The Prestige TV Podcast - ‘The Last of Us’ Season 2, Episode 3 Precap: Every Road Trip Needs a Dina, Plus Gabriel Luna
Episode Date: May 1, 2025Jo and Rob get into the “gamer’s insight,” as Rob talks about his favorite and least favorite changes from the game in a non-spoiler-y way (5:52), and why every road trip needs a Dina (24:13). P...lus, Gabriel Luna joins to discuss his take on the role of Tommy(30:55), before we dive into **SPOILERS** (1:00:17), including Rob’s most anticipated moment (1:14:01). Email us! prestigetv@spotify.com Subscribe to the Ringer TV YouTube channel here for full episodes of ‘The Prestige TV Podcast’ and so much more! Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney Guest: Gabriel Luna Producers: Kai Grady and Donnie Beacham Jr. Additional Production Support: Justin Sayles Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, welcome back to the prestige TV podcast feed. I'm Joanna Robinson.
I'm Rob Mahoney. We are here today, talk to you about the Last of Us, season two, episode three. That is the plan today. We've got, just in case you're joining us for the first time, the way we're covering the Last of Us on this feed is we're breaking every episode into two, two, three sections, actually. We've got a discussion at the top that's kind of a mailbag sort of situation. We'll talk about that in a second.
A Socratic seminar between us.
And all of our loyal listeners who are emailing, Joe, we should say, to,
this is your brain on shrooms at gmail.com.
Or if that's too complicated for you, prestige TV at Spotify.com.
Perfect.
So that's the first section.
Second section is an interview.
Rob, who do we have on the podcast today?
Gabriel Luna's joining the show this week.
Very excited to have you all hear from him.
Was very excited to talk to him.
And we talked about Tommy, of course, who is, I think, taking on like a pretty different
life from the version of the character that we see in the game.
We also work through, I would say, the whole range of emotion that goes into playing Tommy
this week in particular, from saying goodbye to your dead brother to crushing beers at a
tee ball game. Tommy gets to do it all.
And then last but not least, we will have a spoiler section. Rob played The Last of Us,
the game years ago. And so it has a gamer's insight into the story.
yet to come, perhaps, or some adaptive changes stuff that we can't talk about in a spoiler
every way. So that'll be a warning for you. Can I put that on a business card, Joe? Just Rob Mahoney
and then in quotes, a gamer's insight. Is that, would that be okay with you? Is that, is that,
is that how you think of yourself chiefly? I don't know, but I think as I am becoming a more
compartmentalized professional, you know, I have my basketball stuff. I got this prestige stuff with
you. Clearly, I have this offshoot kind of gaming career that is now now becoming quite lucrative
for me, it turns out. You know, I just want to be able to market myself to all of the appropriate parties.
So you're a ball knower. Yes. Okay. Thank you. A TV watcher. Yeah. With a side of Gamer's Insight.
Sure. Okay. Great. I mean, look, we'll have you work up the website, but that sounds great on the copy.
Oh, you don't want me on your website. Okay. So that is the point today. Just FYI, in a larger sense of the feed,
Rob and I are going to be continuing to cover your friends and neighbors.
Perhaps on a week-to-week basis, time will tell.
But for right now, we're still in it with John Hamm.
So we'll be back later this week to talk to you about that.
There's also coverage of the rehearsal.
I heard rumors that there might be a check-in on the studio and hacks and poker faces coming up.
So that's all the delicious stuff waiting for you on the Prestige TV podcast feed.
Rob Mahoney, can I share with you?
Speaking of like specialities.
Can I share with you my Joanna Robinson NBA podcaster moment that I had earlier this week?
You simply must.
Okay.
I was after I went to the Thunderbolts press greeting on Monday.
And after that, I went to that parking garage is by the Metrion.
And I was like getting into the elevator to go up to my car.
And there was a guy waiting next to me at the elevator.
And it's a place where you like kind of want to be on your guard of like what's going on around you.
Yeah.
And so he was just like he was watching something full volume on his phone.
phone. And we got to the elevator. He didn't look up. Got into the elevator, still watching. And I could
hear it. I was like, oh, who's playing? He's watching a basketball game. I'm like, who's playing? He's like,
Warriors. There are seconds left. Yep. It's 107 to 106. It sure is. And I was like, got it. You
can't look up. I will look for. I will help you. He was like, I. But, you know, and the Warriors won,
right? Over Houston? They did.
I mean, what you're describing was a seminal Draymond green moment, just absolutely huge defensive stuff.
And I will say a crucial assist by you, Joe, in hitting that elevator button and not letting this guy miss a second of it.
I thought you'd be proud of me.
All right.
Absolutely.
I sold my car in Carvana last night.
Well, that's cool.
No, you don't understand.
It went perfectly.
Real offer, down to the penny.
They're picking it up tomorrow.
Nothing went wrong.
So what's the problem?
That is the problem.
Nothing in my life goes to smoothie.
I'm waiting for the catch.
Maybe there's no catch.
That's exactly what.
What a catch would want me to think.
Wow, you need to relax.
I need a knock on wood.
Do we have wood? Is this tablewood?
I think it's laminated.
Okay, yeah, that's good. That's close enough.
Car selling without a catch.
Sell your car today on.
Carvana.
Pick up these may apply.
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Let's talk about episode three.
Speaking of Gamer's Insight, Rob, I wonder how you feel about this.
of it that I found on the subreddit, which was this. I'm just mad that Ellie got a horse with saddlebags
full of supplies. I had to search 8,000 drawers to find that stuff. Rob, did you feel similarly
jealous and resentful of how easily Ellie got all those supplies, or Dina rather? Yeah, I was right to say,
let's be honest about who packed those saddlebags and who's responsible for all of the goods.
Would scavenging make for good TV? I go back and forth on this. Is it exactly earned by Ellie? No,
because, as this poster alluded to, we had to dig all of those supplies out from every drawer
between, not Jackson and Seattle per se, but literally everywhere else around these
respective towns. I'm glad, you know, you know what? Here's what I'll say. We get this
big traveling montage. Could we not have gotten a scavenging montage in there? Could we not
have gotten a rapid fire Ellie opening roughly 3,000 drawers and 3,000 cabinets to find supplies?
Is that not a thing that we're entitled to? Oh, you want a drawer montage is what you're saying. I would
love one. Would you set it to like a jaunty pop song or what would you? Okay, great. But yeah,
I'm trying to think what the number. I mean, it's really like you get to get high BPMs on that,
you know? It's going to get a little repetitive. Yeah, yeah, yeah. If you can synergize it,
don't stop me now, Sean of the Dead style to either crushing zombies or just the percussive
opening of drawers, then I think we're really getting somewhere. You read my mind. I was like,
this is an Edgar Wright moment. If ever we saw one, we need just like drawers and cabinets opening
closing. Okay. I guess what I'm most interested to know from you, this is a large,
largely like departure from the game kind of episode. The creators talked about sort of wanting
to build in this three month window and take this moment to breathe and grieve for Joel before
we hit the road to Seattle. So I guess my question in a non-spoiler sense, Rob, is can you share
with us your favorite change and your least favorite change if you can talk about it in a non-spoiler
way inside of this episode? Great question. I think my favorite change is,
is probably just the expansion of the mournful quiet moments that we get in Jackson to grieve
as an audience and as characters to grieve Joel before we leave. And that's, you know,
there are bits and pieces of that certainly in the game, but it is blown out in a totally
different way. And I think the time spent is ultimately so much more impactful. Like these are,
these are the reasons that I watch and love this show in particular, right? Like things like
Ellie getting to have an extended moment in Joel's bedroom, which again is kind of extrapolated.
but expanded, getting this another kind of expanded sequence in terms of her getting to visit Joel's grave.
And overall, I think my biggest payoff, and part of the reason we wanted to have Gabriel Luna for this episode is Tommy getting to say goodbye to Joel.
And that is, like, I think it's a really remarkable scene.
And Tommy's carrying it all on his face.
And it's right there.
It's in his hands.
For some reason, the little detail that really got me was their kind of like dual, very similar watches.
as he's cleaning Joel's arm, really, really got to me for some reason.
But I think Gabriel Luna's fantastic in that scene.
And you just get, I think you get both the very personal, devastating consequences of what's
happening.
And then you get to juxtapose it with the slow zoom out of this is a full morgue that, as
Gabriel will tell us in the interview today, is actually the same room where he gave the big
speech about preparedness.
And so having that sort of juxtaposition of small stakes and large stakes, at least
relative to the perspective of a town, I found to be really, really effective.
Is it also the room where they have the town hall meeting?
I believe so.
It's just like the bar, the salon.
The bar, the restaurant.
You know, does Jackson not have multiple restaurants or bars?
I don't know.
But this is the one.
A lot of stuff caught on fire, Rob.
Okay.
Something that I, and then did you say least favorite?
I will say my least favorite.
Honestly, I don't have a lot of least favorite for this episode.
Other than, I think, creating.
more of a travel, the montage that we've already talked about as far as the opening the drawers
go, turning the travel sequence from Jackson to Seattle into a montage event.
I was left a little disoriented, Joe, as far as like, I've literally no idea how long
this is supposed to take these characters.
And so I felt a little bit tossed about as we're kind of having these just like scenic walks,
gallops, trots across the countryside.
And then also some, you know, more intimate moments between Ellie and
Dina, but I was a little mixed on that because on the one hand, it felt very like fast-travely
in a video game sense. Like, all of a sudden, you're just kind of there, which would be fine,
but stringing it out in a cursory surface level kind of way left me a little bit wanting.
Okay, that's interesting. I think for me, not having as long of a time to sort of cherish
the game storytelling as you've had, so I take my sort of objections.
more lightly, but like...
I do not.
Dina, I do think this line, and we talked about it elsewhere, but I think this line where
Dina says to Ellie in the game, where you go, I go.
And we might yet get it in the show in a different context, perhaps.
But like that just felt like a core sort of Dina game moment to me.
And they're parceling the Dina, L.A. stuff out a little differently in the game, and we'll
talk about all of that.
on the dean of front um rob i thought you might be able to add to this podcast not just a gamer's insight
but a baker's insight um you have been known to bring baked goods in a temperware to uh to curry favor
with people guilt okay let's let's be honest about what's happening it's not currying favor
it's that if i don't get rid of them i will eat them and so i need to get rid of roughly
one half to three-fourths of every batch of baked goods that i make so it's it's i think it's
strictly a practical affair.
But that can't be what's happening with Dina
here because
cookies seem rare and precious here.
I just wondering if you had
any thoughts about the conversation we had on House of R
about a potential chocolate shortage in the time
of the mushroom apocalypse.
Is this a carib chip situation?
What are we doing?
What are we doing here?
I do have thoughts. This is 100%
dried fruit. There's no
chance of chocolate. It's
got, it may not be a raisin. It could be
a dried cherry. It could be any number of things,
but that is definitely a dried fruit cookie.
That's just what you've got in the post-apocalyptic world.
I mean, maybe a crazen.
Not for me personally, but I respect everybody out there who's living the crazen life.
Okay.
If you're from Jackson, Wyoming and you want to let us know what kind of dried fruit you're most likely to find in your local floor and fauna, let us know.
If this is a dried cherry cookie, I...
It's not a bad thing.
Oh, well, it's not for me.
simply not for me.
So you're anti-hot fruit.
You're also anti-dried fruit?
No.
Well, okay, I'm sorry.
This is a Last of Us podcast.
But I'll eat it, I'll eat it to dried fruit, but then you put it in a bake good and it kind of gets rehydrated and like it gets closer to baked fruit.
Does that make sense?
I'm just learning that you hate fruit.
No.
I love raisins.
It kind of sounds like you hate fruit.
I don't know what to tell you.
That's deeply untrue.
We talked so much about pineapple.
very recently. I hope you know that. Okay. What do you think? Okay, so Gail is an additive character
in the show. We've got several emails from listeners. Just wanting to point out like what a bad sort
of hippo-violating psychiatrist, Gail is. Straight up. Just very, very bad at the professional
aspects of her job. Granted, this is a lawless space. You know, you can go around murdering people
without legal consequences. So, you know, what's a little doctor-patient confidentiality?
So maybe not a good psychiatrist, more the only psychiatrist in town. So that's what we're dealing with here.
Perhaps she was great before, oh, I don't know, the world ended around her and she's like, you know,
fair. Fuck my professionalism or whatever.
Are, let's start out.
So a common sort of pushback I saw from some gamers on this episode was that they felt between some of the gale scenes where she is sort of, you know, psychologically analyzing characters and the town hall scene where we get dueling speeches about the nature of revenge and mercy and morality and all that sort of stuff like that, that we're making a lot of the themes of the game more explicitly stated rather than.
it's up to the gamer to sort of figure this out as the story unfolds. Do you feel like the show is
holding hands a little bit more than you would prefer? Or do you feel like it's a different medium,
so these things need to be told differently in that space? My personal preference as a viewer or a
gamer or anything is I want as little hand holding as possible. I want to be able to make
the connection for myself. And so, yes. It's similarly to how we talked about
Abby's big speech, there are elements of the season that are just over-explicated in a very
different way. Then not just in the game, but then what you might find another prestige TV fair,
right? Like, characters are overtly saying there are motivations up, up in front, front and
center, like leaving no room for misinterpretation as to what's happening in some of these
things. Yeah. Some of that I like. Some of it is obviously misdirection, right? Like, Ellie is saying
a lot of things in this episode. I don't know how many of them are true. She's just saying a lot of
stuff. Gail is where I am concerned. And yeah, we did get this email from Natalie, Joe,
who talked about how not only is this handholding, but it's sort of like potentially protecting
the show from the similar kinds of backlash that the game received around some of these plot
points. Bad faith interpretations that we've talked about in the past. Like bad faith or willful
misinterpretation, I would say, of the last was part two. And so leaving no room,
for those kinds of points of view.
Yeah.
I think that's interesting.
You can do that.
I just think you then have to create ambiguity in other areas of the story, right?
You just don't want anything in a Last of Us type of storytelling to be so cut and dry.
Like, we need room to question characters motivations.
We need room to question who are the, who are the quote unquote good guys in these various scenarios?
Who are the people who are seeking violence versus trying to protect themselves from violence?
Like, those are all worthwhile conversations to have.
have, Gail to me is ground zero for a lot of these concerns. And it's one that I've started to have,
I would say, especially with this episode. Because even though I love Catherine O'Hara, I love seeing
her on screen, I love what she's what she brought to the character, especially initially on
our first meeting with Gail. That is a character. In this episode, she's sort of recast as the
woman who sees things other people don't. And that's not a character. That is a device.
And we talked before about this, our reticence around therapy as device in TV storytelling in general.
Well, Ellie has similar reservations.
She wants no part of it.
I guess it depends how much, I think I want to reserve my feelings, depending on how we use Gail going forward.
I agree this episode, felt like a lot, but we are on the road to Seattle at this point.
And so I'm not sure how much more space there is for like therapy hour.
with Gail. For sure. It's also why I'm really eager to see kind of what the show has in store
for Eugene's story. That's a thing that fleshes out Gail as a character and tells us a lot
about her life and her circumstances and makes her more than just the person telling us to watch
out because Ellie is violent. On your sort of quest for moral ambiguity, which I think is at the
heart of what has made The Last of Us, both so compelling for people and, uh,
open for those misinterpretations.
I wanted to ask you about the group of people that we meet on the road outside of
Ellie's story.
They've got bows and arrows.
They're armed with hammers.
They've got scars on their faces, et cetera.
We see that they have been attacked later.
We don't know.
And we should say this is additive.
This scenario is not in the game.
We don't know for sure.
Ellie feels like she's sure.
She knows who did it.
She's quite sure.
We don't know who did it.
But I thought it was interesting.
I hadn't thought about this, but this idea that like Abby, when she is talking to Joel,
she talks about the code of the WLF and the code being we don't kill people that can't
defend themselves.
And so when you see these people who are armed with bows and arrows and.
hammers, and yes, literally that little girl has a hammer in her hand when she died, but would you
call her someone who can defend herself? So if this was the WLF, if these were the wolves, whether it's
Ellie or other members that we see tromping down the street at the end of the episode,
do you feel like the show was trying to say that code is bullshit or an Abby is so far gone
from the code that it doesn't matter.
What do you think?
I think I interpreted this scene as being much less about potentially Abby or potentially the WLF,
who again,
we should say,
we have no real connection to say that those people or anyone involved with the WLF was
there other than Ellie and Dina find some random gun casings and are like,
this must be them.
Well,
and the guy,
Jacob being pretty sure it's them, right?
When his daughter's like,
is it demons and said worse wolves?
Yeah,
they do call them the wolves.
And so I guess we do have that connective point for sure.
I think for me, it's less to me about whether Ellie and Dina are right or wrong in going out for revenge, ultimately, to find Abby and more that they are looking for further justification of what they're doing, right?
Because if they find all these bodies, enough bodies in horrible enough states that Dina is vomiting from the sight of them, then what they're doing is not revenge.
It's righteousness, right?
They are on the right side of everything.
And so I'm learning more about Ellie and Dina from this scene than I am necessarily.
necessarily Abbey or the WLF, in particular just because we've seen so little of them other than, you know, the splendor of their tanks and their ultimately their war hardware at this point.
Splendor, you love war.
Let's, let's hear from.
Famously very hawkish.
Yeah.
Let's hear for a listener, Catherine, who says, watching this episode and seeing the military, the tanks, all the soldiers, all I could think is how much gasoline is there left in this world?
These big cars are not fuel efficient.
Shouldn't we save bullets for infected?
So Catherine has the same concerns that the people of the world of Mad Max Fury Road do.
I was about she's wondering about Bullet Town and Guzzelline.
We're mapping to Seattle.
We should be mapping to Bullet Town.
Yeah, we really should.
Any thoughts?
I mean, like, it's not up to me to figure out how to logistically have an army in the mushroom apocalypse.
But here's what I think is interesting inside of, I mean, it's a funny email, but like here's what I think is interesting inside of Catherine's question.
And it gets to the heart of something that I think the show and the game have on their mind.
We're fighting each other and losing sight of the real threat, which is the mushroom zombies, right?
And so we're spending bullets on each other when we should be saving them for mushroom attacks, etc.
Completely.
And something that, sorry, really quickly, something that, you know, the show has this information from Eugene.
via Dina that like the WLF is one of several sort of splinter groups and wouldn't it be better if they all band it together?
But once again, if they ban it all together, they're banning altogether against Fedro, which is still human on human violence and not all of us together versus the mushrooms, you know?
I think it's very tempting, especially with a show like this, to say like, why aren't these people operating in a logical way?
And the answer is that they're in an apocalypse.
And beyond that, they're human.
That's the thing.
Like, we are fickle, emotional creatures.
And the idea that, look, given where we are in human history right now, I'm just putting
myself in our current world, the idea that somebody would be distracted by something streaking
by real fast, that's another group of humans with another, like, ultimately, like, perspective
on the world as opposed to the grave existential threats facing literally everybody.
Who could possibly relate to such a thing?
You make great points here.
Yeah, I wasn't saying that like, this is so beyond the scope of human understanding.
This is just like, this is just, again, something that the show has on its mind.
For sure.
It's just like the way in which our little tribes, our little definitions of us, put us in
more vulnerable positions that we might be if we could think of the larger us, which we are
often in our current situation and when there are mushroom zombies knocking at the door,
have trouble keeping you in mind.
Even to the point we talked about last week of Tommy, like pillar of the community,
General Tommy is like, actually fuck the larger scale battle.
My main priority right now is distracting people from my wife.
Like that's my us that I'm zooming in on in this moment.
So I just thought that was interesting.
I think that's a lot of where we are right now.
It goes to the town hall sequence.
And so many of the themes implicit and explicit of this episode is like what happens when
push comes to shove, when you really have to make compromising choices over the collective good
versus what you want, where are you going to fall on those things? And clearly, Ellie has a very
defined worldview as far as what is important to her in these moments. And it's mostly fuck all
y'all. Y'all, I'm going to do my own thing. And if I can bring 16 of you along with me,
all the better. But if not, I'll do it myself. Or at least attempt you against a tank and an army.
We return now to our conversation already in progress about the bottle versus brick debate.
Oh, sure.
And we did get another piece of information from our listener, Eli, who wanted to point out that the bottles in question that you use to distract from zombies are not the same bottles that you use to construct a Molotov cocktail.
This is true.
So there is no inherent advantage to the bottles in terms of storage or crafts, says Eli, suffice to say Team Brick.
So team brick is another push from...
We regret the error.
Yeah.
I misstated that the bottles were one and the same.
But counterpoint, do we not get the whole bottle family?
Oh.
Like, are we not entitled to multiple kinds of bottle?
Thanks for handing me that transition.
Our listener Sarah wrote in on our group name question to suggest that we should refer to the zombie
horde in terms of like how we talk about mushroom groupings.
I love this.
So here are some possibilities.
Clusters, rings, patches, and beds.
A bed of mushroom
You don't want to be in a bed of infected
That's for sure
You don't want to be in any of these
I don't want to be in any of these
But I think I would have the best chance with a cluster
A cluster of zombies I think I can handle
You think you can handle a cluster?
Oh no, I can't handle one
But if I have any chance of surviving
It might be against a cluster
All right, what else do you want to talk about
Inside of this episode in a spoiler-free way
That we haven't yet?
Joe, I would love to talk about the fact
that every road trip needs a Dina.
Very important.
I think there's a logistics versus execution thing happening between Dina and Ellie that in some
ways makes them a good team.
Oh,
you mean in preparedness?
Oh, yes.
Okay.
I thought you meant in coming up with fun car games.
Well,
that too.
You meant like the airport dad situation that Dina is presenting here.
Let's go games first.
If you are going to be the person responsible for the vibes, the games, the ox, whatever
whatever your version of that thing is for your trip.
I would recommend something other than let's just go letter by letter through the alphabet
on whatever our chosen theme is.
Like you got to jazz it up a little bit.
By the time you get to cue, you know, like we're in trouble.
And it's queen.
But like the, the like, Dina, I mean, she immediately pivots to a really fun game.
She does.
She's adaptable.
Yeah, yeah.
Just really light and breezy stuff that L.A. engages in in full faith.
Okay.
but in the non-game sense, what do you want to say about Dina?
Well, I mean, for one, I think it highlights a couple of things about Ellie, the fact that Dina has to be the one to come into Ellie's house, into Ellie's plan and say, I know you think you're doing this, but here's what you actually need to accomplish your goals.
For one, Ellie is a top line thinker who is at this point one priority, which is, I need to kill this woman with the braid.
Like, that is basically all she wants to do has not really put together the question marks in between set out.
and goal. And Dina's the only thing that I would say is actually keeping Ellie alive as far as the
execution of that plan goes. There's also the element of like there are ways in which Ellie is such a
self-reliant person and a really capable person who's out there on patrol wiping out infected,
like very, very capable. And in some ways she's still the naive teenager in the Chucks who doesn't
know better than to like doesn't know to put boots on. And I love that at this point in the story,
like she's literally engaging with those ideas that she's walking through Joel's house
and seeing her old room.
And she's like so much caught between the ideas and the realities of who she's supposed to be.
Yeah.
Like 19, I think is a perfect age for that.
Yeah.
To quote the philosopher, Britney Spear is not a girl dot yet a woman.
But like I think I think, I think her plan of step one converse in a pile of guns,
step two, yada, yada, step three profit is, yeah.
Going to get her further than me on the road to Seattle, but not.
Would it, though?
Yeah, I think so.
I also think to Dina's credit, Operation Let the WLF folks get where they're going before we pursue them.
I actually think it has some merits.
I think this is a reasonable perspective to hold for two 19-year-old people who are themselves not trackers.
Like, if you're Ellie, you know, clearly she would have preferred all the information and she has been denied it many times in the history of The Last of Us.
I get it.
say she had set out the next day looking for Abby and her friends or several days after as opposed to the three-month time jump that we get.
How if you are not someone who knows how to track people?
And granted, maybe she has some basic skill in that department as learned from Joel or Tommy or whoever.
How are you expecting to find five random-ass people you don't know in the Great American West?
Yeah, vibes.
Straight up.
Like, not even a compass.
Just like I'm sensing animosity from this general.
direction. I'm just going to like follow my instincts. She didn't have a route planned. None.
She's never been that far west. Nope. You know, so yeah, that's a great. That's a great point.
So three cheers for Dina, who remains one of the greatest characters on television right now, played by a tremendously
charismatic actor. And I'm really excited that we have Dina on this road trip. But this is a lot of
pressure for when Craig Mason said in the official podcast,
this is our us. This is our two-sum now, Dina and Ellie. And that's just, I think Isabella Merced has done
such a good job, like an incredible job. Yeah. And she has to fill the Joel Miller boots for the
audience. And that is, that's tough for anyone. Petro Pescal is just like, everyone wants a piece
of Petro Pescal right now. He is like, the person everyone turns to be your leading man,
and you're asking someone to sort of like be Joel Miller to.
you point out, even though she's actually a little bit more of the, the, uh, the Ellie in this dynamic.
It's true. But I would say especially important because even the other people that Ellie is
ostensibly close to, you know, like people like Tommy and Jesse, for example, she's kind of
keeping them at arm's length too. Like, Dina is really the only person she's trusting to the extent
that she is with something resembling close human intimacy. Everybody else, it feels like, you know,
to the point about her being a liar that Gail raises, she's telling a lot of people what they want
to hear and or at least what she thinks they want to hear. I think that's ultimately a reason why her
plea to the town hall is like falls so flat is anyone who knows her knows that it's like real rich
that this girl who doesn't want anything to do with us is all of a sudden talking about what's good
for all of us. It just it doesn't ring true at all. Even though technically speaking from like a
speech writing standpoint, the pathos note is here. Like we get it. But it just doesn't track for the
person that she is to the point that like I almost believe homophobes Seth more than I believe her.
or like what he's saying makes sense for who he is.
I think that like Dina,
Dina is someone who will not accept like Ellie saying,
I'm just going to bed and Dina being like,
I don't think that's where you're going like will not accept the bullshit that
Ellie is,
even though Ellie does lie to her inside of this episode,
we see it happen when she tells the story of the kid Brian from Kansas City.
That is half truth at best.
Yeah.
And Dina has no way of knowing that necessarily.
but Dina has a really good BS like meter in general.
And so a lot of her reactions, a lot of her like, uh-huh, sure, I think is is really interesting
for that character.
So for her sort of like in the same way, and we're going to talk about this a little bit
more in the spoiler section, but in the same way that Ellie, Ellie's role was to crack Joel
open.
When Joel is like, you're just cargo, like, you know, I don't want you.
I don't want family.
I don't want any of this and Ellie had to relentlessly, you know, reach out for a connection to him
in order to form that bond.
It's true.
And here is Dina in that role for Ellie as they hit the road here.
So anything else you want to say?
Let's keep it moving.
Let's go to our chat with Gabriel Luna.
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I'm joined now by Gabriel Luna, Tommy himself.
Gabriel, thanks so much for joining the show.
Thank you, Rob. Thank you.
Well, I mean, why don't we go straight to the emotion?
anguish portion of this interview.
I mean, could you tell us about...
Let's just go right.
Just dig right in.
Tell us about your experience, first learning that Joel was going to die in this season
of The Last of Us.
And what that was like for you kind of seeing it play out on screen as well.
Well, that was the best and worst kept secret of the entire kind of last of a story.
I was aware of it.
and it's such a critical part of the second game.
It's what allows Ellie to grow and figure out who she is as a person without his protection and his love.
So I always knew or I always kind of just kind of expected that to be the case, having played the game and knowing this kind of story.
So when it happened, you know, we kept having to avoid it all.
before the show came out
avoid talking about that scene
and everyone would ask
I think there was a lot of people
who would play the game that
went through that trauma already once before
that hoped that we would be
rewriting history in a way
but
it's such a critical element
it had to happen
and that's the truth of life
people die
you know and then to make people
face that
is what the story
is a huge
kind of inciting incident and really what makes the story what it is, you know, having just the fallout
dealing with the abrupt departure of somebody you love so much. So I knew it was always going to take
place. We did a good job of keeping it secret, even though the game was been out since 2020,
and anybody who has an internet connection could have found out that that possibly would be happening.
But once again, that's a tribute to kind of Craig and Neil keeping everybody on their toes,
because there was still the possibility that maybe we do change it.
Maybe it does happen in a different way.
But yeah, I always knew it was going to happen, but still was still as devastated as everyone else when I saw it.
I kept telling everyone, you know, watch the show with someone you love.
And then my dumb ass watches it alone.
Oh, no.
After getting back from WrestleMania on Sunday.
And my wife was already in bed.
She's like, we're going to watch it tomorrow, right?
And I was like, yeah. And then I ended up watching it alone in the middle of the night. And it was just the horrible idea.
Well, Tommy has his own version of that moment and kind of getting to see Joel's body alone. And in complete solitude, you know, this send-off for his brother to help wash him to kind of start to say goodbye.
For you as a performer, like, where do you go emotionally speaking to create that kind of moment for Tommy?
Well, you know, I did a lot of kind of thinking about in preparation, anticipate.
it was equally as important as any of the action that happens in the second episode.
This reflection, this fallout of the events was something that I had certainly bookmarked
ahead of time and knew once that night came that it was going to be kind of heavy load.
And, you know, I was so kind of charged up for that scene.
I remember going into rehearsal and rehearsing it and already bursting into tears the moment
and I say the words give Sarah my love.
And then having to check myself and recalibrate
and try to reset in a way that gave myself kind of somewhere to go
because we, of course, had a whole night of shooting
and many different setups and a lot of different coverage we were trying to get.
And, you know, you didn't want to go all the way right at the top in rehearsal.
So I did ask Peter, our director, Peter Hor, to,
to start with the close-ups
because I was kind of already there
and would stand outside
on streets that were previously
teaming with stuntmen and dogs and fire
and but to stand on that street
alone by myself
was really kind of powerful
and the moment I kind of walked onto the set
because we were in the Jackson set which is a whole town
Yeah.
And where the makeshift morgue is, is the restaurant where I did the big meeting where I was telling
everybody the plan, you know, and now it's just riddled, you know, strewn with bodies everywhere.
And so I walk in and I see the body there who was, it was actually a body double named Philippe,
really nice guy who went through full makeup so that I could have something kind of visceral to respond to.
and the moment we were in it
I stopped thinking about what I had hoped
the moment would be, what I was planning on it being,
and it just became what it was.
And in my mind, I had thought,
I started having visions of my grandfather's wake
and how he had lost both of his sons,
my father, my uncle David,
and I was his only immediate family member.
He has divorced my grandmother.
mother and, you know, and his second wife. And so he was, as far as immediate family goes,
when they allow the immediate family to view the body before everyone else comes in, I was the only
one. So it was a very easy to remember what that was like and to try to bring that experience
into the scene. I mean, what does it like to tap into a memory that's that personal for you,
that deep for you in this really emotional raw place.
And then you look up and yeah, you have a body double under a sheet in front of you,
but you're surrounded by cameras and crew.
Like it's a lot that's being put on your shoulders as sort of the sole performer in this scene.
And yet you have all this, even though it is a well-built set around you,
a lot of artifice around you.
Yeah.
I mean, it was tough because it was, I remember, you know, kind of getting to that emotional place
and having, you know, my eyes well up and, but also being.
outside with flame bars going off all around me that were drying up all the tears.
But we have an incredible crew, very respectful crew, and very dedicated and very invested in the story.
And so, you know, these moments are as precious to them as they are to us.
And so, you know, it was easy to put myself into that kind of waking.
hallucination that one has to, you know, put themselves into to believe the imaginary moment.
And so it was, once it was in there, I mean, it was, you could hear a pin drop.
And that's just kind of, that's just the nature of our crew and how respectful they are of
the source material and of the writing and of the moment.
And I mean, us getting that moment with Tommy and Joel is sort of the tradeoff of one of the
bigger changes from the game, which is not having Tommy there at the moment of Joel's death.
When you read that in the script and that kind of departure, I mean, how did that hit you?
And kind of, do you see that as having an impact on Tommy as a character, the fact that he wasn't
there in the room? Like, how does that change Tommy's reception of this moment?
Yeah, no, that was a big change from the game. And that was one that I had planted kind of the
seed of with Craig and Neil the first season.
You know, we, we talked about that.
And I had told, you know, I mentioned to them how it, for me, it didn't make sense that Tommy would be so trusting of this stranger, especially how well trained he is.
And especially having lived in this, you don't survive, you know, 20 plus years in this, in this world that we have in the last of us by trusting everyone you come across and telling people your name, you know.
So for me, it just didn't really ring true.
and that was something that kind of always kind of, you know, kind of, kind of irked me about the scene.
And then the fact that this capable warrior, this person who loves Joe so much is completely incapacitated when this is all happening,
unable to do anything about it.
And so Craig took that to heart and came to me, you know, before we started, before he, when he was breaking the story for season two, him and Neil Druckman and Haley and said, you know what?
thought about it and he sent me a very long text about what the new plan was which is i would be
in jackson protecting the city with maria and the townspeople fighting off two or three bloaters
originally it was like two or three bloaters that we were fighting um lots of action that we shot
that was all kind of cut just for because we had to uh that that whole scene could have been
20 more minutes long with all the stuff that we had shot the uh but the but you know what it it it
as you mentioned, it creates a new dynamic and it creates a whole well of guilt that's just sitting there in his heart, having not been there and having not been able to protect his brother.
It might, you know, some choices that he may make going forward are informed in a different way because of it.
And that's all really kind of rich, new, you know, territory and grass.
to tread.
And not only for me as a performer and all of us as the performers, but for, I think, for
Neil and for Craig.
Yeah.
This is the opportunity for them to change things, maybe do things that they wish they
had done.
Neil wishes he had done in the game, you know, to come up with new and exciting ways to
keep themselves kind of on their toes.
So, yeah, I think, I think it's, you know, just all of the guilt.
Tommy Most Feel makes it, you know, makes his choices down the road are just shaded a different way.
Well, I mean, you mentioned the big battle sequence you get to be a part of as a performer
instead of, you know, the emotional kind of death sequence in the room. One bloater or three,
that's a huge production to be a part of. I mean, you've got a flamethrower in hand. You have extras
all over the place. There's a lot happening. What goes into the production of a big battle sequence
like that that maybe people watching or people outside of the industry wouldn't expect.
How much fun I had with all of the infected.
Like all my friends, you know, Andrea and Mike and all these different, you know,
Keanu, his fight coordinator and J-Day, one of my talents people, he used to be a UFC fighter,
Jason Depp.
He once fought Michael Bisping and fought him really well for a couple rounds.
You know, it's everybody.
coming to work and giving you their heart and working 15, 16 hours just to try to make it real, man.
I mean, Danny Virtue, who was our horse wrangler and all of his team, I mean, just incredible stuntman, Denton Edge, Glenn Ennis.
We just, Ty Provost, my stuntman.
We just, we did it all together.
And it was, you know, fake blizzard surrounding us.
Hundreds of, hundreds of stunt people, hundreds of background, you know, weapons, blanks being fired everywhere.
I mean, huge massive pyro explosions.
That, you know, it's just, it was insane how much there was, how much was there and how much we did practical.
And I loved how ready HBO was to be able to plant the seeds, the events so that Alex Wong, our, Alex Wong, our VFX coordinator.
could and his team and all the house in wedda and everyone else who helped us um already had so
much to go on man i mean that's that's that's that's that's that's that's really that's really the
brilliance of it is how interlinked our special effects and our visual effects were how tightly
woven they were and i and i think that that's would kind of lends itself to the realism is just uh
it's just uh you know they you mask the seams so well because so much of it was
was there and then you don't have to jump far into the kind of computer generator world.
It's, uh, it was, it was absolutely incredible. And, and, um, we shot it for two and a half
weeks and then I did an additional four or five days on second unit. Well, so Manz Manson,
our second unit director, I must have my hat to him and his team. And then Mark Milot,
of course, who, who never, who never left us feeling overwhelmed and unable to accomplish
and to make the day because he just, he had such a strong focus in a great plan.
And every single day, he communicated so clearly his vision in the morning.
You know, if you get on the God mic and we'd all be hundreds of us sitting all around
and during a safety meeting.
And he just broke it down.
This is what we're doing, this part, this part, this is how we're doing it.
And said it in such a charming British accent.
Everyone maybe foolishly believed that we could possibly do it.
But it turns out we could.
Turns out you absolutely pulled it off.
And I think overall the Jackson sequences of the show have been a lot of fun, seeing this town from the inside out.
And seeing that Tommy, who we know to be a joiner, getting to see him have this sense of community that's really evolved and really expanded within the world of the show.
I mean, he's on the council, but he's also a father.
And where are you seeing those sorts of elements of Tommy's personality coming out at this stage of the season in terms of this is a community that he's kind of ingrained himself in?
Yeah.
I keep bringing this up because everyone takes Joel for his word in that first season,
that Tommy's a follower and he's a joiner, which is, I think, that is colored more through
his lens.
Tommy is a joiner and a follower of others as he's drifting from me, I think, is the way of phrasing
that, or at least that's how it's happening in Joel's mind.
Yeah.
I think to Tommy, Tommy is in service.
And that's who he is.
You know, that's why he joined the Army.
That's why he joins the community of Jackson is to serve others.
And it's not blindly following.
It's more of a, you know, it's more of a gift of his, you know, and to give the
of his strength and his knowledge and his ability, right?
And so I think you see that, and I think you get to see that in its kind of, you know,
it's mature form.
His, you know, I think being a father, of course, I think really kind of reframes everything
and restructures how he likes to live, you know, how careful they are on patrol, you know,
the protocols.
place, all the TTPs that he puts in place for his team and how they are to engage the, the, the, whatever threats they face.
And so, uh, that's, that's, you know, that's, that's, that's, that's evident in just what you see and just kind of the way he, the way he, the way he's, composes himself and just a little bit more kind of put together.
But love still loves having fun and loves, uh, loves to see his niece, Ellie.
succeed and to grow and to hone her skill.
And I think he's more able to do that than Joel was, you know, because he can keep that distance.
But then after Joel's passing, I think you start to see the strain that is on him.
And, you know, there's a moment where he kind of lashes out at Eddie, you know, his cool kind of facade breaks when he tells Ellie, you know, don't talk to me like I didn't know him.
you know um kind of putting her in her place in a way that he you know didn't have the
the position to do before i think you know because that was joel's responsibility but now it's
his and uh you know i think that there's uh other moments where you know there's a full
embrace of of his responsibility i mean i think there always is with tommy but i think uh
you know i was talking about this in another in view where when gail kind of calls her a liar
there's a quick you know there's a there's a quick defense he runs to the defense of his family yeah
she's not a liar she people lie but she's not a liar but gail you know she's very intuitive
and very perceptive and she sees things and others don't that's why i'm there talking with um
and so it's uh yeah it's just it's really exciting to um to play this version of tommy
because much of this is is exclusive to the show and
and to, you know, into, I guess,
into my individual contribution to what this thing has become.
And then, of course, the collective and everyone else
who's built this beautiful story around us.
So, yeah, it's been a lot of fun.
And I'm really excited where we're going to keep going.
Yeah, I mean, you're right about the different version of Tommy.
And you've played, I guess, like as many as three,
maybe more different versions of Tommy so far.
We get the glimpses of him with Joel and Sarah
kind of before the world goes to hell,
we get him after the world has fallen apart,
but at least reunited with his brother.
And now we're seeing him, you know,
start to cope in a world without Joel.
And for you, just in terms of how you're modulating those performances,
what are the biggest differences you see in how you play those versions of Tommy?
Yeah, you know, that first, when you first meet him, that youthful,
you know, I kind of played a character that was closer to my own age a bit.
And, you know, that was just,
just play him as the kind of firebrand that he is and just kind of, you know,
it's just the the impulsive, the young, the kind of guy that'll get into a bar fight
and get thrown in jail kind of guy, but also one who is still very much under the thumb
of his brother.
And then I think that second version you see is him branching out on his own, but still
finding his way and and uh and and this is starting to kind of accept his his uh his uh his role and this
kind of more becoming a slightly more serious person but i think uh i think upon the arrival of joel
there's like this regression back to little brother and and uh and the influence of joel and his ability
to kind of get what he wants out of tommy um
And then, you know, I think you start to, you see him in this year, you see him in kind of a form, a shape, a someone who's, who has his own agency, who is, who is still very much one who serves and serves his wife, who is our leader and, and his community and helps his brother build whatever needs to be built and has this, like, great place, a place, position that he could be proud of.
And then that all gets torn apart.
And so where he goes from now is just a whole other story.
And the story really just started.
But I think it's, you know, I think once again, I mean,
I always have to kind of tip my hat to just the way it's written down.
And it makes sense to me.
And all of the evolutions are there.
And it's just kind of try to tell the truth of that.
And then maybe give myself a,
You know, Craig's always laughing.
I'm always training and working out trying to stay fit for the job.
And he's like, you know, you're not supposed to be in shape.
You're old.
You're 55.
You're supposed to just be.
And it's like, well, I can, I'll do that with acting.
I can't be out of shape running around at cowboy boots.
Obviously, the last of us is a pretty bleak story, even on the version that we've seen so far on TV.
It's also a story where you can give us Catherine O'Hara in the outfield of a tee-ball game,
guzzling beers.
And the two of you have this wonderful scene together.
I'm going to need you to tell me everything about the filming of that scene and that experience.
I mean, it just really popped off the screen in episode three.
Well, yeah, I think it's probably just my glee at being there with her.
But not only being there with her, but being there with her again after 16 years.
I got to work with her.
We weren't in scenes together, but we were in the hair and makeup trailer together on an HBO film called Temple Grandin 16 years ago.
and I took a photograph of us there back then
and then we recreated the photograph here
16 years in the future
and actually posting them today side by side
and everybody's freaking laughing at how much of a baby I looked like back then
but first of all she's a genius.
She's an absolute genius and like many of the best
dramatic actors
she has this great comedic sensibility.
So there is a, what that creates,
and what I said in the past is it creates this kind of,
this unpredictability about her and this wide range of extremes
to which she can go to the furthest extent in both those directions.
And so there's so,
just like so many more incremental kind of nuances that exist.
between that and that she has that.
And so it's just
there's this mischief in her eyes.
I mean,
that is always there.
And so I just,
I mean, I just soaked it all in.
I just kind of just sat there and we got to just sit there and share a couple
of fake beers and watch these little kids fall down.
Meanwhile,
having this really kind of deep philosophical question about, you know,
can people be changed or can they be saved from
themselves. And as much as I'm talking about Ellie in that moment, I'm kind of talking about myself,
you know, can I call off the dogs that are kind of barking in my soul, you know?
And so it's just, she's just brilliant. And I was so thankful for that day. I was looking
forward to it the whole year because we had crossed paths in the hair and makeup trailer in different
scenes and things. But then finally to have that scene together.
was really fantastic.
I had my guitar with me as I do
with every job I do.
I was playing,
take me out to the ball game all day.
Yeah,
limping around because I had pulled
my muscle pushing sleds at the gym.
Oh,
no.
Because we had wrapped,
we had wrapped all the action sequence
from episode two,
but I didn't,
and then my whole legs were super tight.
You know,
they're really very sore,
especially my calves,
once again,
running in cowboy boots.
And,
And then I went to the gym, man, and wasn't, you know, didn't adequately warm up because I just
like, oh, I'm good. You know, I stretched just a little bit. Then I was pushing sleds and pulled my left
calf. And then so the whole day, I remember just hobbling around. And it was like, from the
trailers to the, to the baseball field was, I mean, it was, it was a long walk.
But that's, that's your true commitment to character, you know? You were, you were a little
too in shape, and so you had to create a limp for yourself. There you go. Yeah. That's it.
That's exactly it. I do lean on these old football injuries and training injuries and stuff.
My bum shoulder, my dislocated Patela, all these football injuries I got back in the day.
I kind of lean into those. I'm going to have to play old.
Well, I mean, I feel like as an audience, you know, we love seeing scenes like that between
Gail and Tommy and seeing scenes in Jackson and like our characters that we care about in a relative
kind of safety. But we're also drawn to the idea of them in turmoil. And the whole season
obviously can't stay within the city walls.
I'm curious from your perspective as you think about the delicate balance of this show,
how do you walk the line between putting these characters in dangerous situations,
putting them out on the frontier, challenging them in new ways,
but also giving us the quiet sort of character moments where they can express things and be themselves,
and we get to know the kind of the emotional core of those characters.
I mean, I wish I knew what goes on in Craig Mason's mind.
and I wish I had that ability.
I mean, I guess I have it in my, in my own kind of focused individual perspective,
but he has this incredible ability to be everyone, you know, to be everyone's voice.
But for all the voices to be so distinct and for all of us to remember our histories and to keep our histories
and to and to have those paths and the way that they have,
have crossed in the past, still reverberate and resonate in every present moment and every discussion.
And it's just, he's incredible.
And that's what makes him the writer that he is.
You know, I think that that's why you get these kind of cool little nuanced moments among characters is because they know each other.
So Craig knows them all so well.
And he also knows how they all bounce off of each other.
And so we can do what we need to do in sensation.
the moments that we need to have in the show to keep people excited.
But then what really keeps them coming back is just the quiet, cool moments,
like the discussion with Gail and, or all the beautiful scenes between Bella and Izzy
with Elian Dina's stuff.
They have so many cool little, just little looks and little, you know,
in this last episode, I just watched it last night and I was just so,
just so impressed and there's such a sweetness there in their discovery of that love and um
and you know that's that's kind of where we are with our show and the way our camera ops work and our
dps cassinia and katherine and our directors and and just the show as a whole it's all these moments
that we shouldn't be seeing you know and we feel like we feel so close to the characters
so close and and and and it's just these amazing you know these really amazing moments and really
funny funny stuff that plays out especially between Bella and Dina you know it's like the whole
discussion about the kiss and how kind of you know how Bella's trying to play cool and and then of
course playing cool on the horse later on which is really funny like I keep saying my favorite my favorite line
it's just completely thrown away.
It's just like, you know, it's quiet.
Oh, no, it's too quiet.
You got to do it.
If it's right there, you got to take it.
And I just love, they love those Curtis and Viper movies so much.
Joe loved them.
And they've inherited this love of Curtis and Viper.
And they mention it so many times.
It's like the only, and I can resonate with that.
Because when I was a kid, I had one VHS tape that had the movie Breaking,
the Last Dragon.
and Return of the Jedi.
That's quite a triple feature, I got to say.
Yeah, dude.
The Last Dragon is great if you've ever seen him, Bruce Leroy.
It's great, but the, so it's just those three, you know, I can totally see that these kids,
they only have Curtis and Viper and have watched it, you know, a million times.
So they were like, you know, who says that?
Curtis or Viper?
She's like, both in all four movies.
I was just like, God, it's so good.
It's just, yeah, shared histories.
Gabriel, thanks so much for your time.
This has been a total treat.
Yeah, thank you, Rob.
Appreciate it, brother.
Appreciate your thoughtful questions.
Hey, anytime, yeah.
We're really enjoying the show.
That was an incredible chat that I've definitely already heard and really insightful.
You can take my word for it.
Gabriel was a delight.
Oh, I mean, he is a delight, so I'm jealous that you got to talk to him.
Okay, so this is the spoiler section.
How can we make it any clear?
I don't know.
these are where game spoilers are fair play.
Yes.
So that is what we will be talking about.
We will say things that if you are just watching the show, you do not want to know.
This is your fair warning.
Like, I really don't know how much more clear we can make it.
I want to give you appropriate time to turn off this podcast right now.
Okay.
I'm trying to think of like what's the least sort of abrasive way I can start this just in case they're being slow.
Let's talk about the Jesse question.
So we get this conversation where Dina is talking to Ellie in the tent about Jesse and his sadness.
And I'm curious, you know, this is, I'm curious what you think this is laying track for with Jesse because it feels like it's an attempt to deepen our understanding of a character that I quite like in the game.
But like, what do you think they're up to here with this?
I honestly don't know. And it did strike me as kind of an odd line.
Because, yeah, Dina's saying, you know, if I can't come up with the reason why he's just organically sad, then it must be me.
And, girl, maybe it's the apocalypse.
Like, everyone is pretty bummed out.
I don't know what to tell you.
Maybe it's because we don't have chocolate chips anymore.
We have to put dried fruit in our fucking cookies, maybe.
Just a bizarre, like, framing of his entire deal.
But, yeah, I don't really know this idea of him as a sad, like a fundamentally sad character, or one at least that we know is kind of lost within his.
relationship with Dina, right? They've broken up and gotten together a bunch of different times.
It's just one of those things. And clearly something about that is not satisfying to him.
I will say that part makes sense, given what we do know about Jesse from this portrayal in particular,
which is, you know, not only was Joel kind of a member of this community, not only is Tommy,
really a pillar of the community. Jesse is like present in future tense leadership, right?
Like he is kind of being groomed in this role to as a now a member of the council,
as somebody who's really important, is somebody who is picking up that hammer,
and just just building shit.
Just really, really making things happen.
Yeah.
And I'll just say it.
Looks positively yoked in the process.
I didn't know that Henley's came in short sleeves, but Jesse knows.
Young Mazzino knows.
He knows.
His workout regimen knows.
That's for sure.
I think it's really interesting.
Okay.
So like, I think a job that this episode does, you know, I saw a play.
Plenty of people say this felt like a filler episode.
I once again implore you to look up what a filler episode is.
This is not what this is is.
But I think a lot of what this episode is showing is sort of like what is at risk.
So to highlight Tommy so much here.
Okay.
Let me quick pause.
Do you think Tommy is in front of them on the way to Seattle or do you think he's going to follow them to Seattle?
I think he's going to follow them.
And so I did talk to, you know, you haven't heard that chat yet, Joe.
I did talk to Gabriel a little bit about kind of Tommy's motivations within this story.
And we purposely did not get into what is going to happen in the show.
Right.
But most importantly, this idea that how Tommy not being present for Joel's death changes
the way he experiences that event and processes it, right?
Like it would hit him in a totally different way feeling like I couldn't even be there,
even as opposed to I was there and got clocked and knocked out and all of a sudden my brother is dead.
And so I think there's, I think any version of Tommy game or show would go after any version of Ellie if they found out that this was the case.
If Ellie and Dina went out on their own, I do think Tommy would go, especially given everything that they've both just been through.
Right.
But now it comes, it would come at a totally different cost with Tommy being a father, right?
This idea that he would be willing to risk his life for his surrogate niece, even at the risk of leaving his kid fatherless.
Right.
So we should say in the game, in case you're listening to Spoiler,
section you haven't played the game that Tommy takes off first in the dead of night
basically to prevent Ellie from going.
Straight up the next day after Joel's death basically.
Like no three months like he is off on the road and then Ellie and Dina are in pursuit of
Tommy.
Following like dead bodies and other things on the hunt for him.
The trail.
But their job ostensibly is to bring Tommy back.
That's kind of like why they are sent out is to bring Tommy home.
Bring my husband home.
Yeah.
Okay.
So all of that's true.
So seeing so much of Tommy in this episode, this is just like a great Tommy as a member of the community episode, seeing Jesse's role inside of the community.
And then the third element, I will say, there's been some question or pushback on the rollout of the L.E.D.N.
Yeah.
Like why are we doing a sort of like slightly slow burn while they won't they instead of there are already a thing.
They have sex and, you know, before Joel dies, et cetera, et cetera.
I think what we're really building here is a what was lost on the road here.
So to go through it, Tommy, if he gets his same ending as he does in the game, Tommy sort of like losing his like losing everything.
we need to understand what Tommy is to this community, Jesse dying presumably before this season is over.
I think so.
Timing-wise, that would make sense.
What that rips out of Jackson, like what Ellie's quest rips out of Jackson, which is its future leadership, right?
And then Dina and Ellie, again, I mean, they have to have the same ending.
Like, their relationship not working out in the end, we have to see how hard one that was for Ellie in the first place.
how hard it was for Ellie to form that relationship,
how many of her insecurities she had to battle through,
how much uncertainty and doubt,
how good we'll feel when these two, like, you know,
figure it out and get together,
and then how devastating it will be to lose that.
So I think watching the work that goes into these two young women figuring it out together,
I think will ultimately pay off in the loss of it later.
That's how I'm choosing to interpret it.
I thought you also made a great point, Joe, on House of R about the way that when you do the
time jump, and I'm not sure what the order of operations is, like, did they decide to do a time
jump and then had to kind of reverse engineer some of the stuff around Dina's pregnancy
to make that timeline make sense?
Or did they later add the time jump because they wanted some other different story changes?
I think we'll have to see kind of as we go.
But that change in the timeline, given that Dina is pretext.
pregnant kind of has to happen if you're going to have this sort of time jump.
I also think, like, so that could be some of why Dina is being a little bit K-G, a little bit
will they won't, a little bit frustrating in terms of her conversations with Ellie.
Like that stuff tracks it makes sense to me.
I also think moving the conversation from, again, this whole conversation that Dina and
Ellie have about the kiss originally happens in the game while they are on patrol before Joel's
death when they're kind of like snowed in to the grow house, to Eugene's grow house.
moving it from there to hear when they're on the road,
I think changes the stakes of that conversation a lot.
Because if say they're at the grow house and that conversation goes a little sideways,
it's kind of a fraught talk.
I think Dina has a lot of indications that Ellie is into her.
But sometimes you can have every indication and things still get super weird.
Yeah. Worse case scenario, you go back to Jackson.
You go to your respective corners.
You give each other a little space.
Everything could be fine.
Dina doesn't have that luxury here.
Like if this conversation goes badly or goes poor,
or all of a sudden they are alienated or putting distance between each other.
Like that is, that could be like life and death consequences because they are all that each other
have right now.
That is such a good point that this is the us.
Yeah.
And if we have a breakup before we even get started moment on the road, it's like, what do we
even do here?
All of that said, I did like this version well enough of the like rate the kiss conversation.
I think I was missing some of.
Not to be the like, but the games, but the books guy.
I was missing like some of the snowed in intimacy of that scene of the original.
A tent's not doing it for you?
A little, a little lamplit tent?
You know what?
I don't mind a lamplet tent.
I think what I'm missing is like there's something about that original scene where because
they're out on patrol and they have to duck into this random convenience store that turns out to be Eugene's grow house.
Like there is like a teenager sneaking a private moment.
moment when they're supposed to be at work kind of thing that's like very sweet and endearing. And I think
you just lose with some of this like, oh, we're just like, we're just adults on our own out on the
road. It just gives it a very different vibe that I can appreciate on its own terms and certainly like
the way these characters are developing in more of a slow burn way. But it's, it's tangibly different for
sure. Deena pregnancy watch. I mean, this, this was like, I guess a vague question mark of like,
are they actually going to do? I just don't know how you do this game. Oh, she has to be pregnant.
Yeah.
So we get her throwing up in a, I think, a very clear clue of we're definitely doing
Dina's pregnancy.
Why wouldn't we?
At least I think it's well hidden within the bodies.
Yes.
No, I think if you watch that scene, you don't know.
I think vomiting at the side of a pile of bodies in the woods is legit.
And some of that is character-based, too, of this idea of, like, Ellie has been, we know
Ellie's history.
We don't exactly know where Dina was brought up, what she's been experienced.
exposed to. Like, clearly anyone who's lived...
In the show so far. Yeah. Clearly anyone who's lived this long in the world of the show has
seen some death, but that doesn't mean you've seen a whole crew of people and children
slaughtered by bullets. Right. Because in this section of the game,
um, where Dina asks about the first person they killed, she tells a story about like her mom
and protecting her mom and stuff like that. So we hear some of like Dina's, what Dina's had
to do to survive this long. She wasn't like, broad.
up in the confines of Jackson.
No, no.
Okay.
On the L.E. and Dina future front.
Yeah.
Did you ping the way that some other game players pinged on the sort of waving wheat of
the graveyard, did it look similar to the farmhouse setting to you?
It does look quite similar.
I honestly didn't make the connection in real time, but you're absolutely right.
And the kind of like broad landscapes, I think like the vastness of all of those scenes at the
graveyard definitely call back, like the fall.
like the farm and kind of where we're ultimately going to go and
sort of this idea of the us right like of you know that is
Ellie and having a moment with Joel all alone like there is no one else
around other than I guess a bunch of dead bodies in the graveyard and Dina
kind of waiting respectfully on horseback a little ways away and like part of what is
so serene about the farm is that it's like it is Dina and Ellie's like little
enclave off by the off by themselves like they are kind of removed from everything else
and so that kind of thematic callback I think
is probably on the creator's minds.
Yeah, and I'm wondering if they're setting up like a future visual parallel they can draw of like
Ellie leaving Dina and Ellie saying goodbye to Joel.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Like, okay.
So on that front, and this, this I think is, I think is so clear that Ellie is lying to
Gail when she says she didn't have another conversation with Joel before he died.
Is there ambiguity about that?
Some people are wondering if we'll get, A, we'll get the porch scene at all, or B, if the porch scene is just in Ellie's mind a wished for a conversation.
Guys, we're going to get the porch scene.
On the other, yes, I agree.
It's going to happen.
On the flip side, I will say, do you think the coffee beans that she leaves there, which has been a longish running, you know, Joel conversation?
But do you think that's a reference because there's like a line in the game where Joel is drinking coffee and he's like says he's embarrassed?
to tell her what he traded for the cup of coffee. So it's like one of the last things that they talked
about was like how much he would give anything for a cup of coffee. So some people took that as
confirmation that the porch scene was going to happen. I don't know that we need confirmation.
That scene is going to have everything that Ellie tells Gail is a lie. Yeah. So why would that part
not be a lie? Exactly. I agree. What are you most looking forward to in next week's episode
based on me, did you watch the trailer for the next episode?
I watched the trailer.
I mean, I'm most looking forward to, you know, to our previous conversation about like,
where we're prioritizing the bullets and all this.
Like one of the most exciting sequences of the game in the sense that you're kind of
pinned between the WLF and the infected.
And you're having to kind of toggle these threats back and forth and leverage them
against each other.
And clearly two 19 year olds in the middle of a city they don't know surrounded by an army
is a pretty dire situation.
It's like how they want to portray that chaos.
within the world of the show, I'm really excited.
But this is a show that even though it's very sparing
in its violence and action
usually really pays off with the suspense
and ultimately like the terror of those moments.
I'm really looking forward to see how they manage that.
We know from the trailer they're doing the subway sequence,
which is like particularly harrowing.
It's not fun.
It's really tough.
And then anything, I guess,
I want to talk to you about the Sarah fights in a second.
Yeah.
A group that you did not want to name
in our spoiler-free.
section, but like, um, is there anything, I guess for the rest of the season, is there like,
what is your most anticipated moment? Do you have one? Not know, we don't know where we're
going to end. Yeah. But like, do you have a moment where you're like, I can't wait to see
what they do with this? I think I just can't wait to see. I mean, the pregnancy reveal,
Dana's pregnancy reveal to Ellie is one I'm definitely looking forward to. I would say really the future of
Ellie and Dina's relationship within this portion of the story, given how much has been
reconfigured to this point. And so we're still like, you know, there's this stray part of this
previous conversation that wasn't there. Did it get excised or is it being repurposed and moved
around here? Like, I'm kind of waiting to see some of those things. And in particular,
as Jesse kind of gets caught back up into the story and how they're going to manage that,
given everything we just said about how important he is in the community and he's being pinched
in a way that Ellie is being pinched and the way that Tommy is being pinched, right, like these very
personal costs versus whatever debt or whatever they think they owe to kind of Jackson as a
society.
I love Jesse as a character.
And I honestly love him in the show even more than I ever did in the game where I think he's
like he's a good like vibes based addition in the game and such like a necessary antidote
of humor.
Yeah.
I think they're really building him out to be something that as you alluded to like highlights
what is at stake here and what these characters have to lose and what we kind of like the
broader society of Jackson has to lose.
I was thinking about that a lot
as we're kind of going through this episode
and we go through the vote at the city council
and it's eight to three
and people have already started kind of reverse engineering
like okay who voted for what
it never occurred to me for a second
that Jesse would vote for Ellie's plan
I just don't think like for as much as Ellie means to him
that's someone who cares about the city
who cares about the safety of everyone there
and like this is a city that's still
licking its wounds from a massive infected attack
that a number of them are dead.
They're fewer than ever
in terms of the people
that can actually protect that city
and you want to take 16
of the most able-bodied people in Jackson
on a revenge road trip.
That doesn't seem like something
that this version of Jesse would be down for.
What about some of like,
what about mid-bodied people?
Can we take some of the mid-tier people
on our revenge trip?
Are you going to tell them that they're mid?
Are you going to put them on an evaluation?
What's happening?
If you pick the top tier,
you've already implied
who the mid-tier is,
you know what I mean?
You got to go some.
top tier, some mid tier, so they think
their top tier. And a couple of lower tier
but who have very specialized skills that might be
important, you know? Okay. It's not like a
forager, someone who knows of the poison
plants. If you can find a truffle
you're coming with us.
Okay, Rob's taking a pig on the road
to use. Or even frankly
like Seth on one leg,
I don't care. That guy knows how to make
a steak sandwich. Like we need him out
there. And he's got a lot of anger inside
of him. He certainly does.
Okay, Sarah Fight intro.
This is, oh, I will say for me, what I'm most looking, what I'm most curious about is given, given, you know, we get, other than a sheet wrap body, no Pedro Pascal in this episode, we get, you know, no Joel mushroom figure in the opening credits, all of sorts of stuff like that.
We do know that inside the game, there are some flashbacks.
We have seen in the trailers that there are some flashbacks.
how much restraint are they going to have around that?
How often are we going to go back to that well?
You know, if it were me and I had Peter Pascal in my back pocket,
would I be able to resist putting him in like a little bit of him in every episode or a lot of him at once?
Like what would I, what would I do?
It's very tough.
For the rest of the season.
So that's something I'm interested in.
I do want to give Craig Mason and Neil Druckman credit of a firm salute for this episode in particular.
for not having any Joel in this episode other than his body under the sheet.
Granted, all those flashbacks exist and many of them are quite important.
Like getting the science museum flashback has to be there at some point.
Getting, of course, like the confrontation between Joel and Ellie about what's on the recorded tape,
kind of revealing the truth of what Joel did.
That's really important.
Those things have to happen at some point over the next two seasons or season and change.
Having him out of this episode is the only way that it works.
And it's the only way that like all the twists and turns of the last of us,
It's like they only pay off because you can feel the weight of them.
And you only feel the weight of it in this episode because of that feeling of absence.
And because you're seeing all these characters coming to terms with what life without Joel is for them in whatever respect that might be true.
And so, yeah, it's tempting to have like little flashes of Pedro here and there.
And because everyone wants to see him and wants to see Joel back on screen, even if it isn't a flashback.
But I'm a little worried we're going to get into just by the nature of how many are still left on the board and how important they are.
Are we going to get won an episode the rest of the way?
Is he just going to be like a series regular even though he's dead?
Must be nice to collect series regular pay.
Did you see as part of the Entertainment Weekly cover story that they did
and they did the photo shoot with Caitlin Dever at Bella Rams and Pedro,
and Caitlin and Bella were talking about, you know, how tricky it was going to be to navigate
people's feelings about this and blah, blah.
Sure.
And Pedro was like, so glad I don't have to deal with it.
He was like, sorry.
I'm out of the junket.
That's really funny.
Okay.
So on your request in the spoiler-free section for moral ambiguity, I think we can find no clear case than the introduction of the seraphites in this episode.
We meet the seraphites on the road.
And this is perhaps like a splinter group, you know, given that they give this little girl a wet.
weapon, which seems, you know what I mean, seems counter to the more extremist versions of
the seraphites. So this idea that like hashtag not all seraphites or whatever it is that
we're trying to learn from this group on the road is, does that feed your desire for
ambiguity in terms of who are the good guys who are the bad guys here? Definitely. I mean,
especially because we get so much of a counterpoint of that for the WLF, right? Like, there are members of
the WLF who are well-meaning in their way or have these codes, have these regiments, like,
believe in a cause. And then there are people who are like, you know what, I think we probably
just need to kill whoever we need to kill if they're seraphites, if they're children,
if they're profits, like, whoever it needs to be, like, sometimes you just got to take people
off the map. And so there are these clear divisions between these groups. So it's like,
why wouldn't the seraphites, why wouldn't you expand the sort of like apostate idea or this
idea of like the people who want to get out or believe in some teachings, but not all? That
tracks is a very human thing to me. I think that it's really interesting that the only member of the
WLF we see in this episode that we know is Manny. Manny, who's like the most bad attitude of all of
Abby's crew, right? We're not checking in with Mel or with Manny and he's being a dick as he always
is. And so it's just sort of like, if you're watching at home and you're not ready to have
more empathy for Abby and her crew, you get to spend time with Manny and the Space Needle.
Honestly, at least it's scenic up there.
It's a great job.
It's a great spot.
Good for Manny.
It's a good detail.
I'd be really excited for that gig.
But my question is, I mean, well, no, they have electricity, obviously.
But like, is that elevator working in the space needle or are you climbing?
It's a great question.
I think in the game, you do a lot of climbing.
Yeah.
And they did seem like, especially in the show, they seemed kind of wowed and impressed by the level of electricity, the generator.
And the generator and the sophistication of the infrastructure in Jackson.
I'm guessing like the WLF compound that we're going to see in the show or kind of the, the base ultimately that we see in the show. The fob is, I mean, it is more, it's more of a tent city, right? It is a little bit more provisional than everything we see going on in Jackson. I'll come back to this thing I was alluding to in our spoiler-free section, this idea that like if Ellie is in the Joel position and Dina is in the L.E. POSISION in this two-sum and Dina's making a bid for connection, intimacy. Then we're watching, we watch.
Washington season one,
Joel succeed to a certain degree.
There's complications here,
but to succeed to a certain degree
in terms of finding community
in a way that Ellie is going to fail.
There are major differences, obviously,
across these two characters,
not the least of which is like,
Joel isn't tracking down who killed Sarah.
Sure.
He doesn't have this clear target
preoccupying his brain and heart space.
But I think that's,
an interesting study in contrast, which, you know, the, both the game of the show are so interested in pursuing.
Well, let me, let me circle back to that right there. Like, do you, do you think Ellie fails in finding that kind of community with Dina? Because, like, they're, like, I think what makes her course so tragic is that she kind of does have it. She's just so blind to it because of all this rage that she doesn't know what to do with.
We did get an email from our listener, Joey, who was sort of, like, pushing back on this idea that, like, you know, he was talking about Ellie removing herself.
from the family unit almost like for them to if you want to interpret it that way.
A fail is too judgmental a word.
It's not it's not one I actually really want to use, but like isn't able to have a, you know,
have a happily ever after with Dina in a way that Joel maybe could have if, you know,
the consequences of his own actions hadn't come knocking, you know.
And I think it was an active pursuit of, right?
Like, Joel had reached a level of peace in terms of, at least his relationship with Ellie and kind of what he was, the family he was trying to rebuild.
Right.
Ellie keeps getting diverted from that idea in terms of like, even though at this point in the, in the show, like Dina herself is a little wishy-washy in terms of what she's after and her motivations and I guess her sexuality in general.
And so like all of that is kind of up for grabs in the world of the show.
But ultimately, if it's following the path of the game, which I expect it will, like.
they have a relationship and it's a really meaningful one.
And they're going to have really like important bonding moments over the next couple episodes probably until Dina has to go back.
I'm not saying their their relationship is unimportant or not beautiful in many ways and stuff like that.
It just in terms of like, I don't know, though I guess I don't know, a reckoning comes for both.
It's true.
Ellie and Joel just in different ways.
I guess maybe that's a different way.
I think, yeah, Ellie in some ways at this point is even more closed off than Joel.
was like I found it really telling you know she has that conversation with dina on horseback when
they're talking about the first people that they killed and it's like Ellie can't even comprehend
that dina would feel sorry for the fact that Ellie had to shoot someone she's like why are you
feeling sorry for me and not the person that i killed like the fact that she's that closed off from
even her own pain and her own emotions i think really speaks to where she is at this point of the
story anything else you want to say here in our spoiler section about episode three rob mahoney
One final note, Joe, about the seraphites.
I actually do think, you know, we talked about the balance of the moral ambiguity that they're introducing with that group.
I also think it's just a really deft play of the casual sort of expansion of this world as we're being introduced to like this pocket of characters we don't really know that's going to die within the episode.
What does that mean in all the different senses?
Like there's clearly the WLF versus seraphite part of that.
There's also just this introduction of this idea that, for one, things are a little stranger out west.
than Ellie and Dina may be used to, right?
Like there's these whole pockets of people that they don't know and don't understand.
And also that there are just so many ways to live out here.
And we've seen the version of that where you try to make a little town for yourself.
We haven't really seen the version of that where you try to make a weird ass cult for yourself.
But I look forward to seeing it more on screen.
I mostly agree with you.
I was thinking about that.
I just, you know, I never want us to forget Cannibal David and his weird Bible-based community last season.
almost more like Jackson adjacent.
Like it's kind of a town. It's a straight up town.
It's true. It's just a cannibal town.
It's true. There's bullet town and there's cannibal town.
They're neighboring counties, but they both get it done.
The apocalypse sounds like a delight. It sounds so fun.
All right. Well, that does it for us here. We'll be back again with your friends and neighbors episode this week.
We'll be back, of course, again with episode four of the last of us next week where we'll have more exciting interviews.
I'm really excited about our interview next week.
and thanks for listening.
Thanks to Johnny Beecham
first work on this episode
and Justin's first work on his feed
and we'll see you soon.
And thank you to Gabriel Luna
for joining us for this episode.
Absolutely.
And we'll see you soon.
Bye!
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