting to do this with you.
Mallory.
It's true.
That's how I feel.
I agree.
Except it's me.
I'm the winner forgetting to do it with you.
Should I, should I say my, should I pour my heart out to you now?
Should we do it later?
Yeah.
Should we do it now?
Do it now.
Okay, I wrote you something.
Oh, no.
I'm going to read it to you.
In season eight of a little television program called Game of Thrones,
Varus told Tyrion, quote, nothing less.
And it was a very heavy thing to hear and to carry at the end of a decade-long journey
as fans of that television show.
And it has been on my mind lately as we have returned to the land of
and fire after three years away. You know, we change. The people around us change. The world changes.
Always. Life is as mutable as flame to paraphrase our guy Septim Barth. Now, Barth was, of course,
talking about dragons, but he could have been talking about any number of other things. So as I'm
thinking back and thinking about Varus's words, I'm also thinking about a quote that we have talked
about often and that I have shared maybe as often as any other odd pods over the years because
I hold it so dear and think it captures so fully the spirit of all of this. Stories wait, my little
lord, old man tells Bran in a Game of Thrones. And when you come back to them, why there they are.
and it has just been such a gift to find thrones waiting for us again and to journey into
Westeros with you and with Chris and with Steve and Arjuna and Jomi every week multiple times per week
for multiple months here and before Brand sat a bed with old man in that moment receiving that
wisdom he used to climb.
quote,
Brand could see all of winter fell in a glance.
This is another favorite passage of mine from a Game of Thrones.
He liked the way it looked, spread up beneath him,
only birds wheeling over his head while all the life of the castle went on below.
Brant could perch for hours among the shapeless rain-worn gargoyles that brooded over the first keep.
Watching it all, the men drilling with wood and steel in the yard,
the cooks tending their vegetables in the glass garden,
and restless dogs running back and forth in the kennels,
the silence of the godswood,
the girls gossiping beside the washing well.
It made him feel like he was Lord of the Castle,
in a way even Rob would never know.
And that's what doing this pod with you,
what talking about House of the Dragon
and Rings of Power and all of the other stories
that gotten to share with you has made me feel like.
You know, what a thrill to turn on our TV,
and crack open the spines of our books and boot-up zoom together and know what it was like to be
Brand in that moment, looking out at the expanse and just marveling at the vastness of it,
seeing only the sheer possibility of what was ahead.
And before Brand first wakes after his fall, he visits the three-eyed crow and tells him that
he cannot fly.
And the crow asks him, how do you know?
Have you ever tried?
and I wanted to thank you for helping me find so many new ways to do exactly that,
you know, to soar into worlds familiar and strange and feel that fear and uncertainty
shift into awe and wonder.
And I wanted to share another passage from a Game of Thrones, another absolute favorite
of mine that I talk about often, but one that I think I've thought about this more than
maybe any other over the last few weeks, and it's about John and his early days of the wall.
He had no destination in mind.
He wanted only to ride.
He followed the creek for a time, listening to the icy trickle of water over rock,
and then cut across the fields to the King's Road.
It stretched out before him, narrow and stony and pocked with weeds,
a road of no particular promise.
Yet the sight of it filled John with a vast longing.
Winterfall was down that road and beyond it River Run and Kings Landing in the Erie
in so many other places.
Castorly rock, the isle of faces, the red mountains of Dorn, the hundred aisles of
bravos and the sea, the smoky ruins of old Valeria, all the places that John would never
see. The world was down that road, and he was here.
Now, not everyone who reads the song of ice and fire or watches Game of Thrones has
joined the Knights Watch, but everyone, everyone has felt that way before.
Corliss told us in the finale that hope is a false ally, and sometimes it's really easy
to believe that. But not when I get to do this with you. Not when I get to talk with you about our
favorite stories. Not when we're finishing each other's sentences on a recording session or
delighting in the realization that we've pulled the exact same quote to blow Chris's mind a Sunday
night. Not when we get to laugh together over Waldrig's accent, power, or cry together over
Vassaris's long walk. Not when you push me to think in new ways and to ask new questions and
consider connections that I hadn't previously even seen.
The best fantasy stories help us look down that road and feel not trapped on our patch of it,
but ported, ported in every direction, able to embark always on some grand new adventure.
And we know for rings of power that adventures must be shared.
And the best stories, the best pals, help us feel that way.
Help us feel when we are living inside of those tales like Tyrion did.
Quote, when you open the door, light from within through his shadow,
clear across the yard. And for just a moment, Tyrion Lannister stood tall as a king.
I like, I started crying in the first word and then I just didn't stop the whole time you were
talking. What an incredible thing to say.
Just think you're the best. I like, no, I know, like, what you should receive right now is
thunderous applause and I'm hopeful that like everyone listening just stood up and clapped.
That was incredible. What an incredible thing you put together there.
True to form, you have this beautiful thing right now, and I was like, fuck it, we're doing it live.
I'm just going to wing it because that's how I like to do podcasts.
And I just want to say that like coming off of the last season of Thrones, I was like very certain I didn't want to cover this ever again.
Thrones every year for me was a source of an enormous joy and enormous stress and anxiety.
and then at the end when everything just got so much pressure
and the story also kind of fell apart under my feet as far as I saw it.
Like I was just like, I am done.
And I was nervous to do this at all.
Never nervous to do it with you, but nervous to do it at all.
The fact that you sort of like wooed me to the ringer to work with you,
the fact that like, you know, we had the time building up to it.
But then, like, it just felt like it hit a different gear when we did House of the Dragon and Rings of Power together.
You and I both have podcasts with so many people that we really dearly love in the past.
But I would just say for myself, like, I don't think I've ever podcasted with someone that made me feel like it could be my holy...
Is this good podcasting? I don't know.
Made me feel like I could be like my holy authentic self.
I think coming off of where I worked before, there was this idea that, like, in order to be smart, you had to be cynical.
And something that you've, like, really broken open for me in this past year working with you is that, like, you can be smart and have your heart sort of wide open to possibilities of story.
And so it has helped me approach story.
I said this on a, I don't know, an Obi-Wan podcast or maybe a Boba-Fet podcast where I was like,
listening to you talk about a story helps me love a story more. And I found that to be aspirational
and it was something that I wanted to do for other people as well. So that's the mode that we came
into this stretch of the podcast with. That's the mode where the joy of House the Dragon has been
as much getting to talk about it with you. I can't separate it from getting to talk to you and
getting to read all the really brilliant, insightful, lovely emails that we've gotten from all of
our listeners. That's been a big part of it too for me. The last thing I'll say is I do have a
quote, but it's not a Mallory Rubin. Let me cite chapter and verse Game of Thrones quote.
I mentioned one of my tattoos a couple weeks ago that I had this girl in Piperdown. Or last week I mentioned
that. But the other tattoo I have on my wrist is the word uncool, which is from my favorite quote,
from my favorite movie, almost famous. The only currency in this bankrupt
world is what you share with someone else when you're uncool. And that's always been an
overriding philosophy for me that something like this, the stories that we share together,
obviously it's ridiculous to call Game of Thrones, House the Dragon, one of the biggest
properties in the world, like an uncool niche thing. But like, you know, we grew up as fantasy
lovers. It was not always the dominant cultural thing. And so to get to connect with you about
these stories to hear from our listeners who felt like they didn't have anyone to talk to about
these stories that they loved. That is what feels so precious about doing this show with you,
having the listenership that we have. It's just this connection of people who have responded
similarly to a story and going from feeling alone in that feeling to feeling incredibly
connected, emotionally connected in that story. So that's how I feel about you.
Joe.
And Steve is wonderful also and also here on this call on Arjuna and Jomey.
Amazing.
Amazing group.
I feel very lucky to be at the at the ringer for this stretch of television.
Me too.
Love our team.
Love our little family here.
And it is just,
it is so amazing to,
to share it with the community of people who,
who love it too.
Like all of our pals who cover Thrones to get to share.
it again week after week. And like, it's just, it's the full boramere. It is a gift.
It is a gift.
Oh.
Love you, pal.
Love you. Now we have to do the rest of the pod.
Well, we can, now we can throw to a conversation we already had so that we can take a break
and get some clinics. But yeah, we had this lovely little chat with Gregutainus, the, as, as
Mallory said, the executive producer and director of two, three, and the finale.
He talked to us for like twice as long as he was supposed to because he's such a gemstone.
And really, really interesting, a lot of, you know, talk of what was cut out, what was left behind.
Like, that's always interesting to me because it says more about what remains.
What's the importance of what remains, that sort of stuff.
So let's go now to our chat with Greg Echinis.
Thank you so much for joining us.
I wanted to start, yeah, of course.
We wanted to start by asking you, you know, we know that when you make any given episode of House the Dragon, let alone the finale, there's usually more story than winds up on the screen.
So I'm wondering, like, as you carve away, what was the most important story or narrative or core, you know, idea that this episode needed to be and get across for you?
the Brinera-Daman dynamic was the spine of the episode that everything else needed to orbit around.
And that is from the very moment.
I mean, one thing I love, and I think Miguel had referenced this a couple of times,
is that nine and ten are sister episodes.
You know, they're the same events told from two different points of view,
and only a couple of characters crossed between those two storylines,
which is kind of great.
And that in that we are focused on the Damon-Ranera relationship and it's kind of deconstruction within the episode.
You know, so that was our focus that everything was around.
I mean, everything that, you know, one great thing about Ryan's work is that, you know, there's very little that makes it on the floor.
You know, that there's, there isn't, we're not trying to pack in more than, than we can fit and use.
There's, you know, sometimes things are ideas that come out that end up, you end up seeing what the episode wants to be.
And then that's where you gravitate towards and is everything in service of that.
Or are you looking to get back to, again, the spine, in which case it was Renera and Damon?
I'm just wondering really quickly, like, if you can sum up, like, in a sentence, like, what do you feel that dynamic between Renera and Damon is that you want to get through on this episode?
In one sentence?
I don't, I don't, I don't think, I don't think, I don't think, I don't think, and three and a lot.
Well, I think, you know, I think that you, you, you really, you bring up something interesting to me that that fascinates me about partner on partner relationships and dynamics.
And, you know, I've, I've been divorced twice and people often want the one sentence explanation for what happened, you know.
And what you come to learn is there's no one thing or one way to explain anybody's relationship.
And so one of the things that I love about Damon and Bernard is the complexity of their relationship,
that it is kind of an ecosystem in a way that's evolving.
And it's changing moment to moment.
And where it goes.
and we've seen an incredible journey.
You know, I do think that, well, I think there's,
so, you know, that's my multiple sentence answer
to the multiple sentence question about that.
I think that's what makes Ryan's writing so great
and really the writing on the show is so great.
And what defines it from a lot of other genre work
is that it is those relationships first.
The spectacle comes organically around it
and houses it.
You know, I think, you know, one of the things I would tell people about the series I did
that I'm very proud of, which was Quarry for Cinemax, and I did all eight-ups.
Love that show.
Thank you very much.
And Quarry, for me, is, you know, is a marriage crumbling to pieces and the secrets we keep.
It's a deal.
It's really a marriage being deconstructed and the secrets we keep housed in the shell,
the genre-coated shell of a hitman series, right?
But to me, it was really about marriage and marriages that collapse into the weight of their secrets.
And so, and that was what was so fascinating, why I wanted to do 10 so much is that, you know, when you're with a partner and that dynamic is shifting, it's a fascinating thing to feel like you're observing in that moment.
I think force majeure, you know, that French film was so incredible is like another example of that.
And not dissimilar to that, I feel like there's a lot of those kind of themes that come in.
And, you know, when you're watching, you're literally watching, you know, power dynamics when
they're at the table, but you're also in their most intimate, quiet moments, you're also watching.
And it's mixed with grief and shame. And there's all this complexity. So it's juicy. That's what makes it,
that's what makes it great. That juiciness, I think, is even more palpable to us after, of course,
in the entire season, because nothing that's happening in the finale is happening in a vacuum.
And we were curious to ask you about those parallels that are so present.
here at the conclusion of the season.
I think we're interested more broadly
in the way that those echoes surfaced across the season,
but you mentioned this idea of the sister episodes
and Miguel has talked about nine and ten as this pair at the end.
How closely were the teams who worked on nine and ten,
you know, you and Ryan, Claire and Sarah,
working together to forge those parallels actively inside of those episodes,
the fractures inside of each alliance,
the way that a mistake could shape history, et cetera,
to ensure that the penalty,
and final episodes really worked in lockstep.
And then relatedly, looking across the whole season,
there are numerous key connections between and across your episodes,
the episodes that you helmed, particularly, I think,
two and ten, the Dragonstone Bridge sequences.
Shout out Mummers, Farses and Withered Cox.
Key moments between Raynees and Ramirez and Ramirez,
that very strong second son's energy,
the idea of marriage is a political tool, et cetera.
But also, of course, three and ten.
Dragon battles in each episode.
Joe and I have been talking all season long about the long walks.
We've got Renera's long walk covered in Boers Blood in episode three,
and then here this long walk crowned and cloaked at last,
but ascending in the wake of tragedy and in the face of doubt,
the centrality of Agon's prophecy is the force weighing on Vassaris.
In three, Renera here unseen to everyone around them in both cases.
So do those opportunities for those mirror moments, those parallels,
or merge organically as you're working on the finale,
or is the team working and you're working to very actively mine those moments inside of the finale to connect back?
I mean, you broke that down so beautifully.
I almost don't know any to answer that.
Classic Mallory moment. I mean, I'm not going to top that.
That is so like cinematically astute all of those observations.
And what's so great is that you're seeing them.
And that is what's great.
I would tell people that, you know, to rewatch two for a lot of reasons before watching 10.
Speaking directly to my episodes, the, the, you know, I ended up, Miguel and I switched episodes late in the game.
I was supposed to direct seven.
So some of what you see in seven were off of original ideas and sort of early boards and concepts that I did,
especially with the claiming of Begar.
And the, and we, you know, due to COVID and such and various things that can delay the schedule,
seven was the least, had the least amount of sets, right?
So we need to build the hall of nine and then we're on location for the entire episode.
And so seven was actually my way into the series.
I really identify with that script and really wanted to direct that.
And I was fascinated by the adult, the after six storylines,
because again, they get more adult and complex,
and those are themes that I really love living in.
So when it swapped to two,
it actually became a real, like, beautiful accident that happened
because I was able to connect two and ten quite a bit.
In fact, I would talk to Emma about things that she,
she as Renaira, not they as Emma,
wouldn't have, you know, experienced in the past in relationships when it came to Rainies, for example, you know,
talking about that scene between them when they're, when young Renera is watching her dad court or sort of have that,
what Sarah has called the uncomfortable walk with, with, you know, with 12-year-old Lena.
And you have those moments that end up lining up quite, quite beautiful.
So there was, I thought what really paid off was Rainey's watching Renara throughout episode two
and continuing to watch her through episode 10.
And that was the most interesting of the parallels to me.
Then being able to treat Dragonstone Bridge from different points of view
and to be able to intentionally mirror those two things.
So within my own silo of my three episodes,
I was looking for those parallels either in three
in terms of both Renera and both Damon being covered in blood.
In fact, I wanted to go much more Gone Girl with Renara.
And I really wanted it on, it was tricky because, you know,
we have the stag scene came before her walk through the camp, right?
So you want to save that and you want to save everybody's reaction to that.
So we ran tests and I, you know, I mean, some of the tests I did were like, you know,
it was like Kerry, right?
So I, you know, I would like, well, you know, you want it.
You know, it's one of those things you can't pull back from very easily.
So you want to make sure everybody's on the same page.
So, you know, I'll organize with a, with a stand-in, you know, we will do, you know,
we'll do like, okay, here's like option one, option two, option three, just in degrees of how much blood, right?
Damon, I had full reign to make that, you know, a horror movie, right?
So there's those things within the episodes that tie together, and then there's those things that do span the season.
And Claringida and I, you know, in terms of our blocks and our episodes, we're in, you know, we had great camaraderie.
Like my favorite community in that experience was with my fellow directors with Claire and Gita.
That was we met before we all left for London.
We met up in London and we met after London.
You know, I've got this like great diptic of our three dinners that we got.
Because it was so hard to really sink up and there was so much terror of spreading, you know,
COVID and everything else that was going on.
So it was, it was, it was, it was, it was, you know, it was just really hard to connect,
you know, outside. So it would, and then because we were always shooting in the way that we
work is that we've got two full units working all the time. So there isn't, you know, we,
you really have to make those efforts in order to connect and then check in and see what's going on.
So I would, you know, I was watching how Claire really tried to mirror Allison coming in,
from episode one to episode nine and making those connections.
And then globally overseeing that Ryan and Miguel would check in.
So for example, it got deleted,
but there was a scene in episode two that followed.
It was actually a great montage, which checked in with,
there was, so there's a couple of scenes that aren't in the cut of two.
And I didn't, I don't think they need to be there.
I think the cut works really well,
and I'm very happy with how two came out.
However, there was an aftermath scene between
Alison and Renara in the garden.
And then it began a montage that mirrored episode one of
the, of Renera getting Alison ready for the wedding.
And it was this, and the only,
Heartbreak of it was that I watched that wedding dress get me.
There was never a wedding scene, but the wedding dress was manufactured forever.
It was one of those things that the intricate detail of it is incredible.
And I hope it goes on tour or on display or does something where people can enjoy it and be able to see it.
So that was, that was, you know, I went back and I looked at what Miguel did in his episode so that I could, you know, intentionally shoot it very, very similar.
not exactly, but similar, and just sort of flip the roles and have a different tone and weight to it.
And then it actually went to a scene of Elena on a balcony at night and her mom coming out to comfort her,
just, you know, because there really wasn't any scene between Lena and Rainies in the entire season.
So that wasn't, you know, that, and so it checks in with everybody.
And then in that, she hears like the distant cries of Vagar, right?
And it was also, but for me, thematically, it was a way to show that these young women of the realm have no agency in this patriarchy.
And then what, so it had a thematic connection.
Ultimately, you can only tell the story you can tell.
And I think that the choices were made were correct.
But they were there.
And those were other examples of ways that the show mirrored and connected.
But everything that you're seeing is very deliberate.
I don't think there's anything that anybody has.
has read into that wasn't somehow inspired or planned or connected.
There was a real specificity.
Nobody's winging it at any point,
although we do plan as hard as we do so that we can leave the last bit of magic for the day.
I want to ask you about Damon, like, you know,
okay, again,
thinking about the things that are carved away or left unseen,
I think we've been talking throughout the season about the edit on Damon
and how much we, like, say in,
the Step Zones battle that you directed, how we don't see that fight between the crab feeder and
Damon, we just see the aftermath that there are so many moments with Damon that we cut away
from, or so many moments where he doesn't say a word and we're relying on Matt Smith and his
like, you know, magnetic stare to communicate for us. And so I'm wondering, like, with Damon specifically,
what are the decisions that you made in your directorial choices or in the edit?
of what to show and what not to show,
and what are you hoping to inspire then
in an audience reaction
in that kind of treatment of a character?
I would say the global theme
that I went in to Game of Thrones with is restraint.
There is enormous temptation and bait
to take as a director, right?
So it can give one of the great things
about Game of Thrones is that it is a drama that presents,
It presents this fantasy, but really it's a drama.
It's the godfather, right?
And it's a story of a family tearing itself apart.
That's what it is.
It happens to be set in a world where there are dragons and such.
And you have to be careful because you can tip onto either side of the wrong way.
And so we would often, you know, say if something was Thronesy or not, or is that the show?
And because in some ways you're making season nine of Game of Thrones, right?
So you're coming into that and you want it to come back into a world that has an aesthetic.
I wrote Dan and Dave when I rap that I literally felt I was building on the shoulder of giants.
The only reason I was there is because of the work they did.
And that was such an incredible gift of a head start to be able to walk into a show like this.
So along the way as scripts evolve, you know, one of the things,
that has always kept me in television,
and one of the things that I love about television
is the constraints that it has.
I think when you get...
It's why, like, I think, like, Logan is one of the great superhero films, right?
It's, it's the, it's, you know,
and because it's attention to character.
There's no real meaningful spectacle,
but the spectacle that happens is so organic to those characters, right?
So I think that when you get really invested,
and I think people lose track of that in quote,
tent pulls, right? So, and tent pole television can get absorbed in its spectacle and you are lost
in terms of character. And I think, I think a lot of shows are guilty of that that I see. And I,
I ultimately lose interest. I instantly lose interest. But I'll give anything like one episode,
because I'm curious. I'm curious to see who can, who cracks it. And, you know, I think one of
the things that has made the show so successful is that we crack that and you're everything anybody's
talking about isn't is always the smallest moments.
I remember a long time ago, I was brought on to do,
there was, HBO had Rome and then ABC wanted to do a
Gladiator type series and Gladiator, the movie had recently come out.
And I asked people, like, what's, what do you remember most from Gladiator?
And it was inevitably the scene between Joaquin Phoenix and Russell Crowe,
right before he goes up into the final thing where he stabs him in the cut.
And I'm like, that was in the dark with two people, right?
There's no tournaments, there's no Coliseum, there's no scale to that, but that's what you take away.
And so those are great things to remember.
And so with Damon, you have a great character that, yeah, there was, you know, at one time in one version of the script, there was caves and such and Damon into that journey.
But that, you know, that journey becomes, as, you know, when you start to really see the box that you can fit the episode in, I think.
think that's where the real creativity comes.
And Ryan really knew how to, you know, take what we had and then turn that into something
that gave you what you ended up getting, which is what I love is that throughout that episode,
Damon says like one word, right?
But the very beginning in terms of Kragis, in terms of calling him out, you know, which was a...
Yeah, which was an homage to I Am Legend, you know, in terms of the come out, Neville.
asked me.
So it was a
that doesn't
so those constraints
I always think things get better
the more constrained they get.
I read a quote for money Python
with regards to flying circus
and they said something that always stayed with me
which was if we had had twice the money
we would have been half as good.
And I think that's true.
I don't think that unlimited budgets
and final cuts and
you know are the path
or to the greatest end result.
We obviously wanted to ask you about the fight above Shipbreaker Bay,
but I think the specific things we were interested
actually connect quite nicely to what you were just talking about
and that melding of character
and always maintaining the thematic and character-centric focus
inside of these grand spectacles.
So a couple things here that we're curious about.
Filmmaking question and a thematic question
that I think are certainly linked.
You chatted in the...
the excellent house that dragons built featurette
about, we got to see a little glimpse of you
using these small dragon toys to plan out the sequence.
My daughter has those now, by the way.
She plays with them now.
They're upstairs in her bedroom.
I love it. I'm jealous. I wish I had them.
It felt like watching that.
Very Star Warsian.
And then you've noted subsequently in other interviews,
you mentioned this in the Volter interview that you did,
that the moment when Vagar emerges hugely overhead
is a nod to a Star Destroyer
dropping out of hyperspace
and that just dread that sets in in that moment.
So what specifically were you searching for
in terms of that melding of the grand theater
of that sequence and the heart of the character-centric moments
when you were plotting it out in that way
and how did it plotting it out in that way
help you maintain that?
Because like, you know, we talked a lot in our pause this week,
our many hours of potting this week about we don't we're not ready to take a bye to us to us.
I'm going to invest. I'm investing. I started. I started and I have, I have, but I will
It's a lot. We've got like 50 hours waiting for you. I know. I'm there. I'm there. Three
and a half hours on that finale is impressive. I'm like. We also did a one hour pot immediately after
it before that. So we have part two coming today. We got more coming in and Joe did another one.
It's, yeah.
I want them all.
I want to hear you.
No, actually, I really do.
One thing I do love is that, you know, I had, I watched the finale.
We, look, it's been a two-year journey.
So we, my fiancee through and with a friend of her as a, you know, final watch party.
We had probably like 35 friends and community, you've been, you know, come together and all watch it and close it.
All people that have been watching the series.
And it was great and what was great of the after conversations, everybody asking in putting their theories.
forth and wondering what, you know, did this mean this or what did he mean by that or what's
this connection and it's, but it's great because that again, again, comes down to character investment.
You're curious. You're interested in what what their thought process is and what they're thinking.
With, you know, with the Dragon Fight specifically, you know, the first part of it that
I wanted to be aware of actually was to always be one,
step ahead. I felt that the second you see Luke land and storms end or the second you see him go off
into the storm and the dark clouds, you know something bad is going to happen. So I wanted to
be just anywhere I could bring in the element of surprise. I wanted to be just like a moment ahead.
Like wherever you sort of thought something was going to happen, it would just happen one second sooner
so that you just didn't get too far ahead of it,
even though you knew something was going to be bad,
that there was that hope that maybe it would turn out okay.
So that was something to be aware of.
There wasn't a lot scripted for that sequence.
It was a great sequence to build and construct,
and that's why the toys, that's why.
I mean, that's how I used to play as a kid.
And I've said this in other interviews,
but that I would, you know,
I did before I really knew,
about shot design, I would get down and kind of get in that.
I saw Star Wars when I was seven in the theater.
I saw it five times in the theater.
It literally blew my mind,
and I would just sit there and play with the toys and play with the X.
I would just do all that, but I would do it from perspective.
And that was something that was great to go back to.
And that sense of play is really what I love about my job in general.
And whether it's the prep of it is great.
You know, I would, especially in genre stuff,
where you need to visualize these sequences.
And then once the mechanics of that were figured out,
then you start, you really have placeholders for the performance.
And then as much as you think you've edited it,
you want to go back and really do a whole performance pass.
And the actors can see the whole journey so they understand,
I can roll a two and a half minute take,
which is what that sequence I think comes out to.
And they can run the whole gamut of the performance.
And I would have the
I would have a monitor where they could see the previs,
so they understood where they were and what they were reacting to.
The buck is programmed to all those moves.
And, you know, it's selling the G-4.
You know, the cuts a little bit different,
but there was, you know, various pre-vis,
you know, there was real G-force of, like,
going into that nosedive and having to pull out quick before you get to the water
and just feeling that smush of force on Luke.
And so the actors really have to,
and you have to actually figure that kind of stuff out without being there.
So there's a lot of physical aspects to the performance.
That's the next thing.
And then the icing is really being able to clear all that noise
so that they can bring a fully realized performance to the picture.
And that's, you know,
and both, you know, O'N and Elliot were terrific to work within that way.
Plus, they're getting wind and rain sprayed in their face.
Fire host, yeah.
Water inside of the.
the volume. What a, yeah.
Yeah, actually, you know, that was, that was, we were, you know, everybody's like,
oh, you can't do that. It can't be done. And we're just like, I don't know, why don't we
try it? And so we were like, well, what is it? What is it going to? Like, if we don't get the
screens wet, then why can't we do it? And they're like, there was no good read. There was no
good answer that came back for Mortar Brothers on that. So we, we put the way we did it was,
we put showers, shower curtains up on the volume. And then we worked out the exact amount of
pressure of the wind and the water so that it would drop right before the screen. And it was
incredibly precise. So nothing got no, everything had a kind of governor on it. So nothing would
get past that point and then bri the screens. But we were able to solve that problem. There's
no problems only solutions. That's usually what I say on set. I love it. How, I mean, that is obviously
that all sounds incredibly complex and intricate and involved.
and, like, pushing the limits of what had previously even been attempting.
And so I think that's what's so interesting to us about it.
Like, how are you achieving that in tandem with maintaining this true north of this central focus on the idea of control as an illusion?
Control of the dragon, specifically the pursuit of power more broadly.
The part of the reason that the final climactic sequence lands so fully is because we're as viewers thinking back to Vassaris's warning that Harbinger to Renera in episode one, we're thinking about,
Danny telling John in the Dragon Pit in season seven of Game of Thrones,
the Dragon is not a slave. We're thinking of the lines we've read in fire and blood.
So is that something that you are the second, that line is in the pilot in the first episode
that is always there to guide toward full impact in the final moment and everything is working in
harmony.
100%.
That is the payoff to that line.
And the first moment of it actually was I had a close up in an earlier cut.
right when vagar takes that swipe just before cyrarchs kind of banks down and goes into the nosedive
vagar takes a swipe with his talents uh her talents excuse me i don't mean to misgender my dragons and it was it was a
that was like the first sort of moment of something that wasn't amens doing um and so
and it was just we just had kind of a quick reaction of surprise of of that like like
there's like that wasn't like whoa like you you sort of start to see it register but really it was
we had a lot of conversation of where it exactly to slide that when it becomes and really when
vagar gets fire blasted uh you know which i was also in the same eye that amand has taken out
uh vagar you know is is is vagar's like not having it right and i watch that with i watched that with my dog
when another puppy was a rab.
It's like no interest in like, like, you know,
like I'm like, you know,
going to show you what's what.
And so that's, that's really the point where both dragons are,
are on their own and are fighting them for their,
you know, Syrac fighting for survival at that point.
It's not just under Dragon Ride.
So it was, and also, you know, kids with nukes,
you know, that was the other thing that we would,
that we kept saying was that you're putting weapons of
mass destruction in the hands of children.
So what's going to happen?
Like, you know, it's going to be,
there's no amount of, yes, you know,
you have that feeling of being powerful with,
you know, Aiman feeling powerful with having claimed the biggest dragon in the world.
But with that comes a price.
And, you know, we saw the tragic result of it.
Yeah.
Thinking about sister episodes, like,
it's so interesting to me that you storyboarded a lot of Aeman's first
Vagar flight and then got to do this.
Aymn-Vegar flight as well.
It's really interesting to me.
It would have been,
you know, look, I'm actually really thankful I did too.
I think two is why I think 10 turned out as well as it did
was the fact that that was, you know,
really the secret sauce was that because I had done too.
I wanted to ask you.
So, you know, you mentioned that dread we feel as soon as Luke lands,
basically at Storm's Head.
We're like, oh, no, we've seen Game of Thrones.
We know this is not going well.
And I think even people who aren't familiar with fire and blood know that the basic premise of this is a civil war.
There's civil war coming.
There's civil war looming.
There's obviously like book story that plenty of people, including the writers of this show, are aware of.
And I'm really interested in this finale episode, the painted table provides this great opportunity for the camera to linger on certain locations and for those of us who know a bit more about what's coming to think about what's coming.
So I guess maybe like a broader season-wide question is how much as you create this season,
which has its perfect bookends of what Vassera says in the pilot and the payoff and the finale,
but how much are you then thinking about, all right, this is going to echo forward in this way for this character or this way for that character as you're crafting the season one story?
I work with the cast to stay present in what's happening, the events that are to come.
are not, I think,
actable, right?
So, you know, I think it's, it should be,
everything should be fueled by what's happened
and what is going, either what's going on that moment
or what's happened in the past.
So, um, never was I having discussions about,
you know, what's to come because again, you know,
what Ryan wants to do with it and where it's going.
It wasn't what we were focused on in season one.
That's, you know, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that is something for
really,
Ryan to answer and answer to, I can say in terms of my process that I was focused on the
present and whatever traumas or relationship or history existed between those characters
and whatever that particular moment that I was working with them in.
And that in your guide or the scripts.
And Ryan said many times that this is a history book told from multiple points of view
with people with multiple agendas of their own.
And what's great is that because it's a history book,
And because of those agendas and because of those unreliable narrators or reliable narrators,
depending on whose point of view you decide to choose to follow, I think that leaves a lot of room for what can happen in the details.
People only saw that dragon fight from the ground.
They don't know what took place.
So that allows for great moments of character.
There was anybody writing me saying, well, you know, like he was, he killed him on purpose and intended to kill him on purpose.
it's like maybe he comes back and owns it, but in that moment, you know, you don't know what the internal process is of a character.
And that's the great thing I love about the chapters of the book that this is based on, is that there's so much room to allow the actors to fill in that space.
And it's, I went back actually, you know, two years later to look back at those chapters.
You know, I looked at them at the beginning and I looked at them at the very end.
And I was so blown away by what Ryan and the writers did with that, you know,
taking that amount of material and turning it into as complex, as beautiful a season as they did.
And going back to the painted table, you know, that everything about the fan,
the painted table was fan boy directing.
in that.
And what was important?
You know, it was, it was to, in the original series,
I never really got a good look at the table and nobody shot the table in a way that
showed it properly.
And that the idea that it lights up and that's why you can't, you know,
you never got a good look at it because it wasn't ever really, nobody knew what it did.
Like it was gone was the mechanism for it and had been moved around.
And I love that we used, you know, what was once the room of the painted table was actually
Renair's apartment and the painted table actually existed somewhere else.
And after the fall of the Targary and somebody moved everything around, whether it was Stannis or
somebody else.
So it was exciting to be able to what we call the familiar, unfamiliar with the series,
to be able to go to rooms, to be in spaces that had familiar, unfamiliar qualities to them.
And so the painted table specifically, I wanted to shoot that in the way so that you could see,
you know, not just, you know, it wasn't necessarily scripted that way.
It was that he was standing, you know, that Luke was standing at the painted table,
and he was standing, you know, really over, between Drift Mark and Wharfstone.
And he was, but in terms of, you know, designing an opening shot,
I wanted to take people through the geography of the show that they brought them all here,
which was to see how the lands and how things are laid out and then really understand
where we are in Westrose, where everything is.
And that, you know, I did that in a loving fan way, just as I did when I lit the table up,
was exactly how I want to see it if I was watching this show as a fan.
Yeah, opening on Winterfell with all of the thought about the looming thread in the north, too.
Just incredible.
We can add it to our long list of notes for Stannis Barathean, you know,
using the painted table to create his smoke monster baby with Melisandra,
instead of lighting it up and thinking about the realm.
Alas!
Alas!
The disrespect.
A little smoky.
A little smoky.
Wouldn't be me if I didn't ask another dragon question,
but I think it really connects to a lot of what you've illuminated for us today
about this pursuit of the heart of the character
and that through line of the arcs and the journey inside of this magical world.
because I'm curious about the dragon lore.
There were so many intriguing moments in this episode.
And they work beautifully as character moments and thematic moments.
The cuts.
Damon summoning Caraxis to make Sir Laurent and Sir Stephan soil their small clothes, right?
The cuts from the close-ups of Renera's face to Syrax's face,
those many cuts, the different angles,
everything that we're feeling in that moment is that telling us
that Syrax is feeling Reneura's pain.
Is that telling us something else?
And then, of course, the Bronze Fury himself,
Vermithor entering our story with Damon's high-valarian lullaby,
and those very deliberate close-up shots of both the dragon's eye
and Damon's eye and these reflections.
Is that, for you in the finale,
was that primarily about that thematic emphasis and resonance,
these mirrors of dragon and Targaryen,
that recurring through the season about,
100% closer to gods because of the dragons.
100%.
I think that connection between Dragon and Ryder was,
and again, that was something that Miguel and Ryan and I mapped out,
specific to my episodes,
where we wanted to place certain moments like that without overdoing it.
Like what the threshold was, there was at one time,
you know, a version of one that went from Renair's close-up to a close-up over
dragon roaring, you know, and I think that it was better to, you know, when you talk about mirroring
and book ending, you know, we wanted to end season, episode one, the way we end episode 10.
So that was, again, something Miguel and I communicated about so that we could mirror that.
So that's why we, you know, I think if you had gone to a dragon to end it or dragon roar or done
something, we would have done the same.
But I think at the end, you want to stay with the characters and find the moments of connection.
there was, you know, in the battle when Damon comes out of the cave with crowdbeater,
in an early previs, you know, Keraxes lands behind him and kind of that triumphant way when you're
pushing in.
But again, we wanted to keep that Damon's moment and to show that he didn't need his dragon,
that he came off his dragon and that he established this himself.
And during the birth, once I did a first pass of the birth, you know, Adam, our storyboard artist,
and I looked at her Rennaro's physicality
and made storyboards to cut away to the dragon
and we would use those with sound effects
and kind of work those into the cut and put them in.
So we were having conversations of where that threshold
was emotionally that would really bring,
exacerbate the connection between Dragon and Ryder.
So the birth was obviously a pretty intense see.
sequence, but they can clearly, you know, summon their dragon, you know, when you call out to them or sort of have them, you know, I'm sure Damon, you know, make sure Caraxies was hanging where he was so that he was with an earshot of calling him.
All right.
Last question for you is we would like to invite you to join us in one of our favorite pastimes, which is talking about the wigs on House of the Dragon.
And we call it Wig Watch or Wig Watch Corner.
And we just wanted you to pick if you had one favorite wig from the entire season.
What's the number one wig for you in season one of House of the Dragon?
I love young Renara in episode four when she's at Storms End.
I just think the whole look was perfect.
That's Shawnee, that's Claire.
That's the whole situation.
worked beautifully in that moment.
That was the first thing that popped in my head,
when he asked that question.
So her Bachelorette tour,
and not the seven strands of hair clinging to Vassaris's head
at the end of his life.
You know, he was hanging on to what he had.
Doing the best.
Thank you so much for this child.
This was great.
Thanks for all your wonderful work on the show.
It's really, really incredible.
No, thanks for having me.
This was great to have a deeper dive and your observations and connections and understanding of the show is it's so great when you feel people understand the work you've done and get it at the deeper levels that you set out to accomplish.
So it's it was great and really rewarding and such a pleasure to talk to you both.
All right.
So the next couple sections that we're going to do is like a lot of mailbag focus.
we're going to do a non-spoiler mailbag section,
and then we're going to hop into our look-ahead,
which also has some mail-bag questions in it.
I'm really excited for both sections,
but the look-ahead is really going to be interesting
because it involves my favorite.
A theories.
Anyway, but like, let's take a...
Right.
Right.
Corner!
But in this first section,
the non-spoiler mailbag,
we got so...
A.K. Steve gets ready on the soundkey, right? We got so, so, so, so many emails
about the book, right? Because there are plenty of people who are watching the show
tune to this podcast who haven't read Fire and Blood. And some of them listen to our book
spoiler section, which is usually about like 15 minutes at the end. You know, it's a pretty short section.
And some have stopped and are like, you know, I'm keeping myself pure. So let's talk. I mean,
The answer, should I read the book?
The question is, should I read the book?
The answer, Mallory, Rubin, and Joanna Robinson are always going to give you is, yes.
Read the book.
Rating is great, right?
But we got this email from Natalie who says, I've not read any of the song of it.
I've not read any of the song in the Fire series, but I have watched all of Game of Thrones and Hot D.
Well, I have a hard time if I just read Fire and Blood.
Is that something you two would aggressively object to, not sure where to start with these books?
Mal, what do you think?
Can someone just dive?
in a fire and blood, or do they need to read, you know?
Absolutely.
Without a question.
Yeah, no.
This, I think, frankly, this is a great way to start.
It gives you a taste for George's language and style,
even though this is a hit written as a history book
and features these multiple unreliable narrators,
and a song of ice and fire is novel
and written from these very rich and meaty,
first person point of view character chapters.
there are different reading experiences,
but it's going to give you a feel for the world.
You know, you're going to, you're going to,
I was about to mention a foot.
I'm going to say you're going to put your foot in the water,
but then I started thinking of Lairish.
You're going to dip a toe in.
Lairns won't be there.
And if you love Fire and Blood, then keep going, you know?
Yeah.
And if you're intimidated by, like, Fire and Blood's a pretty,
no, I just looked at it.
It's like, oh, it's a thick boy.
Okay.
Yeah.
It's a thick boy.
I was like, it's a slim little, no, that's a long, that's a bloodmurn long boy.
Okay, so anyway, here's what I would say.
I do not consider audiobooks cheating.
In fact, the audiobooks for Song of Ice and Fire are like completely delightful.
The Roy de Trude, like come learn the very special way that Roy Detriez would pronounce certain names like Brayne.
Join us in knowing that Brayne is how.
how you pronounced Brianna charts like that.
So, you know, if sitting down with the book is too intimidating
and you miss hours and hours and hours and hours of Joanna
and Mallory talking about House the Dragon,
you can just pop in an audiobook and enjoy that.
It's a great suggestion.
We also got this email from Marcus sort of about the book reader section specifically.
He would say someday I will not be surprised.
Okay.
He said, I would love to be able to join in and listen to your season two book reader look ahead,
but I'm worried you guys may speak to further events.
past, like Marcus said in his email where he had read up to, past a certain point, and I don't want to be spoiled.
Before I tune in, are you able to tell me if you're going to go beyond that's a point?
So at least I know I need to read, et cetera.
The answer, there's a blanket answer to that.
It's not specific to where Marcus is in the book.
Our book spoiler sections are, everything is on the table.
So like we've had people say, can we go back and listen now that we finish season one?
we did not contain our book talk to season one at all.
So it's just like, if you're in the bookseller section, it's anything goes.
So that's just sort of, you know, just in case you thought we could restrain ourselves, we didn't.
So anything else you want to say about that, Mel?
No, you know, the idea that we control the book look-ahead section is an illusion.
It's a power we should never have trifled with.
She's a power.
Yeah.
So, yeah, read the book.
It's really fun.
So fun.
It's really fun.
We talked like very early in the season, Joe, about like, okay, well, would it diminish from the surprise of watching the show?
Obviously, for us, that's not how we approach it ever because we always love to take the knowledge of the source text to the adaptation.
But even if that is on your mind, I think if that's something that typically,
leads you to hit pause,
just know that with this in particular,
like as we've talked about a lot,
so much is being created here
for the first time
because of both the unreliable narrator factor
and also that historical text approach,
it's a lot of the beats,
but there's all this meat then,
a lot of the bones,
and then the show is providing
all of the meat.
So there will be a ton.
There have been for us,
a ton of like very sincere surprises
along the way.
Lainor lives.
Aman did an oops
Like you know all sorts of stuff
So Rainies killed a bunch of small folk
All right
Oh boy
We also in addition
I would say tied for
Like should I read the book questions
Where we got a ton of emails about
The childbirth theme that ran through this
First season is this going to be an ongoing thing
That we see going forward in the show
We don't want to get too specific about it
because, again, this is not the spoiler section.
So for non-book readers, though, I think we can vaguely say that we don't expect that childbirth
and specifically traumatic childbirth is something that we will see much more of,
we don't know, but much more of in the story.
Is that feel safe and accurate, Mallory?
I think so.
Yeah, I think that it was very centrally positioned here.
in season one in a way that is specific to season one.
Yeah, I think so.
We also have this really interesting enamel from Aerea.
I think that's how you pronounce this name.
Forgive me if I'm mispronouncing it.
But that about childbirth, it says,
you and the creators have talked about
how Reneer is stillbirth scene is meant to be dramatically tragic.
In the moment she's finally called to lead,
she is sidelined in a way that is particular to women.
However, I think this has it backwards.
While giving birth is coded here is weak, it actually requires incredible, unbelievable,
superhuman, indescribable strength.
The strength required to go from that to even living a normal life, let alone life is a newly
crowned queen, going to war, is astronomical.
There's a minor callback to Joffrey's birth, too, in which Rainier gets up immediately
after giving birth to walk the baby over to Allison.
This goes to show how the men of the realm and ours, too, fundamentally misunderstand women.
Giving birth doesn't make them weak.
it reveals how strong they are.
Renira and Allison have shown that they can lead as well as any man
while shouldering the additional burden of caring and burthering several children each.
I thought that was a really good perspective.
Because we have been talking a lot about sort of like the burden of birth
and like the, you know, being being trapped, like feeling like you're in a prison as a mother's like that.
And it's important to talk about the other side of it, which is, yeah, like.
Reneira planning a war immediately postpartum, like, you know, what did you do today?
Sort of thing.
Yeah, I certainly did not think that that finale scene was intended to show Reneira as weak in any way.
No.
But the fact that Reneer was pulled out of that.
Yeah.
Yeah, of that first war council.
and what that said about the role of people in that patriarchy in society.
I definitely agree that that's not meant to be quoted as weakness.
How other people might perceive it, but like, yeah, certainly not.
No, like, I don't think you can watch what Emma Darcy did in that scene and call that, you know, weakness.
But I thought it was a good email, nonetheless.
We got an email from Olive who wrote, I stopped watching Game of Thrones around the time.
Theon's member was delivered to his father in a little box.
Theon's favorite toy.
Theon's favorite toy.
But now I'm thinking...
But now I'm thinking of doing...
Just remember that Ramsey, like, sausage waggle gift, one of my favorites.
But now I'm thinking of doing a rewatch.
Can you recommend any good Game of Thrones rewatch podcast?
In the word of Stephen Tyler, I don't want to miss a thing.
Boy, Joe.
Boy, can we?
Tell me.
I have you
Recap podcast
Have you heard of them loud?
I was going to say
Binge mode of you out of it
Binch mode
incredible show
that our pal Jason Concepcion
Mallory Rubin did
all the way
all the way through
Game with Thrones
All of it
All of it
An initial six season
rewatch
and then
carried on
continued
That beautiful journey
For season
Seven and eight
It's all there for you
If you want to catch up
on Thrones
All of it
Joe, what about your rewatch?
Cast of Kings.
Cast of Kings.
Cast of Kings is the show that I, like, before Mallory and I podcast together,
we podcasted separately about Game of Thrones.
So if you want to double your enjoyment, you could listen to both binge and a cast of
Kings, the show that I did with my pal, David Chen, where we actually start the first season
we did with season two, but then we went back and did season one.
So that's all there in the cast of Kings feed.
Also, Storm of Spoilers that I did with Dave Gonzalez and Neil Miller.
where we got like really, really super spoilery.
That was really fun.
So, yeah, we've done a few Game of Thrones Rewatch Podcast.
We know a thing or two about Game of Thrones Rewatch podcast.
But not of the two of us together.
For that, you have to turn in, tune in for fresh house of our content.
So there you go.
Email from Nicole.
And I love this especially after our interview with Greg.
Nicole wrote, I'm super hopeful that the next season on Hot D, they use the extremely beautiful
painted table map for the opening credits, not only because it is stunning, but because it is
helpful to understand where people are in relation to others. I also hope that they use the map
because I did not connect with the flowing blood family tree sequence at all. I watched it every
week, have read all the books and did not get it at all. The only ones that made sense to me
are the three for Allison's kids because of the spider and the blue sapphire. If I didn't understand
them, I imagine that anyone who is show-only fan is equally lost. So that hadn't occurred to me.
I don't know that it's the plan, but like, what a great idea. How do you feel about a painted table,
the camera zooming around the painted table as a sort of remix of the Thrones map? Oh, you're giving me
no face. So go ahead and hit me with your no. I mean, I'd be fine with it. I'm sure I think it was
amazing. Honestly, it sounds super cool. But I guess the thing to me that would be strange,
about it is like if you're going to do
a traveling the map sequence
in a Thrones intro
just do it exactly the way
it was done before. Like that feels like
half a degree of separation from the
original credits sequence that I almost think would be strange.
But I don't know.
I'll say, I think the
the bloodline
family tree, it grew
on me over the course
of the season. Did it grow on you at all?
No, I'm still out on blood on blood tree.
Blood Tree and I are not friends.
So, uh,
Blood Mountain.
I'm sure it works for plenty of people,
but a lot of people it doesn't work for.
And I think it would be cool if House of the Dragon were like,
okay, we tried that, it didn't work.
Let's try something else rather than like sort of stubbornly sticking to something
because it's what they did initially.
You know what I mean?
I could, there's something I can see about the paint,
like if they did the painted table and did like a sort of cool like,
fire blossoming sort of effect under the location.
Yeah, that would be neat.
From below, I think that would be really cool.
Anyway, email from Leslie,
who spells her name a really fun way.
This is about dragon lore.
So I'm going to throw to Mallory on this.
Is Vermethor simply tolerating Damon like he might,
anyone else, or is that connection more meaningful?
was Drogon Danny's only truly bonded dragon
and the others were simply under her care?
Did John claim Regal or just go for a joyride?
Do bonded dragons often let people other than their writers touch them
like John petting Drogon?
How is book canon different from show canon here?
Mallory. It's a great question.
I will say broadly, there are answers and then there are not answers
because one of the things about dragon lore,
and this isn't just,
readers of the book saying, oh, there's a lot we don't know.
It is actively incorporated into the text throughout the saga,
like that this is an impossible thing to understand.
So this is why I think Joe and I in the finale got really excited about
the House of the Dragon's seeming interest in exploring and expanding on this lore.
The Danny question, like, okay, so there's no precedent in the text for a living person,
a rider having a riding bond with more than one dragon.
And when a rider dies, a dragon will accept another rider.
Balarion had numerous riders over Balearion, the Black Dread's life,
but Balarion's riders never rode dragons other than Balaerian.
Now, sometimes that's after a dragon like Balaerian dies.
Like Viseras could have attempted to form another bond and chose not to.
We know why, obviously.
It's still, it is one of the things, like there were a lot of things about the John Regal moment that I thought were exhilarating.
But it always, it always did bother me in season eight, especially in terms of that larger, just a degradation of the care for the fantasy elements inside of the story.
Like, it should have been a moment where everybody stopped and said, what does it mean that that happened?
Holy shit, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And this idea of, like, the Targaryen blood, too?
Yeah.
Like, especially if you compare because John reaching out to Pet Trogon is season seven.
Right?
I'm not getting that wrong, right?
The Sniff on Dragonstone.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That moment is so much more arresting and, like, emotional.
And, like, by season seven, I was already feeling like we were sort of racing through
things, but like that moment is very powerful.
John writing Regal doesn't, like, didn't hit that.
So I don't know that we can answer that question because I don't think the show is that
in that moment, at least that preoccupied.
Yeah, I think the show didn't seem interested in answering that question, but I think
based on our understanding of the lore, we can say, yes, John and Regal bonded and John became
his writer.
Because, like, even if we think of the, the Aym and Vagar claiming in this season, like the
shaking off, once the dragon accepts.
you and taste you for a ride. That's like a different kind of relationship than anything else.
Dragons, though, they, you know, we see obviously like Jora, Monsenday eventually, Tyrion after his trip
into the catacombs. Like people who are in Danny's life are familiar and become familiar to the
dragons. So dragons can be around other people, but accepting a rider is a bond and a forming
of a bond that is a different thing entirely. I'll read a passage from fire and blood that I'm
going to skip a couple clauses in it that contain specific plot points that we're not going to
share here. But I still think this passage kind of nicely captures this larger question.
Who can know the heart of a dragon? Was it simple bloodlust that drove blank to blank? Did the blank come
to help one of the blank? If so, which some will claim that the bond between a dragon and dragon rider
runs so deep that the beast shares his master's loves and hates.
But who was the ally here and who was the enemy?
Does a riderless dragon know friend from foe?
We shall never know the answers to those questions.
So again, like that tells us something that there's an understanding and a bond
and a way that those feelings connect the rider and the dragon.
There's a heightened awareness of what is going on in their hearts and their minds,
but also that the exact nature of how that works is not something that the text has presented
to us yet.
And something we're excited to see is like whether or not the show, we feel like this lullaby to Vermethore is indicative of the show being interested in exploring some of the bounds of this a bit more.
And we'll talk about that a little bit more in the book spoiler section.
But I think that and what's also true is that I think it'll be less true here where George R. Martin is a bit more involved.
But George was forever cranky with the way that Thrones.
treated fire kana.
Her dragon, like the way that DeNaris Targaryen is fireproof is not how it's supposed to be
in the book.
And so then it, like, inspired all these questions forever about, like, our Targaryens
and fireproof.
And George is like, no.
You know, so anyway, I, dragon bonding, dragon lore.
It will be very important going forward.
We're going to talk about that.
But, like, we're in this cool, like, pivot space where we don't know exactly where they're
going to go with it.
So can't wait to learn more.
Two more questions, and then we're going to, two more mailbag moments,
then we're going to go into our book spoiler section.
This is just about Allison and Reneer, our core duo of the series, right?
We get this email from Chris that I thought was really interesting.
Chris wrote, there seems to be an interesting theme being woven that contrasts morality
built on law to corrupting disastrous effect and morality built on wisdom that leads to righteousness.
I was incredibly moved by the Luke and Reneer a moment when he calls her perfect, and she confesses to being anything but.
It got me thinking about what a genuinely nice young man he is and how much of that is owed to Reneer and her authenticity.
Jace, too, has displayed strength of character, but more importantly, an authentic respect for the women around him.
While the show may not provide any direct examples or corollaries, I don't think it's a coincidence that such a potent and fully realized woman would raise these kinds of humans.
By contrast, Allison and her stuffy, dogmatic approach to life, has raised two horrifying individuals.
Aegon is a drunken rapist while Amund is insecure, Oprah, overcompensating psycho.
They are violent, sexually and physically violent.
They are patriarchy incarnate.
Allison is, by her own confessional woman, so confounded by the patriarchy, so stifled by the men around her that she does not know the true desires of her own heart.
How could she raise anything but monsters?
Poor Allison, she is most pediope.
So I like that idea that like goes back to that like sort of window in your prison idea of Rainey's talking to Allison.
Allison understanding not being on to see beyond the possible limitations of her power and how passing down these ideals of the patriarchy from Otto directly through herself and then into her sons.
You know, despite a You Are No Son of Mind moment.
like, you know, like that's sort of the Allison legacy.
And then with Reneira, because, you know, she's not just, she's going to break the wheel, right?
She's going to, she's going to bust out Kool-A-Man her way out of that prison, right?
And so then her children are, yeah, they seem like much cooler kids, no offense.
What do you think about this idea of, like, being trapped in the patriarchy and passing the
patriarchal values down versus what's going on through an era.
Yeah, I think it's one of the reasons that the moment between Allison's and Otto in episode
nine in the penultimate episode where Otto says, would you have wanted this any other way?
You know, if that's true, I made you queen in the seven kingdoms.
And she says, how can I know?
And for the, for Alicent as a character to be recognizing that and wrestling with that,
also, of course, that's on the heels of Rainier.
of the conversation with Renice and Renice saying the window and the wall of your prison line.
So this is something that Alicent is reflecting on and thinking about.
And hopefully, in moving forward in the story, working to change,
I think that would be a rewarding thing to see out of the character.
Last question is from Catherine.
It's on a similar theme.
Catherine Rothera.
Just so I think he's not going to do.
Yeah.
Catherine throughout the season, the question of who has not
who has and who's not, I'm going to do that again. Throughout the season, the question of who has not
simply power in the traditional sense, but agency has been central. Rainer has been about choice the
whole time, even in moments where she may have felt powerless compared to others. She takes action
for better or worse and worries about consequences later. Allison is put in a position of authority
by becoming queen, but she has little, if any, agency. This has driven home to her when she really
realizes at the end of everything, even if she didn't want to do a coup, it is happening anyway,
and it is brutally and beautifully outlined to her by Rainey's, the window is a prison scene,
the window in your prison scene.
Reneer is driven by a desire for authority because she feels it is her duty to act,
and Allison is driven by a desire for agency because she wants to control her destiny,
how they understand power differently, and the ways in which their perceptions of authority
and control influence their decisions makes their relationship so complex, as they try to
to justify the links to which they will go, the connections they maintain, the damage they do
to achieve their goals, they get deeper into the gray area. Martin loves so much. They may be doing
something for what they think is a good reason from a certain point of view, but it does not
matter what the intentions are. It is how others perceive them. The show is littered with examples
of unintended consequences, misconceptions of motivations, and snap judgments all stemming
from a failure to understand the root cause with someone's actions.
I really love this email, especially the part, Reneira has been about choice the whole time,
even in moments where she may have felt powerless compared to others.
That is like something that you think about that scene on the bench in the godswood
when Reneer and Allison are like sort of one of their close to reconciliation moments,
where Allison is trying to explain to Reneer how much freedom she actually has.
And Reneer is like, it's not enough.
And like we applaud Reneira for wanting to continue to push and push and push the boundaries of like what, you know, women, young women, et cetera can do in Westeros.
She fails to acknowledge how that reality is so different for Allison.
I mean, she says I'm sorry in that moment, but I don't think it's an acknowledgement that she carries with her going forward.
What do you think, Mallorbin?
Yeah, I mean, I think this is why the eye for an eye showdown was really one of the not only best scenes of the season, but most important, because it shows us how each of those characters thinks about this regarding their own circumstances, but also the limit of not understanding, not being able to see the whole truth of somebody else's life. And some of that is because these people are carrying secrets and not able to talk to each other or share things with each other. You know, what have I done?
what was expected of me forever upholding the kingdom, the family, the law, while you flouted
all to do as you please, is there like a better encapsulation? Where's duty where a sacrifice
is trampled under your pretty foot again? Leading, of course, to the cloak of your own righteousness
retort. So I think that is at the heart of this divide. And it is a divide and a wedge that was
created and then widened by the men around them.
And so that is at the heart, certainly,
and the root of the tragedy of it all.
Otto.
Piece of shit.
Damon.
Saris.
All right.
So that, I mean, that does it for us for non-spoilery mailbag.
You know, thank you guys genuinely so much.
If you're going to bounce now, thank you so much for listening.
Thank you for all of your emails.
Please, please remember.
that we're still doing
Andor, man, and it is a great show.
And I really hope that you guys watch it
and come back and listen to us, chat about it tomorrow,
because we are loving that show.
So good.
We'll still cry and make penis jokes on that show, too, I promise.
Anyway.
That's a promise from us to you.
It is time now for Dance of Dragon Dreams.
Season 2 book, Look Ahead.
I really feel like we should bring it over to Andor.
I feel like we should bring all of this to Andor, but, or maybe we should just let Steve build his own new intergalactic soundboard.
Who knows?
So much to look forward to here in season two, Joe.
Yeah.
Brooming with joy and, you know, I don't know.
I don't know. Definitely dread, dread also.
Yeah. A lot of terrible shit's about to happen in this television.
the show. We're not going to go through every single thing that we think is going to happen
in season two, but some of the things that were most top of mind for us coming out of the finale,
I think probably had the same thing at the top of our lists here, which is the son for sun,
blood and cheese. So in the book, when Luke dies,
Damon's at Heron Hall, and he sends Roneira a little scroll.
Yeah, right.
He says, son for a son, right?
Luceris shall be avenged.
Avengers.
Assemble.
I was hoping that he would be there and not like, so they didn't say, he didn't say anything.
Like that's not the closing line of the season or anything like that, right?
But it's sort of in the water as we watched that final moment between Damon and Ranira, that final turn.
I love that, I don't know why it didn't occur to me, but I love that.
Greg,
Eutatius pointed out to us
that that Reneer turned away
from the fireplace moment
was meant to echo her turn at her
coronation essentially,
her being named heir
at the end of episode one.
So I'm glad that Demon was there,
not that he sent a little scroll,
but like the question for blood and cheese,
which is
team black,
we'll just say broadly,
before we ascribe a blame.
Team Black sends two assassins, essentially,
into the Red Keep who tie of Allison,
torment Helena, make poor, already addled Elena,
Helena, pick one of her children to die,
and then they kill the other.
Like, we're going to kill a baby in the opening, I guess, of season two.
Like, we anticipate that this is going to open this season.
maybe episode two but probably the premiere um it's i think the most horrifying thing that happens
in this stretch of house because it's so old with the helena element your mama wants you
dead yeah um this breaks helena forever yes it kind of breaks alison forever to be honest with you
um how do you feel about that as like an opening sorry not to get like
too down, but like, how do you feel like this is going to go over with audiences?
What are you anticipating for this?
So, okay, I've been thinking about this because I think, like you said, we agree this seems
like an end opening note for season two.
It's next up, basically.
You know, we're going to get some other conversations, some regrouping.
Who knows exactly how the show will treat the timeline.
But it can't be far away.
and one of the things that I think has been in the narrative about season one
and the conversation around season one is like,
I didn't feel these deaths as much as I should have
because I didn't know these characters.
Right.
And so I wonder if, and like, look,
is like a difference of half an episode or an episode and a half,
like really the equivalent of what you could have gotten
with three seasons of somebody on Game of Thrones?
of course not, but I think if this opens season one or season two and is like the first half
of the first episode, it's just purely horrific. And like we feel certainly the impact of that
on Helena and Allison, but we don't know, like we've seen Jehress and Jehara very briefly. We've not
met Maylor. We haven't spent a ton of time with Helena. And so I do wonder if they will build up
a little bit more screen time with that family
before blood and cheese actually unfolds.
And even stuff like, you know,
the last experience we have with Masaria
is wondering if Laris's murder crew
successfully burned Masaria alive.
And like, we know that Masari has a role to play in the story.
So presumably,
Masaria has to be introduced to the story again.
So maybe this is like a couple episodes in
to get all those characters back in front of us.
But regardless, it's going to be one of the most harrowing things
that we see in the entirety of how
of the dragon, not only the moment itself, the murder itself, that whole torture and torment
sequence, but like you said, the impact on Helena moving forward. One of the most haunting
lines in fire and blood to me is she could no longer stand to look upon her son, Maylor,
knowing that she had named him to die. This is just, this is one of the most tragic things
in this tale. So it's going to be rough. The other question around blood and cheese is, you know,
who orchestrates it really in the book?
versus who's going to orchestrate it in the show.
Is this a case of Damon, who we've already seen,
break more violent than Rainira in this finale?
Is this a Damon-generated, like, via Misaria plan?
Is Raniyra involved?
This face we saw her pull at the end of the episode,
like, is that the face of someone who would, you know,
sit down with Damon and say, yeah, let's order the death of a baby?
And, you know, and then the follow question is, like,
the show, you know, the constant complaints of, like, we don't have anyone to root for in House of the Dragon.
Like, are, we've been talking a lot about the softening, softening of characters like that.
Like, there have been, I've seen some theories that, like, Damon won't even order it, that, like, it's Masaria going rogue because she's so pissed about what Laris did.
You know, like, the greens are responsible for burning down her, her home, her building, right?
her place of business.
So, like, will
Damon and Rainer say,
go scare him,
go rough him up,
and Masaria,
like,
miscommunicates the orders
and says,
take it further?
You know,
like, how soft are we going to go?
How hard are we going to go
on these characters
that we then have to follow
for the rest of the story,
you know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It'll tell us a lot
about how far they want to lean
into that,
like everybody is capable,
not only of depravity,
but of true, true,
true atrocity.
direction.
Email from on hell.
Who writes?
Will we ever see Helena ride or even interact with Dreamfire, her dragon?
The aftermath of blood and cheese is doubly important,
not only because of the sun for a sun promise,
but because it takes a dragon rider off the board for the Greens.
Can we please establish some semblance of a bond here?
Shoot, I'll even take her reading a book sitting against Dreamfire.
That's a real Cora move.
That's from Joanna.
What do you think?
To your point about like waiting an episode and a half,
like are we going to get to see Helena on her dragon before, you know?
Like she doesn't,
thus far,
she does not seem like she would be a super effective dragon route.
I like her so much.
And I want her to just again,
live her happy bug existence for the rest of her life.
I love her.
But if I'm like going into battle,
I don't know that I would be like,
suit up Helena,
hop on dream fire and come help me roast some people.
like she's so soft so yeah but in terms of the dragon math that Damon is so concerned with
it would be helpful yeah to remember that she's a dragon writer okay also on the bread and cheese
not bread and cheese blood and cheese front we got this email from Shea you tell and I didn't eat
lunch okay do we do we truly think the beast beneath the boars helena prophecy is resolved
Ever since Joe revealed Laris is a sneaky warg spy theory, I've been obsessed with it and watching for the signs.
Granted, now the Vassaris is officially dead, I did notice no further rats scurrying around the castle conspicuously.
But last week, I could have sworn that while Helena was stitching her sweet bug girl embroidery, her mother tried to tell her that the king was dead, and she cut her off warning of the beast beneath the boards, even more insistently when re-mentioned the prophecy again and pausing the divulgence of the info.
Maly's and Rainey's busting through the floor definitely seems more legit, especially with the lack of rats.
But just curious your thoughts on this theory moving forward, especially knowing a foot fetish thing now.
Rats have a great vantage point for feet peeping.
So where are you on beast beneath the boards?
Watch Mallory.
Do you feel like it's been resolved or do you think it's like one of those things that like it can
mean any number of things?
Yeah.
Are we going to.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
I like the idea from.
Yeah.
That would be interesting if we heard it again.
I mean, I like the idea generally that these prophecies can.
apply to any number of occurrences and events. I think that your point from a couple
pods ago about like what pattern we end up seeing moving forward of like a prophecy issued and
then kind of seemingly at least immediately fulfilled will be an interesting thing to continue
to track. But, you know, I still, I'm still, I really like still the Jace theory that you
floated about this many pods ago. We'll talk more about Jace in a few minutes here. I definitely
think this still fits with the
blood and cheese of it all
and the rats and this
even just like the tunnels,
the secret passageways that come into play
for blood and cheese, like this idea of what is
unseen beneath you and how that can
that horror can rise up and pull
you down with it. I think it just applies
to any number of specific
eventualities, including
the ones we've already seen. We talked about
Agon being pulled out from
underneath that plinth sept.
Obviously, we talked about the
unconscionable, incomprehensible loss of life at the hands of Rainis and Males at the Dragon Pit.
So I think it fits both of those things we've already seen.
And then a couple things that could still come.
Our pal, Joe magician, he of the, Laris is a sneaky work spy theory, had a theory that Laris could be cheese.
Like, because we don't know everything about these assassins and would it be interesting?
I don't think so.
I feel like we're just going to get, you know, two blokes in here.
But like, to me, then they have to move this, like, to the back of the season and explain how, what would happen between Laris and Allison for that to unfold.
Because, like, they're currently aligned, not happily, but she would have to, you know, turn off the foot axis, honestly, you know, that would be a part of it.
Anyway, all right, what else?
What else we want to talk about?
let's talk about Damon and Harenhall.
Harenhall specifically got some focus in the finale.
The Riverlands more broadly the need to sure up this location,
lock down this seat.
Damon and Harenhall, you know,
we have a lot of story ahead here in many different aspects to consider,
but I think just Harenhall entering the story,
the Riverlands entering the story again in this new way,
very exciting and cool.
The way that Damon initially takes the castle,
you know, harking back to Agan the Dragon
again, the conqueror coming from above
and everything that happened with Heron and the Black
and the curse of Heron Hall that has still
continued to spread through the land from here.
Very fun, that'll be cool. Meeting Alice Rivers?
I mean,
this is going to be an important thing
that happens very soon. Early in season two,
we have to believe. From fire and blood,
who was this woman? A serving wench who dabbled in potions and spells,
says Monkin. A woods witch
claims sept and eustace. A malign enchantress
who bathed in the blood of virgins to preserve her youth,
mushroom would have us believe.
So I'm excited to meet Alice Rivers
and see how that character is deployed in the show
and obviously just setting the stage for everything
with Damon and Amond,
Carraxes and Vagar,
not only eventually at the Battle Above the Gods Eye,
but the Heron Hall Castle swapping in between.
This is going to be a,
a cool part on the map to spend some time on.
Are you hyped about the Harenhal of it all?
Yeah, you already mentioned broadly, but I love this image of its elderly Castellan Sir Simon Strong
was quick to strike his banners when Karaxes lighted a top Kingspire tower.
And I can just see the bloodworm perched on top of Haren Hall.
Like, that's going to be such a cool shot.
Right?
So Damon's going to take...
Yeah.
Just like,
worming around.
Yeah.
So Damon taking Haren Hall.
I'm really excited for.
Alice Rivers,
as she pertains to Eamon,
going to be super interested.
She's a fascinating figure.
There is a million,
are a million ton fun theories about
Alice Rivers actually being Melisandra
and that this is where we could get
if we wanted to,
Melisandra in the story.
I kind of hope not.
I like Alice
Rivers being her own thing. But that's a fun theory. But like we were talking about like,
we haven't felt like they've done a lot of track for Alice Rivers, except for that older woman
that Aman interacts with in the streets of Silk when they're looking for Agon because like Alice
Rivers is canonically like, you know, a bit older than Aman. He's got a, you know, bad luck for,
what is it, Floris Barathean. He's got a thing for, you know, much older women. So there you go.
Oh, boy.
All right, let's talk about Jace's trip north.
Winterfell.
Have you heard of it a lot?
Winter's coming.
I am excited to spend some time in the veil
before we get to Winterfell.
It doesn't seem like we'll be doing
the Three Sisters in White Harbor,
like in the text, we'll just be going,
presumably from the area to Winterfell.
But, Joe, there is so much to look forward to
in this Winterfell stretch for Jace.
First of all,
how many episodes do you think?
is going to spend up there.
I mean, this could be a big stretch of the beginning of the season.
Like five.
I would say like five.
Like maybe, like, I think it's like, I don't think he comes back until like episode six
would be my guess.
So like maybe one episode in the veil and then four episodes up in, in Winterfell or
maybe even more, but something like that.
It depends where we think season two is going to end.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah, because we need to leave time for which a couple of those things we're going to
talk about, sewing in the seeds and then.
battle the gullet.
Yeah, maybe four episodes.
I guess it depends on how long it takes to do the red sewing.
But, okay, let's talk about the Starks.
I've always said Cregan reading this,
but this is apparently not how this is pronounced.
This is a real twist.
How are we supposed to say it?
Craigon?
I think so.
I think so.
Craig and Stark.
Who did you hear it?
Who did you hear say it?
Condal.
Condal.
Okay.
I'm going to have to
write myself a post that says like
Craig and like Ronald Reagan
Reagan, Craig and Stark
Craig and Stark
Craig and Stark
The Pact of Ice and Fire Joe
This is going to be a blast
This is going to be really cool
We're going to get like
Craig and Stark is a huge figure
All the way up through
well past the end of the dance
Right?
This is a massive figure
And this is something we talked about
early on
You know we were like
People who love Game of Thrones are going to come into the show and they're not going to get any Starks in the first.
There are no Starks in the first.
We see one Stark in the first season, barely.
But Craig and Stark, who's a very cool character.
But we found out from Reneer in the finale that he's like closer to Jace's age.
So probably around like 20 or something like that, you know, young.
Two bros bonding in the north.
And the snow?
What could go wrong?
I've seen a lot of fan casting for Craig and Stark.
What are some of the names?
Who's out there?
I mean, all of them are like way too famous.
Like, I just don't think it should be a famo.
I think it should be, you know, like an Ewan Mitchell or like a Thai tenant or whatever, you know, or Millie Alcock or an Emily Carey.
Like, give us something that we haven't really seen that much of and let them make this their own, you know?
So I'm excited.
Sarah Snow.
Yes. Okay. Tell the people who don't know who Sarah Snow is. I'll read a little passage here that actually gives us some Craig and some Sarah Snow set up here.
Monkin's true telling says that Cragan and Jasaris took a liking to each other for the boy Prince reminded the Lord of Winterfell of his own younger brother who had died 10 years before. I don't know why I'm using such a cheerful voice talking about this poor dead brother.
they drank together, hunted together, trained together, and swore an oath of brotherhood sealed in blood.
This seems more credible than Septin Eustace's version, wherein the prince spends most of his visit attempting to persuade Lord Craigan to give up his false gods and accept the worship of the seven.
But we turn to mushroom.
This is so funny.
To find the tale's other chronicles omit.
Nor does he fail us now.
His account introduces a young maiden or, quote,
Wolf Girl as he dubs her with the name of Sarah Snow.
So for both the relationship between Jason Kragon
and this potential relationship between Jason and Sarah and Sarah Snow,
there are so many different accounts presented us of what the nature is.
So who knows what's going to end up happening?
There's a whole, like, did Jace get Sarah Snow pregnant and did they marry each other?
Was there a wedding?
Great.
She's Sarah's married to Sarah Snow element to this.
Right.
And real Rob Stark vibes, right, of Jason the North here, right?
Like, did he go Rob Stark himself into a...
Don't want to marry the Fray Girl!
Have you seen, Talisa?
Yeah.
So, I mean, he...
So, Jace is engaged to Bela, but, you know, according to some folks...
I'm surprised.
What happens in Winterfell stays in Winterfell, you know what I mean?
I definitely don't think that we're going to get like a careless, thoughtless, chase.
That would be surprising based on what we've seen so far.
But I don't know.
I mean, some of what happens in the finale, it's like we're getting a little bit of a different energy from him.
He does seem very devoted to Bela based on what we've seen so far, right?
Based on what screen time?
That they sit nicely and stand nicely next to each other?
Didn't want to hear Agan's filth.
at dinner.
So I don't know.
What do you think?
You think that there will be an affair?
Will there be a wedding?
Or just a...
I think it would be a love affair.
I mean, you know, I think that what I think, and maybe this is uncharitable, but I think House
of the Dragon, the temptation is going to be so strong when we go to some place like Winterfell
to get, like, very familiar and dig into, like, some North trappings that fans of
Thrones are familiar with.
Like, is the wall going to get involved?
or are we going to see not, you know, like there's no reason to, but like might they do that to bring in something, you know, lemon cakes you love lemon cakes sort of thing.
But like, so with Sarah Snow, I feel like they're not going to miss an opportunity to give us like a, you know, Robslees or or Jean Etie Grette sort of feeling of like.
Forbidden love.
Yes.
Yeah.
A forbidden love or romance.
Agreed.
Yeah.
Agreed.
I think that would be really cool and seems likely and like it would fit.
I just don't, I don't know if Jace will be like a total.
I think it's going to be
the heart wants
with the heart wants
He's just going to be like
I'm going to try
Yeah
I'm going to try to be an upstanding young man
But have you seen Sirrus?
No
And Craig and Stark is so important
Because like Damon
Is probably going to die in season 3
Like you know
We're going to need these characters
You know
Damon and Kristen
And like all these characters
Are going to be dead
So like who's pulling you know
Who's pulling us forward
The thing about the house of the dragon
is that almost everybody.
Yeah.
Not everybody.
But Craigon is going to be important.
We're going to have to care a lot about Craig and Stark to be in.
So anyway, we got this email from Leroy that I'm going to read mostly for one line that I found really extraordinary.
Lord Craig and Stark is by far my favorite non-targarian of the story.
He is such a, dare I say, a stark juxtaposition to his descendant Ned.
He's smarter yet brashier and more stabby.
and I look forward to seeing him on the show.
So I have a theory in order to make us care about him
and show his bonding with Jace.
Let's say his uncle is still controlling Winterfell's regent,
well past when Kragon should have taken over.
That's why Sir Otto thinks the North is in his pocket.
Jason is Dragon will team up with Kragon and 86th the uncle,
and this will be the origin story of their deep friendship,
and of Lord Kragon becoming what I like to call
the Duke of Fuck Around and Find Out.
Additionally,
we have mushrooms account where Jace gets his Rob Stark on and falls in love with Sarah Snow
but something that will happen to her preferably she dumps him for his own good so we don't have
to see another fridging.
How else do people bond in a song of ice and fire but with murder and weird sex stuff?
I also think there will be some yada yada to explain why Craig and and the winter wolves are so late
to the party or there will be a rebellion in the north he has to deal with probably the
Bolton's because hashtag fan service or wildlings doing it.
wildling things.
This is Joanna again.
I want to say,
how else do people bond
in a song of ice of fire
with murder and weird sex stuff?
Put it on a T-shirt.
I will wear it.
That thing
you did
with your tongue.
Tell me.
It's a great television show.
We don't even know
a fuck to bear.
Lover.
Bring Rose Leslie back
to be Sarah Snow.
Why not?
Anyway, a fun theory, no strong basis for it, but I could see them sort of inventing something that makes the Pact of Ice and Fire feel like it's born out of something more action-y, especially if they feel like they need a few more action spikes in the season or something like that.
Do you have any thoughts about Cragon and the Winter Wolves being late to the party?
So in terms of the Pact of Ice and Fire,
rereading this stretch, I got so excited
because I was like, oh my God, this is going to end up connecting to the prophecy.
And then I remember that Jace doesn't know about the prophecy yet on the show.
So that's a...
We got an email about that.
Yeah, because like, I'm going to email about that.
Yeah.
But I think even absent Jace having been brought into that confidence
of the Pacted of Ice and Fire actually directly connecting to the Song of Ice and Fire
inside of these characters' lives,
still, it gives the show a chance
to connect the North
and the threat of the North
to this particular character set.
So, like, one thing that I...
I'm going to stun you, Joe,
and bring up a dragon thing here.
But one thing that really stood out reading this
is the Vermax Egg Theory.
There's that passage.
You know, dragons not liking the North
is a through line.
This goes back to Good Queen Alicane.
Alicein.
Yeah. So it's like, I don't think so.
Yeah. And like we see it obviously in Game of Thrones too, right?
They're not eating as much as they should be, et cetera. It's not a place that they like to be.
And this ties into this magic and these opposing forces of magic.
So I'm excited to see what Vermax unlocks for us on that front being up in the north for presumably a good stretch of time.
And there's that passage mushroom also claims that Vermax left a clutch of dragons's eggs at Winterfell, which is equally absurd.
on and on the passage goes,
but including to say that
whilst it is true that determining
the sex of a living dragon
is nigh on a possible task,
no other source mentions
for a max producing so much as a single egg,
so it must be assumed that he was male,
etc.
Who knows?
I mean, that's such a fun of the dragon.
Yeah, the dragon under Winterfeld theory is so fun.
Yeah, so I'm just excited about that.
How else do they keep,
how else do they keep warm?
there's a beast
Del Mar.
The beast beneath the boards.
Beast beneath the boards?
Is the dragon in Winterfell?
I love it.
I mean, I'm forever disappointed
there wasn't a dragon in the wall,
but, you know, that's fine.
The beast beneath the boards,
it's all of the dead bodies
in the crypts of Winterfell
that nobody for one second
considered might be reanimated by the Night King.
Those are the beasts beneath the board.
We solved it.
We did it.
Do you remember when that happened
when all the stark corpses came back?
Yes.
And my friend Gustavo made this meme that I went pretty viral where he took baby shark
and it was just like, Grandma Stark did it do to do you.
Like it was like about all the stark corpses.
They were coming out of the wall.
Anyway.
Okay.
What a time.
What a time that was.
Do you want me to tip off this next section?
Please do it.
Yeah.
Please.
Thank you in advance.
The battle at Rooks rest.
that Mallory could definitely pronounce
with their Baltimore accent.
It's the...
Rooks rest.
Rooks.
Rooks.
Rooks. Rooks. Rast.
Rooks rest.
Rux Rast.
We anticipate this to be a mid-season event.
Yeah.
And this is where
Queen that never was, Rainees,
and her beautiful dragon Malyse
swear off against
that piece of shit Egon
his extremely beautiful and fuckable dragon sunfire
Sorry
That's a trial by content,
Good old Aman
Aman Kinslayer, Amen one eye
Vagar
And Kristen Cole is also there
Radies is going to die
Probably mid-season
But good news
That's badness
Not all is lost
What's the good news?
Mallory.
As sad as we will be to mourn
Rainies and Males,
I, it's just going to be a delight
to see Agon so grievously wounded
that his armor melts into his flesh.
I'm not looking forward to seeing Sunfire
badly wounded, the torn wing,
needing all that time to heal.
That's going to be very sad.
But the injuries that Agon
is that Agon suffers at
Rook's rest are...
Crushed it.
severe and alter the rest of his life and alter the war.
He's off the board.
And Eamond.
For a really long time.
Rules in his stead, which, you know,
I'm sure we can expect a very measured...
It's going to be fine.
This will be fine.
Tender ruling approach from A. Mendikinslayer should be fine.
Yeah, I think midseason for this feels right.
We'll get a little bit more time with Rainies and then it'll be one of the...
Season two is going to be grim.
of the show is going to be grim.
Blood and cheese at the beginning.
Rooks.
Rux.
Rest.
Battle of the gullet is what we're going to talk about later.
But yeah.
And Kristen Cole, I mean, who knows?
Who knows who they're going to make responsible for what?
But canonically, Kristen Cole is responsible for this, like, trap where AGO and Amon, like, ambush, Rainey's.
All's Fair and War.
But fuck you, fuck you, Kristen Cole.
Once again.
Fuck you.
Christine Cole had sprung his trap
and Raineese had come snatching at the bait.
Now the teeth closed around her.
I love though that next line,
Princess Raineese made no attempt to flee.
Speaking of Dragons, Joe,
should we talk a little sowing of the seeds?
Was there something else you wanted to hit at a rooks rest?
Rest.
I'm just going to paraphrase a couple emails
that we got from people who were concerned
about Allison and Reneera going forward in the show
because the reason that Rainis goes to Rook's rest
and is sort of like Corlees and Reneas are sort of running the war plan
from Dragonstone is because Reneira is so gutted by Luke's death
that she sort of fades away from the story for a while.
Then Allison similarly traumatized by blood and cheese,
she fades from the story for a while.
But a question that a bunch of people had that we got
was how can we have that happen when Allison and Reneira are ostensibly our two main characters in the show?
I mean, like, you know, things up and flow.
It could happen that, you know, we'll feel like other people are main characters that were interested in following.
But, like, I just don't feel like that's the story they're interested in telling.
And I think especially with Reneira, we'll see what happens with Allison.
But with Reneer, that look she gives at the end feels like she's processed all the way through.
devastating grief to the other side, which is anger.
You know what I mean?
It will then force them to make some changes in terms of like, you know,
why is it Rainis out here at Rook's Rest and not Reneer?
Like, why isn't Reneer out doing some of these battle moves?
They might just be like you're the queen.
You need protecting, like, stay behind or something like that.
But I don't know.
Do you have any thoughts, questions, comments, concerns about Reneer and Alice's roles going forward?
Yeah, I've been thinking about it a lot.
I agree with everything you just said.
I can't imagine the next season of the show
not centrally positioning them as very active participants
and very present and key moments,
but a lot of what happens will need to be slightly adjusted
to account for that.
So we're going to talk about Battle of the Gullet
and Jace's death in a minute here,
but the way that we're in nearer process is that
seems to have been shifted up
to how she's processing Luke's death.
So broken by the loss of one son,
the quote goes,
Reneira Targary and seemed to find new strength
after the loss of the second.
Jace's death hardened her,
burning away her fears,
leaving only her anger and her hatred.
So I don't know if we're in full-on
only her anger and her hatred territory
immediately, but this,
that look, that expression that we got like action,
it is time to do something here.
I think that we moved that up
because we can't take Renair off the board for a season of TV.
It just wouldn't make sense inside of the universe that they've built.
But then the question is like,
how does that affect something like sewing of the seeds,
which is very much a Jace-led pursuit
because he is taking a more active hand
in leading the blacks with Reneira in a more reserved position?
Is Reneira leading the sewing of the seats?
Is that happening while Jace is up at Winterfill?
Let's talk about that in a second.
Really quickly before Rooks rest, Rooks rest, Rooks rest, Rooks rest, Rux.
Cargill Bull, the cargill twins, basically the reason why these twins had to be identical.
And I still think that you could just have different hairstyles at least.
But Aurek, Sir Aric, on behalf of that fucker, Kristen Cole,
he sneaks into
Dragonstone
disguise as his brother, Eric.
So that's why they need to be identical twins.
And then they fight.
And then they both die.
And we have actually spent now
after episode nine
an incredible amount of time with them
so it'll hit us hard.
They've got time
to keep making Eric and Ark.
Did you see that apparently...
So Tom...
I can't remember his...
his hyphenated name,
but the actor who plays Agon
posted a behind-the-scenes photo
of a lot of them at a pool.
And Eric and Aric are very easy
to tell apart with their clothes off
because one of them is covered in tattoos
and the other one isn't.
And I'm just sort of like
that would have been helpful.
What amazing.
Yeah.
All right, what do you want to say
about sewing of the seeds?
The red sewing, the sewing in the seeds,
looking for these riders,
for the unclaimed dragons.
Is this what's going to come
from Damon's speech,
his dragon math speech.
Here are all these dragons.
We have some used to have writers.
Some are wild dragons who have never known a writer.
And the dragon seeds, the bastards, all of these Targaryan bastards, people with Targaryen blood,
the blood of the dragon that would allow you to form this magical bond with a mount.
A ton of people die during the sewing of the seeds, thus the alternate name, the red sewing.
The red sewing, yeah.
I think that this, the reason I was.
wondering if maybe, because this is again very like Jace-centric in the in the book, I'm wondering if maybe Reneira leads this while Jace is off because I don't know how long they can wait to do this on the heels of the dragon math. But I guess the flip side to that is pretty apparent, which is just dragomath is always going to be top of mind throughout like every episode in the rest of the show. There are plenty of new opportunities to do that calculus. The vermithor introduction here in the finale, obviously very important given that Vermethorre.
is one of the dragons during the sewing,
who is paired.
Hugh Hammer will be entering the story
during the sewing.
Silver Wing will be paired.
Oof, the white.
Sheep Steeler will amazingly be paired.
Sheep Steeler, actually one of the wild dragons.
That's the, that's nettles.
And then Seasmoke, we've already talked about this on prior pods.
We have a lot of questions about how this is going to happen,
the Adam of Hull pairing.
If Seas Smoke accepts another rider and Seasmokes writer,
Lainor is actually alive in the story.
that's like a very new canon download for us.
An update to Dragon lore.
Yeah.
So will it be these same characters in the sewing?
Will we have something else introduced into the mix?
What do you think?
I cannot overstate how many emails we got about the girl models, right?
Like, people are really worried about this because by people, I mean people who feel like Damon Reneera share a true and lasting love.
because, you know, there's many different stories about Nettles.
Mel's a very cool character,
but there is also this story of her and Damon basically shacking up,
and she's young, she's like 16,
and Reneerah finding out about it,
and Reneer trying to get Nettles assassinated,
and Nettles escaping, and then Damon going off to die, or did he?
And so I don't know how it would happen
He would have to go to Harenhall later
But I can almost see like
It feels like Damon should run the sewing of the seeds
Doesn't it?
Since he's the one the most invested in like
The Dragon Lour and the Dragon Math
And all that sort of stuff
Like he should be running that program
He's just also very invested in locking down the Riverlands
And it doesn't seem like he's going to want to stick around for long
Amid everything on the home front
But yeah, it would make sense for Damon to run it, definitely.
There's this theory
that Raina
could be involved
in the sewing the seeds
based on basically
one lingering shot
that happens
in the finale
when Damon is
talking about
the wild dragons
the unclaimed dragons
and the dragon
math
a reminder
that Raina
does not have
a dragon
and thus
Damon did not
consider her
a worthy daughter
anyway
Dan wrote in
the prior
conversation
between
Lena and
Raina
about the multiple
paths
to finding a dragon
doesn't have to be
a hatch
You can claim a dragon, right?
So I got this email from Dan who wrote,
I think there's an off chance.
Not sure how small of a chance,
but it's definitely non-zero.
The show will remix things
and make Raina a dragon rider
of one of the bigger dragons,
Vermethore, Silver Wings, Sea Smoke,
or one of the wild dragons.
The idea first occurred to me
in the painted table scene
where Damon runs down his dragon math
after he mentions the riderless dragons,
blah, the camera moves to Raina
and Cass is sort of looking up and taking note.
But beyond that little sprinkle
of classic camera cut foreshadowing,
another addendum,
if they do go this route with Raina,
is you also have a ready-made built-in, easy out
where you can kill off her dragon but keep Raina alive,
but just having X-Dragon present
for the storming of the Dragon Pit Calamity,
do we really think the show is going to introduce us
to each of Hugh, Ulf, Adam, Allen, and Nettles?
I think any of them other than Nettles
could be written out of the show in favor of a bigger role for Raina.
I will just say, I love this idea,
mostly because I want more for Raina,
and I love the idea of making the sewing of the seeds
a very personal
father, daughter,
what is the nature of a Targaryen?
Can you be a Targaryen if you don't have a dragon, like, conflict?
Because there is enough of that,
it's sort of involved in it in terms of like,
who are these dragons?
Like, the dragon seeds are in theory
Targaryen bastards
who have some Targaryen and blood in them,
Adam and Ulf and Allen and, you know, whatever.
But like,
How much, you know, how Targaryen do you have to be to claim a dragon?
What is the caprice of these dragons?
As you mentioned, you love that quote about the Caprice of Dragons.
So I don't know what, like, would that change in the storywork for you to get Raina more involved in all of this?
Yeah, I could see that working.
Yeah.
I don't know if I feel like that's like a prohibitive number of new characters to introduce, though.
I think that as the story spreads out across the map, like we have not only room to,
introduce new characters, but frankly, that would, I think, address a lot of the
laments from some corners of the viewership that, like, the story feels very contained
and, like, limited to a certain character set. So I think, like, people who have Targaryen
blood, but have never been a part of a Targaryen life entering the mix is actually, like,
cool and something that I definitely hope we get some of, but certainly would love a more active
role for Rina. I think also that we can still go the Syrax egg, you know, that new clutch
of egg route and Raina getting a new egg and ultimately still getting mourning.
So any number of ways, I mean, definitely need, definitely need Raina and the dragon mix very,
very soon, though.
What about another dragon rider that we're eagerly anticipating?
Okay.
This remains one of the more confounding things about season one.
Darren, the fourth child of Allison and Vassaris, only acknowledged by the
one mention of four dragons from Damon
and the fourth bloodline and the opening
credits not present in the show, confirmed
by George, Condell, et cetera,
in Old Town. When
and how are Darren and
Tessarian, Darren's dragon, going to
be entering this story? Because
the
honey wine
stretch, I have to think
happens in
season two when Tessarian
arrives to rescue Ormond
High Tower in the reach. This is
post-Gullet, so I don't know, exactly what the episode placement here will be.
There's definitely enough time for us to meet and learn who Darren is before this moment,
which is a pretty big swing moment.
Like on the heels of Honeywine, here's a quote,
on Dragonstone an air of despondence and defeat hung over the black court
when the disaster on the Honeywide became known to them.
Lord Bar-Iman went so far as to suggest that mayhaps the time had come to bend their knees
to Egan the second.
So not only does this need to happen,
We need to know who Darren is before this because it's a pretty big,
it's a pretty big swing moment for like morale.
I'm just so confused.
I guess we don't need to get bogged down and I'm just so confused because it would have been
so easy to at least mention him a couple times.
You know what I mean?
Like Craig and Stark gets a mention.
Like, you know, so we won't be surprised by the Stark Lord next season.
Jane Aaron gets a month.
You know, like there are like various characters that get mentioned and we can't spare a thought
for Darren the Daring and his dragon Tasari.
So, yeah.
Very odd.
Particularly when Otto came back to be handed again.
That just seemed like a moment where I know there was a lot going on,
but like Darren's doing great in Old Town.
Your child, Darren is doing great and Old Town.
Allison could have FaceTimed him, you know, something that could have happened.
Anyway, you mentioned the gullet.
So we've got Jace's death, which we think might close out the season at the Battle of the
gullet, right?
The only question mark we have around that, like it seems like a really natural way where
basically two little baby Vassaris and Agon are basically sent away for safety.
And then you will not believe this.
The triarchy gets back in the mix.
Somehow.
The triarchy returns.
Yeah.
And the little blonde babies are in peril, except they're not.
at the point in the book, but anyway, they're in peril.
And then Jace, who already lost a brother in the bay, hops on his dragon, but flies too low and gets got and dies.
So the question, so we've got two questions.
Number one, are they going to age up these babies so that when one of them hops on a dragon and flies away?
because one of the babies rescues self,
but should probably be a little bit older
than the little blonde babes that we met.
So is there going to be another little time jump in season two?
Or are they just going to hide the babies from us
and then, like, show them again and they'll be older
and they just will like yada, yada, yada over the fact that they were very recently babies?
I don't know, these kids need to be older.
for Saras and Agon for this story to work.
The other reason why they wouldn't do
the Battle of the Gullet in season two to end season two,
that we really anticipate that they will.
But the reason that they wouldn't do it is because, like,
do we want a second Reneira strong boy
to die on his dragon over some water to close out?
Will that feel too samey of a finale?
Not to be reductive about it.
Anyway, what do you think?
So Agon the Younger is supposed to be nine when this happens in the book.
We don't know exactly how old Agon and Vassaris are in the show,
but based on the timeline of the Reneer-Demon marriage,
what's the oldest Agan the Younger could be on the show?
Five? Five and a half?
So, yeah, that's the storm cloud escape.
Also, Storm Cloud is not in the show yet, is Dragon.
So there's a lot to take care of quickly to have this unfold exactly that way.
but I think it, this is one of the things,
and I'm, again, always prepared to keep my mind open
and say, oh, yeah, I didn't think that they could change this
effectively and they did and it worked.
However, I think that given the nature of Agon's,
Agon the Younger's life and future,
this is obviously not the most traumatic,
the only traumatic Dragon Center thing that happens.
But like, it's a seminal definitive thing.
Only, here's the quote, only nine.
He had never flown before and would never fly again.
A later quote, though his brother, Egon the Younger had fled and lived, all the joy had gone
out of the boy.
He would never forgive himself for leaping onto stormcloud and abandoning his little brother
to the enemy.
This is a huge, huge, huge moment for the character.
His dragon dies.
He never claims another dragon.
Egan the dragon being, like the role and everything that happens later with Reneera and
Sunfire, obviously, and then the ultimate eventual extinction.
of the dragons during the rest of his life.
This is an origin and a seed of something that blossoms horrifically across his whole life.
Like, I kind of think this has to happen.
So the question is, can it happen in a way that makes sense to us?
If we haven't met Storm Cloud yet, we meet new dragons all the time without having met them
previously and then they're immediately involved in something central.
Can he be like six or seven, though?
Maybe.
Yeah, the way that we met Aerex.
But, like, when we saw her bring Agonne in to meet, like, you know,
He's like three at most, like three at most, when he met Vassara.
So I have a lot of questions about that.
I'm sure they'll figure it out, but I'm calling it the toddler conundrum for now.
That's just sort of where I am.
Can we talk about prophecy?
Please.
Okay.
Speaking of Jace, who's going to – Renair is just going to lose so many kids, right?
We got this email from William who said I was perplexed because in Reneer's arguable near-death experience,
during the stillbirth, she neglects to inform Jace of the biggest responsibility he would have
if he had to step into her place as heir in the event of an untimely passing.
To me, this is all going to culminate in Reneira telling poor little Agon the third, the younger,
about it before she is barbecued and devoured by sunfire in front of his little sweet soul.
I mean, this has to be what ends up happening, right?
I can already envision Agon too having any last words type situation for Reneera,
and her last act ever is hugging little egg on the throat
and telling him about the Song of Ice Enfire.
Imagine the horror but the unreal scenes.
OMJ.
For the first part of this email from William, I would say,
at that point, Renira, though she's never discussed it with him,
assumes that Damon knows about the prophecy
so that Damon could tell Jace about the prophecy.
Again, she never talked in the six years that they've been married.
They've never discussed it.
But this is her assumption before she finds out that he doesn't know.
But yeah, you know, is Reneira, like when, how many times is she going to try to pass the prophecy off to a kid?
You know, when is the ultimate handoff going to happen?
Do any thoughts or opinions about that?
I think she will tell Jace as soon as he's back.
I think it would be strange not to given how, what a central preoccupation this is for her character now.
Very, very strange.
And especially like what it meant for her to realize that Viseris,
had entrusted this to her alone to now then give that to her air,
I think would be like a really cool story beat and then the anguish of realizing she has to do it again.
I do think that sketched out scene from William about like whispering, passing on in a final whisper,
this burden to sweet little egg on the younger, that would be like anguish inducing.
But I do think Jace will learn it.
What about you?
Yeah.
We're going to talk about Reneer's death again, well, in an end.
another email.
Quickly, we got this email from Jay.
Do you think in the future we get a moment where Rainer tells Allison that she misinterpreted
Vassaris's last word.
As book readers, we know Allison is a prisoner for quite some time.
It would be the ultimate salt in the wound to tell her all of this was started because she
got it wrong.
Now, was it?
Because Otto was going to do a coup anyway?
But like, what do you think?
Do you think Allison ever has a reckoning with getting it all wrong?
Hmm.
I'm just salivating.
Like, how long is it also, how long is it going to take to get these two women back in a room together?
A while.
Yeah.
Like, we're not going to get to see Olivia Cook and Emma Darcy in a room together for, like, seasons.
I'm going to cry like when Sansa hug John and, you know, like, that's, it's going to be a big moment.
I have a theory.
I have a, I'll, I'm going to throw something out at you when we talk about where we think the season might end about how we could, we could end it with them back together.
But in terms of this.
Skype.
I'm going to find out there a diet in the force.
Yeah, exactly.
Reneira telling Allison she misinterpreted Sarah's last words.
I don't know.
What do you think about that?
I just don't even know that Allison would believe her.
Like, it will be so important for Allison to cling to the cloak of her righteousness.
You know what I mean?
So, all right.
Let me hit you.
We're almost done here.
Let me hit you with this email we got.
from Sam. Sam has been writing us like beautiful, beautiful tomes, OED-length emails that I usually
cannot work into the show, but I did my best to try to get an excerpt in here on this final show.
So Sam wrote, the details we have regarding this coming winter. So there's a winter that
happens in the Dance of Dragons. And how will that relate to the prophecy is the question.
The details we have regarding this coming winter are scant, particularly during the onset of the
dance. Most mentions about the winter and the books concerned the Stark's getting ready to
March South and die, is never once mentioned in the context of Reneira.
Winter is only mentioned explicitly affecting the sovereign in fire and blood after Reneer's
death in a passage describing the winter of the widows as it affects the realm under
Egg III.
The challenges he, Egg Three, faced, were daunting for winter had descended upon
Westrus and would endure for four long years.
Winter is cold and bleak as any in the history of the seven kingdoms, etc., etc.
written record tells us Rineira remains vengeful to the end of her days.
She slides further into grief with each loss of a son and becomes less and less interested in ruling the masses and more and more interested in keeping safe harbor for her and her kin.
Consider for Jace what happens up north, a pact of ice and fire.
That's what his alliance with the Starks is called in the books.
It makes you wonder if Jace returns triumphantly having gone two for two on allegiances in the books, it'll be four for four, but I appreciate the condensing.
Wouldn't it be interesting if he tells his mother, we have solidified a pack of ice and fire?
And then Reneira's face shoots up, does he know?
Of course not, but should he know?
And maybe that is the moment Reneer officially tells Jace cutting through her bloodless and vengeance.
Or maybe the guilt of the fallout from raining fire and blood in the realm gives her paws and stays her tongue.
She does need to officially label him Prince of Dragonstone and heir to the throne.
It would be nice to get that dagger back first, but she won't have it at least before his fall at the gullet.
If Agon never finds out, I wonder how that will affect her death by Sunfire.
Does she try to plead with Agon, Agon the second?
Begging to say one last thing to him, believing her cause to be lost,
does she whisper it to Agon 3?
Something of the effect of the dagger, the secret is in the dagger.
The only clue given in her final moments is as follow.
Renira Targaryen had time to raise her head toward the sky
and shriek out one last curse upon her half brother
before Sunfire's jaws closed around her, tearing off her arm and shoulder.
definitely looking forward to that curse,
not looking forward to that scene.
So anyway, the question of the prophecy,
and as it laces through Rainera's journey,
this is something we've talked about a bunch.
But like, how is this informed,
we've already seen that payoff in this finale.
Reneer's reticence to tear the realm apart
is connected to her knowledge of the prophecy,
and Allison's team has no such knowledge
despite the fact that Agon 2
has the fucking dagger on his hip.
So, like, how much is that prophecy
going to guide Rainer's demeanor and attitude and all of that through and demons for that matter
since Damon now knows throughout the rest of this story.
Any thoughts like some conflict in the human heart, Joe?
Ah.
That old trusty conflict in the human heart.
Yeah, I like that.
I like that sketch a lot.
And I think, you know, said this a minute ago.
Like, I think the idea of Jace returning and them having that conversation,
it feels like an important thing, given how top of mind this is for Reneera,
I just, maybe if she's lost in the quest for vengeance, you know,
the line that we heard Reneira speak about Damon in the finale,
gone to plot his war, like if that kind of gone to madness,
fog and Myopia sets in following Luke's death,
then maybe there's some way to delay this conversation.
But I just, I think it's something that we have to see between her and Jace.
We're going to have a really fun time keeping this light in the next few seasons as like all this shit goes down.
But we like, bees will carry us through.
Last but not least, Miley Rubin.
Like where if, if Fire and Blood, House of the Dragon Fire and Blood is four seasons, the dance four seasons, which is what they've said a couple times.
where do we end this story in a way?
Like we both agree that we think
the gullet might be episode 9 or 10 next season,
but for the larger, for the end of season four,
what feels like the end of this story?
Because after Rainiera dies,
after Egg 3 becomes king,
there's this whole regency period.
That feels like a weird petering out of this story.
So like, what do you,
is there a stop, a natural stopping point in your view?
I don't know.
I hope we find out soon if this is definitively going to be 40 episodes.
You know, we had heard the three or four.
It seems like it's got to be four, right?
But also, like, I wonder when we all definitively know
if that idea of using the House of the Dragon container as an anthology
to explore other periods of Targaryian history,
if that will in fact happen.
Because I could see that having some bearing on the end point.
Like, not that you would just immediately pick up the next,
batch of House of the Dragon right after this.
I assume we would get Agon's conquest or Blackfire Rebellions, though.
I don't know.
Blackfire Rebellions, like, then it's a lot of similar stuff.
So maybe there is a different stretch to choose instead.
I'm curious to know what you think.
I will say on the end point of season two, though,
I was thinking Jace's death initially,
but I'm compelled by your observation
that that would be a very similar conclusion on the one hand.
mirrors, echoes. But on the other hand, yeah, that might feel like to seemy of a way to conclude
the first two seasons. And so what if, like, what if to get back to Rainier and Allison, what if
this season ends with the taking of Kings Landing? Like, what if Jace is episode eight or nine?
And then that episode 10 is, meanwhile, Prince Damon himself hasten south on the wings of his
dragon, Karex, he's flying above the western shore of the gods eye well away from Sir Kristen's
line of March. He evaded the enemy host, crossed the blind.
the black water then turned east, following the river downstream to King's Landing and on
Dragonstone, Renera Targary, and donned a suit of gleaming black scale, mounted Syrac's and
took flight as a rainstorm lashed the waters of Blackwater Bay, high above the city. The queen and her
prince consort came together circling over Agon's high hill, the sight of them incited terror
in the streets of the city below. That feels like an endpoint to season two for me. And like even
you could then go to that next little stretch of the city is yours.
Princess, Allison is reported to have said, but you will not hold it long.
Maybe we get our Renera Allison moment right at the end there.
So I feel like that would work for season two.
Oh, Stunnen.
Stunnen.
What do you think about the end of the end point overall, though?
I don't know.
It's hard to say.
It really feels like the story dies when Reneer dies.
It's hard to imagine, like, but a lot happens after she dies.
So, but like, imagine House of the Dragon without Renair a Targaryen.
Like, that is tough for me.
But maybe it's just the death of, death of egg too.
And the egg on the younger being crowned.
Sure.
I mean, sure.
But the false dawn, the hour of the wolf, like all that sort of stuff.
Like, that's really interesting.
I would love, like the hour of the wolf, I would love to have.
Oh, awesome.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Anyway, if you have, we have years probably until 2024 to find out what comes next for House of the Dragon.
If you have any ideas between now and then, you can always email us, Hopison Dragons.com and also about Andor and also about Wakanda forever and also about Willow and also about all the things that we'll be covering on this feed.
Everything.
We'll be here in the content wars.
Joe, hope it's a fool's ally.
And yet I still hope that season two of Hot Dee will be here.
next year. I just am not ready to accept
2024, even though it seems likely.
What if,
what if until then, you and I
fly on Dragonback,
see the wonder across the narrow sea
and eat only cake together?
I never just about cake.
Okay.
That is a wrap on today's show.
A vagar-sized
thank you to all of you for listening.
And of course, to our
dragon lord, Steve Allman, for producing.
this episode, Arjuna Ram Gapal, for his additional production work on this episode,
Jomi and Danoran for his work on the social media for this episode. And for all of their wonderful
work all season long, we are so fortunate to work with such an incredible amazing team.
From the soundboard to the long edits to the hours and hours of work and slack and text
and on the phone and on Zooms and in files, we could not make the pod without Steve and
Arjuna and the whole team standing around the painted table with us. So thank you to them
for their wonderful work. And thank you to us.
to you.
Me.
Thank you to you all for soaring through the skies with us, hot day, what the time it was.
Join us on Friday for our indoor chat.
Join us in all of the other magical worlds that we visit in the future.
Until then, remember, our hearts remain as one.
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