The Ringer-Verse - 'House of the Dragon' Episode 2 Reactions | Talk the Thrones
Episode Date: August 29, 2022Chris Ryan is joined by Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson to give their immediate thoughts and reactions to the intriguing and dragon-filled second episode of 'House of the Dragon'. Hosts: Chris Ryan,... Joanna Robinson, and Mallory Rubin Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman Additional Production Support: Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello, my name is Dave Gonzalez, and I haven't read any of the books in George R. Martin's The Song of Bison Fire.
I'm Joanna Robinson. I've read every book in George R. Martins, a Song of Ice and Fire.
And I'm Neil Miller, and I have also read all of those books.
We are headed back to Westeros to cover the Game of Thrones spin-off series, House of the Dragon.
We'll be answering your question, so send us a raven at Trialby Content at gmail.com.
Take some bread and salt and join us Thursdays on the Trial by Content feed, and don't worry, you're safe.
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Hello.
Hello and welcome to Talk the Thrones.
My name is Chris Ryan.
I am an editor at the ringer.com and joining me today as always.
It's Joanna Robinson and her pal the crab feeder, Mallory Rubin.
What's up?
Oh my God.
You know I love steamed crabs, Chris.
I was keeping my eyes peeled for some old base seasoning.
Didn't see any, though.
That guy seems like he's a great match for you, Mal.
First of all, amazing nickname, Baltimore-centric nickname.
Also, great at Carpentry.
So handy around the house.
we're going to get into a bunch of crap feeder stuff.
This is episode two of Talk the Thrones for episode two of House of the Dragon.
This one, Joanna, was called The Rogue Prince, a catchy title.
But I was trying to decide how we should start and what would be the big takeaway from this episode.
And I thought a fun way of doing that would be to rename this episode using the naming convention of the popular American sitcom friends, which many people may be familiar with.
the one with, the one where, the one when.
If you were renaming this House of the Dragon as the One friend style, what would you call it, Joe?
You mean like the one where Ross goes to the tanning booth?
No, the one, I would call it the one with the low winter sun.
Oh, yeah.
Maybe.
Beautiful.
Beautiful.
Poetic.
That bridge sequence, like, there's a lot that goes on in this episode, but the way that that bridge sequence really underlines the
advantage that the show has of adapting such a, like, slim text, because that whole caper with
Damon stealing a Dragon Egg is literally, like, three sentences, and none of it has to do with,
like, Otto or Cyrax, or Renuera, or any of those people going to Dragonstone. It's just
like, Dragon took an egg, Vesaris was pissed, Dragon gave, a, Damon, sorry, let me say it
again, Damon took an egg, Viseris is pissed, Damon gave it back, but was unhappy to do so at the end.
And instead, House the Dragon has concocted this, like, one of the most beautiful things we've ever seen on a throne show in this bridge sequence with two massive dragons.
This one got the blood, the blood flowing, right, Mallory?
Like, that bridge sequence really, like, it's like, here we go.
Okay.
This is where the money went.
Stunning.
Absolutely stunning.
Love to see a dragon crest through the fog, like a submarine emerging through the tide.
Beautiful.
I'm torn on whether I would call this the one with the maggots and the foot gnawing crabs
or the one where we were forever scarred by hearing the exchange.
She is 12.
She will mature.
That's awesome.
I think I already made the joke to Andy about we could have just called this how I met your father.
But yeah, I mean, you could say this is the one with the second sons.
This is the one with the bridge.
There's lots of different ones.
Why don't I recap this episode?
You know, we try to be servicey here.
And of the three of us, I think I have the firmest grip on Game of Thrones lore.
A character name pronunciations.
And just also, like, I kind of understand the timeline.
Like, I am sort of like, I can see it all happening.
And all the names and all the different dragons and how they look different from each other.
You guys can't see them in my background, but they're just literally like all over my wall.
All right.
So this is notably, episode two, the rogue prince takes place six months.
after the first episode.
And I want to talk about that in a bit.
But the crab feeder continues to raid.
Damon has moved to Dragonstone to set up shop and start a family and tawn his brother.
And Ranira is still figuring out what it means to be an heir, while Verseris is looking
for a bride to maybe give him some more options in the air department.
When the small council finds out that Damon has stolen a dragon's egg for his child
to be, Viseras sends Otto to get it back after initially volunteering to go do it
himself. And on that bridge, as we have just referenced, words are exchanged, and then Renier shows
up on the back of a dragon, has another ambiguously charged talk with Damon and gets the egg back.
We get a glimpse into the relationship between Damon and Masseria. Is that right? Am I saying
that right? Maseria. Maseria? Lady misery. That's why I'm open to revising my steadfast
pronunciations, you know, like Masaria. I'm just delighted to see that you're sticking with
a dragon instead of making any effort to identify which dragon. It's just not going to happen.
44. You know what I mean? Like, you just, it's just, when those dragons start having personalities,
and I can be like, it's the funny one. Braxis or whatever. Carax is the one with all the jokes.
Yeah. These guys, so far they're offering a lot. Classic zinger throwers, the dragons. Yeah, they love to laugh.
They love levity. Continue. We get a glimpse into the relationship between Damon and Masaria.
Viseris gets a lot of advice about whether he should marry Corliss and Renice's daughter or not,
with some counsel from both Otto and Lionel Strong, who I want to touch on later.
He goes with the most combustible option and announces he's going to marry Allison Hightower,
pissing off Corliss and his own daughter in the process.
This episode ends with an alliance between Corliss and Damon,
and then we finally get a look at the crab feeder who basically looks like Leatherface
and likes to nail people to think.
things on beaches, which I guess is a nice place to die if you got to go. You got to go somewhere.
Maybe not the best way. With an ocean front view? Yeah. You have to see.
Waves lapping at your feet. Look, they don't make a big deal about it. But I thought it was
interesting that this episode did take place half a year after the first one that we saw. So,
Mallory, I'm going to start with you. I feel like time is going to be something we need to
keep an eye on here. Right? Like, obviously this show, we know that there is basically older
versions of these cast members waiting in the wings, possibly, obviously for the season,
for some people. What did you make of like, oh yeah, six months later as we got right into
the second episode? So I had a few different responses to the time jumping in this episode.
Our very first realization that half a year has passed comes when Sir Ryan Redwine,
Lord Commander of the Kingsguard, is unceremoniously disposed of. We have. We have. We have.
learned that he has perished between episodes and six months have passed.
Was he in the first episode?
He was.
Yes.
He was.
Just like randomly in the background though.
Like not much to do.
Bearded gentlemen in his Kingsguard armor, etc.
And it was a funny thing because offline, you know, between pods, Joe and I had been talking
about, oh, wait, they haven't clarified.
Is Sir Riam?
Lord Commander is Sir Harold.
Lord Commander yet, oh my God, what if we get this wrong?
You started your Sir Ryan blog?
Yeah.
Guess what?
No.
Our guy who in the canon previously enjoyed a very, very, very brief stint as the hand
and is a present character, just gone.
So I had a little bit of a timeline, time jumping jittery response to that,
where at first I wondered how disorienting it was going to be to acclimate inside of each episode.
because a lot of time passes between,
but then the focus of this episode itself
is very, very, very concentrated.
Ultimately, though,
I think that given how much time we have to cover
that this show has to cover in the first season here,
you know, we know the cast is aging up to the older,
the older set of actors midway through the season
that was widely reported and announced
in the run up to the season.
We've seen the older characters in the trailer.
We are going to have to move very quickly
through time. And so what that does, I think, is reinforce, much like in fire and blood,
where you'll go across a number of pages over decades of time, that what you are actually
seeing inside of the episode in question is consequential. The things that they are choosing to show us
matter. These are the fulcrums. These are the pivot points in these character arcs, in these
relationships, in these dynamics. How many years will pass or months will pass between the next
set of episodes. I have no idea. But what I do feel confident about after this episode is that whatever
we see in episode three will be just as consequential as what we saw here. There's not going to be a lot
of downtime. We just have too much time to move through in season one. I don't know. I miss our sojourns to
flea bottom, you know, just like kind of wandering around a little bit. Like there's part of me that
sort of wants us to, we got a show back. Let's take it a little slow. I understand though they need to
have some pretty, some pretty consequential stuff happening. Like, Joe, I mean, do you think that the
the speed with which it's moving,
I don't want to say, like,
betrays a disinterest in the era in which it starts.
But what do you think,
what do you make of the quick pace that we're moving at?
I think it's really interesting.
We get, I think it's one or two mentions about the fact
that it's been six months in this episode,
but we also get, as Mal pointed out,
those couple mentions of, like,
the fact that so much this episode takes place
over the course of one day.
But Sarah's will say, like, earlier this morning,
like so many things happen in this one.
It's not just one day.
But also, as I was telling Malav Pot, I think it's really weird that Alicant and Reneira
wear the same dress the whole episode.
Renaras are very similar.
There's a lot of, like, cream and beige coloring.
Allison appears literally the same.
Yeah, and we know that Allison High Tower doesn't have one dress.
So I didn't know if that was like an editing thing so that they could like chop it around
however they wanted to and it and like put the timeline over they wanted.
She's in the same dress or what was going on there.
But the concentrated timeline is so interesting to me.
But I know that there was a version of the show at one point
where all of this stuff before we get the actors,
older actors who are going to be playing Allison and Reneer, for example,
was going to be prologue, was not going, like, you know,
once upon a time there was an idea to start with adult Alicent
and adult Reneira and just say,
remember when this happened somehow in the dialogue.
So I do think that at a certain point,
when we hop to those new actors, all of this will feel somewhat like prologue,
but not in a sense that it will feel wasted.
I think all of this groundwork that they're laying here, all these relationships that
they're digging into, the fact that this episode ends with a betrayal of sorts from Allison
to Reneer after we also get this lovely scene where they're in the step together and they seem
possibly close. I think it's important for us to see that stuff. And so that's why it's here.
But I do think eventually all of this, you know, the youth of these girls will seem like a lead
up to something else. Yeah. And I think that what we're witnessing are probably like you're saying,
these are things that if they had started with the adult versions of these people, there would be
lots of references to like, well, you remember when my dad decided to choose you without you telling me.
that was like a huge schism in our relationship, by the way.
That could have wrapped up these two episodes,
but we wouldn't get the bridge.
We wouldn't get a lot of the stuff that we have
that's building up these characters.
I wanted to talk a little bit about this idea,
you know, and I think it kind of had echoes in the first episode,
but I was struck when Vesaris was walking Allison
through his sort of replica village or replica that he has in his room there.
Yeah.
His leg is said.
Yeah, and he has like a bit,
Malia has like some longing for an era,
a bygone era, right?
And so even though that this is a prequel
to the Game of Thrones that most,
you know, TV watchers know,
that even characters within this prequel
are nostalgic for a time that's gone.
And I was wondering if you could tell me
a little bit about that time
that Viseras is talking about.
Well, I would say even just more broadly
that,
I think Viseris is being presented to us as a character who is very much, he's reluctant to go to war with other people and other places, reluctant to go to war with the triarchy and the stepstones, states many times in this episode that it is his job as king to maintain the peace and avoid the war.
But he is a character who is deeply at war with himself.
And so while I think you're right to identify that he has this nostalgia for a bygone era, I don't think we should lose sight of what we hear him say in episode one.
in that great closing stretch with Reneira,
where he says the idea that we control the dragons
is an illusion.
There are power men should never have trifled
with one that brought Valeria.
It's doom.
If we don't mind our own histories,
it will do the same to us.
And so I think that these aspects of longing,
and I think he is also a character,
especially in this episode,
defined by his longing and his loneliness.
I think one of the real heartbreaking moments
of the episode was on that,
uh,
oh boy, that walk with Lena.
Valerian, what a stretch of the episode that was, where he says that even dragons can be lonely.
And he is, of course, not only speaking about dear Vagar, but about himself in that moment.
And so he is thinking back and studying old Valeria, the might of the freehold, the magic and power of the dragon lords.
But he also, both because of House Targaryen's role as the lone dragon riding family to escape the doom of Valeria.
and also now he is the one entrusted with Agon's prophecy, with the dream, with the weight of that burden.
Can I stop you right there just really quick?
Because I think that for listeners who don't know the deeper kind of history of this world,
like that, that is kind of come up a couple of times in these episodes where there was this place
that was full of families that were dragons, right?
And then there was this natural disaster that took place, the doom, right?
Which was a volcanic eruption?
Like, what are we talking about?
Like a Pompeii thing?
Yeah, I think that Pompeii is a really handy comp, actually.
The 14 Flames.
And, you know, Joe and I talked about this for a while on our episode one, House of Our Deep
Dive, if anyone wants to hear like a much longer run-through of the lore.
But as a very quick snapshot here, there is a lot of mystery still surrounding what actually
befell Old Valeria.
Now, Denise, the dreamer, is the one who had the prophecy of the doom and allowed House Targaryen
to escape.
and this is part of why House Targaryen put so much stock in dreams and in prophecies,
but all of the other dragon riding families,
many of whom were worrying with each other for who would have ultimate supremacy.
And I think that's another thing that's worth, worth remembering when we look back at Valerian history,
is that the Targaryans were like mid-tier.
Yeah, mid-ling.
We're not talking five-star prospect of old Valerian houses, right?
This is like if the Pacers got out of the Eastern Conference, basically, yeah.
Exactly. And, Chris, I want to return to some basketball.
and football
comps later
when we talk
about David
Targaryen's
throwing form
you know
the spiral
on the dragon
egg toss there
but what
actually happened
with the eruption
the 14 flames
the was it
that the
the fire mages
lost control
of their power
there's a really
fun theory
out there in the
fandom
and in the world
about the faceless
men
who Game of Thrones
fans
would be familiar
with
we don't have to
get too
deep
into it. It's all just to say, we don't actually know the answer. Maybe we will learn it moving
forward in the tale, but Viseras is a character who thinks deeply about what went wrong and what it
might mean for the future. We hear that exchange between Alicent and Viseras in this episode about
whether Westeros can be the new Valeria. And he's not a character who is striving to recreate
something. He is a character who is fearful of what went wrong. And I think that is enmesh in a really
fascinating way with the burden that he feels to maintain his rule and think about how to extend
his reign, something that he and other characters are really perseverating over throughout this
entire episode. He used to ride Belairean the Black Dread, the most fabled dragon in the history
of the story. He never took a dragon again. Why? Did he not want to? Is he afraid?
It feels like he's afraid of dragon power, and this is a source of frustration for Renira when
she's doing her cup bearer, doing the small council. She's like,
You have Dragon Riders.
Send us.
We could clean this up real quick.
And that stands in contrast, I think, to on the bridge, Renira and Damon sort of seeing each other as Dragon Riders.
They've each brought their WMDs to this conversation.
You know what I mean?
Where Vesaris is like, I don't want to fuck with that at all.
And I think the model village that he has in his chambers of Voleria is one thing.
But there's also the more recent history that's hanging over him because Megas,
Magor the Cruel, who Otto mentions last week's episode,
and he's like, Damon would be another Magor the Cruel, right?
That's the king, only one before Jahiris,
only one before the one we met at the very beginning of episode one,
which means this is recent history in Magor the Cruel,
tyrannical reign, absolutely bloody and violent, all of this.
And I think some of the stuff that Damon does in this episode,
specifically the idea of taking a second wife.
That was a big thing that Magor did to take everyone off.
Megor loves to get married.
Yeah, so it feels like Damon's just sort of like poking at, you know,
he's poking at his brother with this move specifically is a real Magor move,
like proving Otto right in a certain way.
And I want us to always be listening to exactly the word choices that Otto uses when he's
talking to Vassaris because the way that he's manipulating the king is so subtle.
in this episode when he says
talking about marriage
and he says
to be compelled to replace
for duty's sake
you were the king
but I do not envy you
like he's not saying
isn't my daughter
hot
he doesn't go that route
he goes another
which is like
using the word duty
and just making it
sort of an ugly word
here in that conversation
well other thing I was going to ask
because I can't tell
whether the end of episode one
where he has we have this
reveal to all Game of Thrones fans
that this secret about
the winter and what the evil might come with it has actually been like guarded closely by
the Targaryen royalty for generations. If that is informing any of Vassaris's like, I don't really
want to get into like a stepstone's war and I don't really want to do this and like maybe we can
just send a letter and maybe we can just pay people off and whether it's like, is that, is that going
to be something that we see is like, I mean, I don't want to ask this because I know that a lot of this
stuff is like, yes, and you will see in, you know, in a year or two, this will happen. But I'm curious
whether or not this new information is governing any of the behaviors of the character.
I think, Chris, this will be welcome news to your ears and many listeners, I'm sure. Anything
that has to do with this AGO prophecy, fair game to discuss in full, because we knew nothing
about this until this first episode. This is just not in the books. So we don't know how fully
that is shaping Viseris's thinking,
but I think it's a really reasonable read
at this point in the story.
It's certainly my read.
And I'm anticipating that we will learn
more in subsequent episodes
about how actively
that is driving his decision-making.
I think that there's also,
there's a, the macro and the micro
at play here already,
because there's this vast weight
being the guardian of the safety of the world.
Also, there is his very personal
shame and guilt.
about what happened with Emma, with his wife.
And he does not know how to speak openly about any of this.
I think that if you ask me to describe Vassaris,
in addition to, you know, the kind nature that he seems to have,
I would say that so far through two episodes,
he's a character who's defined by his passivity and by his secret keeping.
And I think that those are both stark contrasts to other characters,
namely his newly named Air Reneira, his daughter,
who was a very active character and his brother Damon,
who was a very active character,
but also to Joe's point from a minute ago,
a state of existence that makes him vulnerable to manipulation.
That passivity, I mean, I thought that one of the lines of the episode
came from Corlis, the sea snake,
when he said to Viseris to elude a storm,
you can either sail into it or around it,
but you must never await its coming.
Vesaris Targaryen, through two episodes,
is a character defined by waiting for the storm.
And when you wait for the storm, you cannot control how you make your way through it.
He's a game manager.
He's just checking.
But he's not.
He's not a game manager.
He's not?
He doesn't know how to manage the game.
What do you trust a game manager to do?
Not fumble.
Not to make mistakes.
Keep an eye on the clock.
He's not a game manager.
It, like, it underlines why they included the great counsel of 101, which they didn't have to at all.
That is the prologue to the prologue.
He gets crowned, right?
Yeah, where he is chosen over Rainies.
That shows us that the previous king saw war on the horizon
and made an active move to strongly back someone and head off war at the past.
That's a strong move that he made.
And you could argue that Viceris does it in naming Reneira his heir,
but how much is he going to stand behind her going forward?
He's already lining up some spares here,
like fortify the line that you give me options is something he says I'm not going to replace you
but I need options is something that he says to Reneer in this episode.
So the naming Reneer in his air thing is the one bit that I kind of felt like suffered with the six-month time jump.
So episode one ends with everybody basically swearing fealty to her.
And then six months later, she's still serving drinks.
And people are pretty actively saying you need to have more kids just in
case this one doesn't work out.
You know, like, there are multiple people on his council who are like, how are we going
to get you preferably, I mean, definitely preferably, a male error that in case Renier doesn't
work out, or let's be honest, probably won't work out.
There's like the sort of line here is still guarded.
Did you, are we supposed to intuit that like the sort of enthusiasm for the idea of
naming Renira the air Joe, like that that got.
diminished over the last six months, or is it just like that was always going to be the case?
I don't know that anyone was particularly enthusiastic about it. I think it was more, and something that
Reneer says to Allison to the sept is like, he didn't choose me. He spurned Damon. So she was sort of
the anyone but Damon choice. Okay, now that that's cleaned up, let's move to plan B. And to the passivity
point, that even reinforces that the most active decision as still being highly reactive and
responsive. She seems kind of fatalistic. I mean, on the bridge, she's like, why don't you just kill me?
If this is what you want is to be King, you've got to kill me now.
And Damon doesn't, you know?
I think she knows he won't.
I think that was like a baller move on her part.
And she's like, this is the, this is what you're, because it's all, to quote Otto High Tower,
a mummers first, right?
Meaning like this is just theater that Damon is doing to get attention.
And she's calling his bluff.
Those are not Philadelphia mummers.
I'm assuming, right?
we're not talking about.
Mummer's being meeting like a theater troupe
and it's like that's that's a, it's, you know,
it's just nonsense that Damon is doing to get attention
and she calls him out for it, essentially.
She's like, are you really going to kill me right now?
Yeah.
You know, he's like, obviously, you know,
with no words because he's Matt Smith.
Obviously not.
There you go.
That's such a great scene.
Before we get to that,
because I do want to break that down a little bit more closely,
I wanted to ask about the,
the current medical state
of our king, Vassaris.
So in the first episode,
it's got a little Nick from sitting in the Iron
throne that's been bothering him.
They're doing some really creative
stuff with Puss in that episode.
In this episode,
if you thought maybe six months and
time heals all wounds, it in fact
doesn't. It just makes them
much, much worse. And now
Viseras is getting
maggots eating his flesh
to, I guess, stop the infection from spreading.
So, Mal, does that also kind of kick things into high gear with,
we really need an air here because this guy is slowly dying in front of us?
Or is that just like a different era of medical sciences in Westeros?
And that's just how they treated skin problems.
Well, boy, I have so many things I want to say in response to that.
I think there's so many interesting threats to consider here already.
I mean, we know that even a couple centuries later, think of our guy, Kai Byrne, treating the treating Jamie's rotting flesh after his hand was severed from his arm.
It's like, you know what we could turn to here?
The highly advanced science of boiled wine.
Yes.
So, today, you got to work with what you have here in Westros.
Not a lot of mose surgery going on back then, I guess.
Not a lot of skin grafting, not a lot of plastic surgery.
Okay.
So they want, you know, the maggots to eat away the dead flesh, work with what you can.
I think that Otto, just as in episode one, Otto seemed incredibly focused.
Sure, let's be charitable and say that he cares about his king and good friend,
Vassaris, the first dark area, health and well-being.
Okay.
He seems primarily focused on nobody finding out about this because that, and that connects to this
larger through line of this episode as well, this idea of the crown and the rain and
house Targary and being in this vulnerable state where other people, other factions might sense
this, this weakness and this opening and try to tear down the rule. So anything that heightens
the sense across the realm or beyond the realm, the triarchy, ESOS anywhere, of weakness is something
to fear. Now we hear this many times in the episode, Corliss voices this when he's making his
campaign to go deal with the triarchy and the stepstones. Rainis and Corliss just say this
directly to Viseras's face when they meet out in the gardens, which was a great scene.
Otto knows that a king who is being harmed by the throne on which he sits and cannot heal is not a king
who people are going to believe in for long.
This is a real risk for them.
Yeah, he's not a guy,
not a guy you'd want to have a beer with, you know?
Otto or Vassaris?
Vassaris, it's like, it's just like he's not,
he's not going to like play.
Like, if you're trying to get like people behind this guy
and he's like, it actually hurts me to sit,
it's going to be a problem.
You know, I wouldn't say bar stools and seats
are typically, typically the most comfortable.
But Chris, I think also, like,
if you think about the symbolism
of the broken dragon elsewhere in this episode,
the stone that fell and fractured from this vast village.
And the way that Viseris is so captivated
by holding its repaired form in his hand,
I thought that was fascinating in a lot of different,
in a lot of different respects.
He certainly seems genuinely very moved and touched
by this gesture on Allison's part
and, like, frankly, could barely choke out a sentence
without sounding like he's on the verge of tears.
The guy's a high-key dork.
Yeah.
The Sarah sounds just like me on a podcast, can't get out of line without sounding like he's about to break down in tears.
I felt very tenderly toward him in those moments.
But it also just felt like he was looking down at himself and at his own line.
And we hear him say to Reneira elsewhere in the episode, you know, too easily ended, this idea of the vulnerable line.
Now, he is a part of that in his own mind.
But so is the vast, sprawling set of scenarios for his own children.
He says he does not intend to replace Renira as heir
if he has other children, Chris,
to get back to what you were asking about earlier.
But that doesn't stop a character like Renice
from saying to Renira in front of one of the many
dragon fucking people
orgy tapestries
populating the Red Keep at this point in Targaryen history.
Can't wait for them to start selling those as official merch.
I'll be buying a poster for my home immediately.
Are you talking about the scene where
Riversares is walking with her daughter.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love how like it's just like, oh, hey, were you just also watching the King talk to this 12-year-olds?
So many moments where Renice is watching for a balcony.
She's also doing it during the Kingsguard interviews.
It made me think of all the shots of Littlefinger leading against the wall at Winterfowl in season 7,
where every time you cut him, he's observing something consequential.
But she says to Reneer, men would sooner put the realm to the torch than see a woman,
send the Iron Throne and your father is no fool. So we have Vissaris reinforcing to Reneira.
He doesn't want them to become estranged. He intends to maintain her as air. And yet, the reality
all around of the preference of even many of the people who did pledge fealty at the end of episode one,
there's no true stability ever. And a nimble ruler has to acknowledge that. That gets back to
that corollus stormline. You always have to anticipate how somebody else is going to try to take you down.
Gotcha. Can I circle back to maggots for a second?
do always always want to circle back to maggots um can i introduce and and i do not think this is a
spoiler because it is a fun long term long-gestiding book reader theory that has no answer one way or
another in the books i think those are those are fair game the problem i'm having is like how do you
write how do you spell this person's name so i google it and then it's like and he died don't do it
I'm like a lot.
Everyone in this story is going to die.
No, I know, but it's how.
It's how they died.
There's something called the Grand Maister theory that I absolutely love.
And it is this really fun book reader conspiracy theory about how the maisters from Old Town,
which is where House Sinaitan is from, by the way, because there's a mace, like a chicken in every pot and a maister in every castle,
they actually have tremendous power throughout the realm
to work from behind the scenes to orchestrate the flow of history.
And there is, especially, there's great quote
in A Song of Ice and Fire where this character, Lady Dustin,
calls them gray rats scurry everywhere,
whispering in the ears of their masters.
I love that.
And then also in A Song of Ice and Fire,
when Samuel Tarley goes to the citizen,
which he did in the show as well.
He meets a character who's Marwin the Mage who says,
Who do you think killed all the dragons the last time around?
Gallant dragon slayers arm with swords?
The world the Citadel is building has no place in it for sorcery or prophecy or glass candles,
much less for dragons.
So there's this great theory that the maesters are working behind the scenes to end House Targaryen and end the dragons.
That is bad ass.
So this is the Maester Illuminati theory.
Yes, exactly.
I like this.
The Carlisle Group.
And there's like one arm of the theory that they were working in consort with House High Tower,
but I think it's really interesting in that scene with the aforementioned maggots that Otto is working the Alicent agenda.
And Macer Mellos seems to be on team, let's make House Valerian happy.
Unless he's doing like a deep bench, you know, manipulation or just acting the partisan like that.
It doesn't seem like House High Tower and the Masons are working.
I don't know if the grandmaister theory,
the maister theory is real, but I like it.
I love it. I love it.
Melos coming in with a bowl of maggots
and then what does it matter,
your grace, about the idea of Reneer
maybe being unhappy.
Her mother has passed.
Her father must propagate the royal line.
Just full on, who gives a shit?
Her mom died.
Her dad's got to fuck.
Mellos.
What a showing for Melos?
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Joe, you mentioned Valerian.
I wanted to ask a little bit about what for me was a very dense data dump when Corlis
comes into the small council.
And, you know, I was like, slow down.
Start from the beginning.
Talk to me like I'm a baby.
Like, what are we doing here?
There's a lot of places, people, things being mentioned.
He's very upset.
He's lost some ships.
He feels like they're slow rolling him in terms of the response.
We've basically got a situation where, what?
Like, I heard free cities.
I heard stepstones.
This is for either of you.
I mean, I think after several viewings,
I have, like, a decent idea of what's happening here.
But this sort of piracy that's going on, I guess,
what does that conflict kind of say about this era?
Is there a lot of uprisings?
Is there more than other eras?
And does it speak to this being like a moment of instability in the realm?
Mallorban, you're a famous Free Cities fan.
Do you want to talk about what's going on in the Free Cities at this time?
Okay.
So I'll start with the very last thing that you asked there, Chris,
before diving into the triarchy and your guy, the crab feeder a bit more.
Can I ask you just actually one thing really quickly is,
geographically, how far away from Kings Landing is this happening? Like, are we talking about,
like, you can look out the window and see this happening or this is far away and it's like the way
it was. You're talking about the stepstones? Yeah, because I'm wondering whether it's like the same way
stuff in the north seemed to be happening on another planet to the to the Lannisters. They were like,
oh, fuck the north. You know what I mean? Like, yeah. Good, good question. So while acknowledging
that this is a podcast and people can't see what I'm doing.
doing with my hands or visualize this. I'll attempt to sketch out quickly a little
respective geography here. So you just start with Kings Landing. Let's start with that as kind of a
central point. Head out east into the narrow sea from Kings Landing and you hit Driftmark
and then Dragonstone. So that's one bit of geography that's worth keeping in mind is that drift
mark, the seat of House Valerion and Dragonstone, of course, the seat of the air to House Targaryen,
which is why Damon setting up shop there
when Renira has been named Princess of Dragonstone
is such a grave affront.
Gotcha.
Go down, head south in the narrow sea.
You will hit the stepstones,
which is basically a chain of islands.
It's east of Dorn.
It's in the southern narrow sea,
and it is this pirate haven.
But it's a really, because of its position,
it is a really consequential trade route.
And we hear Corliss voiced this in episode one
about the threat of beggaring the ports.
But this is a direct threat to Coralus and House Valerian
because, as we know, their strength comes from the sea,
from trade, and not just their strength in a military sense,
but their wealth.
And we've heard a lot about the wealth of House Valerian.
So anything that puts that at risk needs to be accounted for.
But this is also a consequential trade route
for numerous other cities and families.
It would be incredibly sick if Ryan Condole was like
for the next five episodes, we're doing supply chain issues in Westrose because of the shipping
lanes. Let's go to Spice Town. What is Aragorn's tax policy in one of the trade routes?
I was literally just going to say that. I was going to say exactly those words. This is like why
George Arborne made the story. What if there's all of a sudden like there's a shortage of maggots
because of these shipping lanes and we thought about like. Regrettably, you could never run out of
your king is literally going to fall apart. So, yeah. Mallory, I'm sorry for interrupt it. Go ahead.
No, no, no. It's a good question. So.
Okay, to your last point about vulnerability, we hear this again, as I mentioned earlier, from a lot of different characters.
So this is a sensitive, delicate moment.
Well, we open this television show, House of the Dragon, by in the prologue at the Great Council, hearing about how this is the apex of power for House Targary.
Now, we're, you know, we've moved a decade into the future.
But I still think that's a really important shift to be paying attention to, that at the height, you begin to risk what?
of course, the fall.
So I found myself thinking back to our introduction to Taiwan Lanister in a little television
program calling Game of Thrones when he is given that classic dad pep talk to Chris Ryan's
favorite incest participant, favorite incest participant for now, Jamie Lanister.
You're going to be a lot of competition for that crowd.
And J.B. is challenging what he's hearing and saying, so the lion does concern himself with
the opinion of the sheep and Thailand cuts him off.
to say, that's not an opinion, it's a fact. If another house can seize one of our own and hold
him captive with impunity, we are no longer a house to be feared. This is just a reality of rule
and power and strength in Westeros. If other houses or factions can attack you in any way with impunity
and you do nothing about it, then other people aren't going to take you seriously for long.
And right now that's happening to Viseris in multiple respects as we hear.
Damon taking Dragonstone is one of them
and it is so close to him
that it is in some respects
even more damning
that he won't do anything about that
but then the stepstones
the triarchy
with your guy the crab feeder
this is your boy
that guy is from Baltimore
what if he is our guy
the crab feeder
football and crab kicks
that's what we do
what if we just all embrace him
the crab feeder is
so hyped that in
late August,
the Baltimore Orioles
are right in the thick
of the wild
I really worry about my
susceptibility to the crab feeder.
Like,
if I was alive
during this time
in this world,
I think I would probably
like cut the line.
You know,
I was like,
this guy's coming.
Like,
I'm going to get on board
early.
I'm going to be a seed
investor in what he's doing.
I believe in it.
I believe in the results
he's getting.
Let's go.
Team crab feeder.
Into the crab boil.
You love a seafarer.
You love a seafood boil out on the beach.
This alliance of Mir Lees and Tyroche,
it's the kingdom of the three daughters.
This is the triarchy represents a pretty real threat
because these are often free cities,
the nine free cities of Esos.
This group in particular often would war with each other
over the disputed lands
and for them to align and for this alliance to become a threat to Westeros and this trade route is a big deal.
And that's why at the end, Corlis, part of the appeal that he makes to Damon is a direct contrast with Viseris.
Well, he's too weak to act.
This can be how you show your strength.
And I love the Joe brought up recent Targaryen history with Magor and other rulers earlier.
because the king between Agon the Conqueror,
who we of course have heard a lot about,
and Magor, who has been popping up as a reference,
is my guy.
What was his name?
Anus Targaryen.
Ais Targaryen.
Shout out to Anus, now and always.
Love my guy, Anus.
Here's the thing.
A lot of the realm did not love Anus.
Not a big Anus realm.
And part of that was because he was considered ineffective.
and Magor is a little overcorrection, but it's part of why Jay Harris was such a successful ruler.
He earned the nickname, the moniker, the conciliator because he showed no reluctance, even in complex situations, to act, to work to build alliances.
An alliance building through marriage or other methods is a huge focus in this episode as well.
If you're going to succeed, you need to know how to navigate that aspect, whether it's through war, through marriage, or through any other aspect of life in West.
It seems to be like the entire Martin project in a lot of ways is watching these families sort of align with one another, betray one another, marry into one another, take over different seats of power.
Joe, Corlis, Corlis is heated in this moment. You know, like he's losing money, but I think he's also taking offense to what it means that he sits on the small council and he's just getting got by these pirates.
can you tell me a little bit about who this guy is?
He's married into the Targaryen family, but who is this character?
I would be thrilled to do this.
And if you have three and a half hours of your life to spare,
you can also listen to our deep dive.
I'm on minute 92, but I have only been awake for like...
That's further than I thought you would have made it.
Yeah, it was way further than I thought you would have gone.
You've been jet-setting this week.
I did think that my...
I thought my iPhone was broken when I saw how long it was.
But just in case someone doesn't have three and a half hours to spare, let me give you the reader's digest of some of the deep dive that we did last week on House Valerian.
Just to say that as Corley says in this episode, he says the Valerians were no dragonlords.
My house had to scratch out our fortune from the sea.
So this idea that the Valerians who are from old Valeria, from the model village, as we discussed, they came over before the Targaryens.
They were here first, but they were not Dragon Rider, so they don't have that built-in majesty or command.
And so Corlis himself built the Valerian fortune by being a seafarer, by being, if you want to call him a pirate, he built all this money up together.
And something that I think is really important context is that Valerian is now the richest house in all of Westeros.
and they only recently eclips the Lannisters, you've heard of them, and the High Towers.
So Otto High Towers sitting at the small council, looking at this guy who is like Nouveau-Rish, if you want to call him that,
who is coming in here and is now richer and more powerful than him.
So it makes entire sense to me that Otto is like, I don't really care about protecting your fortune.
Yeah, he's like, we'll top you off with some coin, but like I'm not going to like make this guy fight a war for you, right?
And Corliss is new to the seat of power, has ambitions, is married into the Targaryens.
His family has been passed over for the throne already.
He is so outraged that his daughter is passed over here because she is on paper, despite being 12 years old, the better match for Vassaris.
But there's a small detail that a lot of people lashed onto in episode one that I don't think we mentioned, which is that when they're pouring wine.
for everyone at the small council, he puts his hand over his glass. And I think it's a really telling
in terms of like, I'm new here. I can't fuck around the way that you guys have who have been here
for generations. This is serious business. I'm on the small council. Let's do some business.
And so I think that's really telling of him. And then also the way that he's bonding with Damon
over, we're both second sons, right? The idea that being the second son in a household means
everything goes to the first son. There's a reason that there's a sell sword company in ESSO called
the second sons because it's like if you're the second son, you have to make your own fortune.
So maybe you go off and be a mercenary or if you're a Corlis Valerian, you build a massive
shipping empire or whatever the case may be.
But I think one more just quick detail of this episode that I think is so fascinating is if you
go back to Rainira picking Kristen Cole out of the, you know, number of knights who are there
to be on the Kingsguard, right?
Does she pick him because he's battle tested?
Maybe.
Does she pick him because she likes the way his hair looks?
Probably.
But if you look at that assemblage of knights,
and Otto sort of mentions this,
the other houses that are assembled there are more noble than House Cole.
The other knights have bannermen with them.
They've got huge plumes on their helms.
They've got, like, fancy tunics over their armor.
Kristen Cole is standing there by himself with his dinged up armor,
no plume.
And this is a huge upward mobility moment for him.
him to join the King's Guard. So, like, he, along with Damon and Corliss, are these figures that are
sort of, and Otto High Tower is also a second son, who are out there scratching their way up the
ladder, which I think is a really interesting theme that this show is interested in. Yeah, can I,
can I just follow up on that for a second? So, I mean, first of all, shout out Damon calling
Kristen Crispin. Iconic made me think of Jamie. Rick on a dick on. He's a man after my own heart.
Proud Thrones tradition.
I think that it is worth remembering
when we consider the risk of a rift
with House Valerian,
and we hear many in this episode,
including characters like Otto and Allison
who have their own agenda here,
Otto's agenda,
have to concede the point,
have to at least acknowledge out loud
that a match with the Valerians
is the logical alliance
to make in a smart one for Vassaris's reign.
House Targaryen and House
Valerian have a long history.
Not only because they're both Valerian houses,
but the Lord of the Tides has been like an ever-present figure on Targary and small councils
during the entire time that they've reigned.
So look back to Agon, the conqueror.
He had a Valerian as his master of ships during his conquest, Damon Valerian.
Look at the marriages between the houses, pre-conqueror.
conquest, Valene Valerian married Aryan Targaryen. And that's how we got the conquerors. That's how we got
Aegon, Vesnia, and Rain East. So this is a long tradition. There are other marriages and unions we could
cite. I say that to say, risking that is a big deal. Like being the ruler who sees that fall apart
is a real blight potentially on your reign. Now, that all exists in the context of life in
Westeros where nothing is eternal, right? The sea never stays flat and glassy for a long.
There are always going to be waves and tides that pull somebody under them. Is this a Mallory
Rubin original aphorism or is this in the book? Just love the ocean, just like you and the crab feeder.
But the other thing I just wanted to quickly say is that, and Joe, please correct me if I'm wrong
here. And then Steve edit this out of the episode of one. But Corlis-Ferlarian, unless this is a show
update, and it might be.
canon changes all the time
across the adaptations
and there's a lot we don't know
about the characters
in fire and blood.
We just have certain details.
There's a ton to learn.
It's not actually a second son.
Right.
And so I think that that's important
to remember because it shows
his saviness.
When he says to Damon,
we are the realm's second son's
demon, our worth is not given.
It must be made.
It is a savvy, savvy tactic
to draw a parallel
between a character
he is attempting to win
as an ally to his cause.
He is a tactician and a schemer,
and these are always the most fun and compelling characters
in this world, the schemers,
the ones who have their plot,
plots and schemes and plots, they're the same thing,
and to get to watch this unfold,
what did we hear Damon say in episode one about Otto,
a second son who stands to inherit nothing he doesn't seize for himself?
That's true for Damon, too, and Corliss knows that.
Well, and I think it's, yeah, it reminds you of Tyrion saying
all bastards or cripples and their father.
You know, like this idea of like, let me,
let me relate to you
all dwarves are bastards and fathers' sides.
That's the line.
Or also like relating cripples,
bastards, broken things.
We're all on the same level.
So Corlis, I'm, I don't know.
I could see the show changing it
so that it's literal.
Definitely possible.
But I like your version better.
Yeah, where he's basically trying to appeal to him
on a more of like a symbolic level
rather than a literal one.
Let's talk about the bridge.
It's been 50 minutes here,
and I can't believe we haven't gotten
to my favorite scene in this show so far,
which is...
Where the one dragon in the show
looks at itself in a mirror?
That one?
Let's talk about this incredible scene.
First of all, like,
if you had a critique,
if one had a critique,
and we talk a little bit about this
on the episode of the Watch
going up tonight,
where it's like,
it's been a very interior show so far.
You know,
we haven't gotten to see a lot
of what King's Landing
looks like right now
and what are different folks doing?
A lot of our main characters are kind of bunched together.
TV dictates that these people will be split apart.
And obviously, Damon has been the first person to step out.
And we get to see a little bit more of the world.
This was an awe-inspiring.
Gregory Tatas directed this episode.
This looked incredible.
I have a few things I would like to point out
that I love from this scene.
And these are not questions.
So anybody just jump in whenever you want.
Number one, got to say Reese Eiffins.
It's just really good at saying the word,
whore. He's said it twice. I feel bad for who he's talking to, but at the same time, I hope he doesn't
stop. Can I just say, let me jump in and say, actually, the word reading of this episode award I would
give to Fabian Franco who plays Kristen Cole. He says incursions. Like, he draws it out. It's pretty
Yeah, but he's called Masaria whore twice. So that's chill. To the mummers farce bit. I
love that just as a Philadelphia and love to love to see the mummers popping up in Game of Thrones.
Three, I wanted to ask, either one of you jump in for this, Damon stealing the egg.
Is he shit posting?
Like, because she's not pregnant, so he doesn't need the egg.
So what was the goal here?
Yeah, and again, that's a difference from the book.
But I think that in which she is actually pregnant.
But I think that, you know, and this is why Massaria is so pissed because she's like,
you just put a target on my back,
you just made me really vulnerable to assassination,
all for just to get your brother's attention.
Because it really does, you know, he says, where's the king?
And I don't lie, you know, because Vesaris was going to go there.
That was if Ceres' first instinct.
I'm on my way to Dragonstone.
Can't take a dragon, so I guess I'll go by ship or whatever.
But Otto lies to him at Dragonstone.
He's like, a king could not be bothered.
And Harold Westrilling gives him a, like, a face.
Like, we know that you stepped in to do this.
But that's all Damon wanted, I feel like, is maybe if I just sit here for six months,
my brother will come notice me on Dragonstone.
And that didn't happen.
So maybe if I steal this dragon egg, my brother will come notice me.
Mal, do you disagree?
No, I'm with you.
Yeah.
I think he just wants a consequence.
Are there any consequences to being like, I need this dragon egg because my wife is pregnant
and it's like, she's not pregnant?
And like, then you're just being an asshole.
Like, like, I wonder whether or not that will come up again.
Yeah, I think that it's worth noting that Viseria.
as many characters remind us to start the episode,
wasn't interested in challenging Damon at all.
And in fact, Viseras says, like,
what would you have me do?
You know, send him to the wall,
put his head on a spike.
It's only when he learns,
when they learned that it was Dreamfire's egg,
the same egg that Rennira had picked for Bailon's cradle,
the air for a day,
that Viseras has moved to act,
because that is such a deeply cruel and personal affront.
The egg that had been chosen for your dead son
is the one that I came to take.
Of course that is an effort
to draw Vassaris out
and that gets back to this real tension
that we saw between them
in the throne room scene
and in the premiere,
but also this love and affection.
I believe Damon in episode one
when he said,
I want to be by your side.
Why do you, like,
why do you let this asshole
who I don't respect advise you
and cast me into these other positions?
So he wants Viseris' attention.
I loved so much.
I mean, the visuals were gorgeous,
seeing Keraxis move down from the fortress onto the bridge,
seeing Syrax emerge up through the fog,
the low light, the low sun.
It was just stunning.
Dragons also, they kind of talk now?
Okay, this is my moment for Dragon Sound Design.
So, like, what I love about that moment
is that you hear both of them before you see them.
You hear Karexies and you hear Syrax before you see them.
And I send a message to,
to my pal Paula Fairfield, who does the dragon sound design on, she did on Game of Thrones,
is doing it on House of the Dragon.
And I was asking her about the sign design on Caraxies.
And she said, basically Miguel Sapashik said he's the dragon that no one loves and he has a deviated septum.
And my expansion was that he's a bullying white boy who thinks he can wrap and overcompensates.
So like real Kendall Roy energy.
He might say that he's a bullying white boy who gets to get a rap.
He had a cocaine problem in the 70s.
This is incredible.
And overcompensates for his deviated septum.
Plus, he's always hitting on the lady dragons.
He tries to sing a new love sick rap song he wrote for Syracs.
Astonishing.
Wow.
No notes.
Wallace.
And like Paula sometimes makes up little stories about the dragon, but she says the whole, like,
the dragon that no one loves and has a deviated septim thing did come from Miguel
Sipachnik.
That's incredible.
And then she said the clicking and the whistling and the spitting that you hear from
Karexies in this sequence.
comes from the same family of sound sources that she used to make the toddler dragons in season
three, episode four of Game of Thrones.
So, like, Paula has this really cool sound library.
And if you go to her studio, which is the coolest place in the world, she's got, like,
this thing she calls the bone yarn, which is all these bones that are hanging up that make
a bunch of noise.
And, like, just the way she puts together the sound design on these dragons.
And, like, this is just part of my ongoing attempt to get Chris Ryan to acknowledge that there
are different dragons on this show.
I know that they're different.
just don't need to invest in their biographies just yet.
Well, I don't know, man.
No, I know.
Well, if I had known they had deviated symptoms and we're writing rap, yeah.
To every character from succession, then will it help you invest in who they are?
Can we just wait to meet your Roman?
And one Tom and one Kendall.
I think that was like Kendall versus Shiv was what we saw.
I love this so much.
This is incredible.
The other, there were so many interesting dynamics there, but I love that like auto orders
everybody to sheath their fucking swords as soon as he sees. I was going to say the shit talk on
the bridge is outstanding. It's amazing, but it's like such, again, he's not even there and in his
absence. It is an extra forceful indictment of Viseris because Reneer was right when she said,
you have Dragon Rider send us, like look how quickly things are resolved. And Reneira's action is a
point of contrast is so palpable in this moment. And then like the debrief later, of course he
loves his daughter. He has great affection for her, as Joe and I have talked about. But he's
also framing that in, you're my heir language, which was like really dispiriting and strange,
obviously for Furruder herself. But she's able to diffuse the situation to get the dragon egg
back in that little dragon keeper kiln speaking in High Valerian, initially challenging Damien.
The crop pot. The crocodile gets the little back shoulder, back shoulder path.
From old dame there.
It's amazing.
Mahomesian ball security
from Damon,
you know?
Just really leaving it out there
for anybody who wants
to try and strip it.
Yeah.
God.
It's that whole scene
was just so,
so great.
And I loved the look
on Otto's face
as he watched Renira
walk back through
and then take off
because what is playing
on his face?
There's almost some
begrudging respect.
He can't help
but acknowledge
that she's an effective
leader.
But I think also,
to me,
at least it seemed like
that moment
was one of almost panic.
Like, this is not somebody I'm going to be able to control the way I can her father.
And the episode starts with him booting her out of the small council room by saying, like,
perhaps there's better uses for the princess's talents elsewhere.
And then goes to that assignment and tries to, like, you know, manage her on the Kingsguard
assignment as well.
And yeah, so I think this is a huge moment.
And then when she shows up, he tells Kristen Cole escort the princess to safety.
and she's like, watch out for my dragon.
She's very protective.
You know, so yeah,
Otto has got this,
he backed Reneera
because he didn't want Damon,
but he can't have Reneer
because Reneer is uncontrollable.
And she's already starting to show flashes
of like, well,
when you have dragons,
you can do anything.
So, you know,
and maybe things shouldn't work
the way that they work.
And if we have dragons,
we can be as progressive
as we want to be.
You know, gosh,
so there's two big points
I kind of want to hit before we go.
One is just the overall theme of power being consolidated or acquired through marriage, which obviously is what happens at the end of this episode. Although, I mean, just as somebody who has watched enough Game of Thrones, it doesn't seem like a lot of relationships founded on love really bode well for the people involved in them. You know, like most relationships in Game of Thrones that are, hey, these are two powerful people who need to be brought together. Those are the ones that have stayed.
power. It's the ones where it's like, I can't stay away from this person that winds up causing
wars or getting people killed or whatever.
So.
A little Robin Talisa.
Yeah.
Or hell even Jamie and Circe.
You know what I mean?
Like there's lots of opportunities for us to do.
John Eagret should have just stayed in that cave enjoying a life of waterfalls and
conalinguists.
What an alternate history that is.
So with that mind and without spoiling, I guess, the rest of this,
series, how big of a mistake did Vissarish just make?
Or, I mean, like, you can't answer that.
So how big of a...
Here's something I think I can say about this episode.
I think that there...
I mean, first of all, this definitely isn't a love match
because Allison is, like, chewing her own fingers off throughout this whole thing,
and it's just, like, you know, being steered by her father.
But, like, to your point, Vassaris is following his...
Wow, she mended my Lego minifig for me, thinking so much.
And she seems that how she shared the same interests.
Like, right?
We're both bookish.
We both love replicas.
You know what I mean?
Yes.
We both like to read.
But I think
to, there are some really, like, own goals that
that's the sports work.
What are you, Jen?
She's a ringer of, boy.
But he, that he makes in this episode
where it's just sort of like, he could have done this,
but what if he had had like a side conversation with Corliss first?
What if he had told Renier for, you know, like,
why did he announce it the way that he did?
Well, I mean, I would say he was opinion shopping and he kept getting the same one.
I mean, I thought it was very striking how Lionel Strong's way of talking to him about why it made sense for him to marry Corlis' daughter was pretty, like, very straightforward and very like sober.
You know what I mean?
Whereas everybody else seems to be like manipulating him a little bit and maybe Lionel was manipulating him as well.
That was a really cool little speech he gives where he's just like, I understand like this sucks.
but if you're trying to like,
if the goal here is to not lose power
and to make sure your family stays where it is,
like you got to do this one.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I agree with Joe.
It felt like a real,
this is just a series of unforced errors
because he actually has,
over the course of the episode,
opened up to Renera,
and she has opened up to him in turn.
And one of the things that I thought,
this was a big,
you know, we haven't talked about Allison as much today,
and I think this was obviously a huge Allison's High Tower episode.
And it was fascinating to watch her interact with both with Viseras, with Reneera,
and with her own father and try to glean her personal motivation in each situation.
And we have so much about her interior thinking in life that we don't know when we're just getting to glimpse for the first time.
And I think that her affection for Reneira, for example, is deeply felt and very sincere.
But absolutely undeniable.
Undeniably so.
But it is also true that when they're at the Sapt and Reneira is saying like all these bros in the realm just cannot wait for another air to come along so they can get rid of me and move me out of the line of succession.
And she is opening up her heart that Allison does not repay that confidence with candor of her own does not reveal that she has been for six months meeting in secret with Viseris, Renera's father.
tries to counsel and encourage Viseris to welcome Reneira, which is as much projection about,
hey, well, what if you welcomed me into your life, right?
And then to guide Reneira to go open up to her father.
So Alicent is a maneuverer as well.
And even though she is also being used as a pawn in this really hideous way by her father,
she is acting in a fascinating fashion throughout the episode.
So, yeah, why does it Vassara say to Reneira in their very forthright exchange about the need for him to marry?
By the way, let me tell you who I'm thinking this should be.
Yeah.
Your best friend who is your same age, by the way.
And that's a huge show difference is that, like, Alison and Reneer are the same age who just makes this way worse.
Yeah, way more Brian DePaul NeNei than you'd expect it to be.
Let's wrap up with our guy.
So the last sort of moment of the episode is obviously this alliance that comes between Corlis and Damon, although I will note.
And overall, I had this question.
I kind of like Damon as this dude who's like, it's not like he has a plan.
Like when Corlis is sort of going at Vassaris and Damon's like, that's my brother, I can say that, but you cannot say that.
I was kind of like, okay, but everything you're doing is weakening your brother.
You know, you go to Dragonstone, now you're scheming behind his back.
So this sort of like familial bond that you two have while sweet is you're not really like playing that out in practice.
In any case, these two kind of come to some sort of backstage idea of like what they're going to do going forward.
And then the last shot is of the crab feeder.
Crab feeder coming.
Winter is coming.
And I just want to know a little bit more about this guy.
I know I have to be patient,
but what are, what's his business model?
Like, what are his core values?
And seriously, though, who's paying this guy?
Like, who, because is he an independent operator
or is he a functionary of something else
or is that just something I need to wait for?
I think they mentioned a couple times,
like, who do you think is funding Kragas Krab Feeder
if not the free cities, you know?
Like, I think that, you know, like,
because there is the argument that can be made
that Kragas Krab Feeder is just
a pirate, particularly vicious one that we can clean up. And the point that Vassaris, Otto,
and my guy, Lord Beesbury are making is that to...
God's be good. God's be good. That to attack Kragus Crabtree is to declare war on the free city.
And I will say this is where the show is going to have to do a lot of extra work that the book...
We don't have a ton of book answers.
Do we, Mallory?
No.
He likes carpentry and seafood.
Just some great form on the batting stance as he's...
Low-setter balance, yeah.
Yeah, the hips.
I see a real power hitter doubles to the gap.
I just don't think we can end the episodes
as we're talking about David and Corlis of the stepstones here
without noting that one of the most shocking digs of the entire episode
was Damon saying it was never my brother's strongest trait.
Corlis asking what?
And Damon saying being king.
So good.
But it's so funny because then Corlis is like, yeah, fuck that guy.
And Damon's like, hey, I can say it.
I know.
But, Chris, to your point then about Damon and this brotherly bond and Rift,
like what was the opening note for the series?
We didn't get the great council scene just to see Viserish chosen over Renis.
though, of course, that was a huge part of why.
It's because we get in the voiceover
the mission statement of the show,
the only thing that could tear down
the house of the dragon was itself.
And so even when there's sincere affection
and the, hey, won't you look at me
and welcome me back into the fold,
reason for the way that Damon is behaving,
the consequences are not always things
that these characters are anticipating in full.
Yeah.
And that's why it's an entertaining show.
That's why it's a fun story.
If everybody knew exactly what the consequence of their choice was going to be,
there wouldn't be much of a television show.
Yeah, that would be a short show.
Can I drop one last Lord of the Rings reference before we go,
just to like bring this week of content altogether?
Corlis, Valerian, says to Damon,
waiting the substance is a chance for you to prove your worth to any who might doubt it,
which, of course, has to make us think of King Denethor,
who says a chance for Farimir, Captain of Gondor to show his quality,
which is a real shit thing to say to your second son over there.
in Gondor.
Oh, God.
Yeah.
I'm fired up.
Which has been absent, as
people keep pointing out for so long,
is really
this place where the second sons,
the lowborn, or whatever,
can work their way at the ladder.
Upper mobility.
That's what this is all about.
I'm fired up.
I thought this was a good episode.
Andy and I talked about it a lot.
We had our critiques,
but we were, I think,
generally, like,
you know, judging it against
its baseline of like, this is pretty good.
Here's some notes, but it is pretty good.
I wanted to ask you to one thing is, you know,
we don't often get to chat about like the kind of more,
I guess, like, critic point of view on the show.
After two episodes, and it's only two episodes,
did you notice, because Andy and I talked about this
for much of the watch episode that's going up now,
do you note slash miss any of like the Bennyoff and Weiss,
like just the little seasoning that they had for their version of George Martin's world,
where it had, I think, a little bit more, I don't know what, like, what's the dynamic range?
Yeah, humor.
Humor.
Yeah, exactly, yeah.
I think not having a Tyrion character, like as great as Matt Smith is,
Damon Targaryen, like the closest we have to this kind of thing, not having a Tyrion,
not having those really, like, witty jokes or really funny moments.
And then also, and we've talked about this, the cross section of society.
We're still operating with the lords and the kings and the princesses.
And so you do miss being down in the muck and the mud and the dirt.
I guess we're in the sand with the crab feeder.
But I think I miss – I'm really enjoying the show.
I like it a lot.
I really am enjoying it on rewatch.
Like I think the scene in the sept with Reneura and Allison –
The candle scene, right?
Yeah, with the candles.
was just some of the finest, like, tense acting
that I've seen from people on Thrones.
That being said, I do, but I think it could be coming.
Yeah, I think it's growing that way.
That's why I'm like, this is like such a fake criticism
because it's two episodes and they haven't really left
the small council room that much, you know, so I, but I do,
I think inevitably people go back to the beginning of Game and Thrones
to compare and contrast the two shows.
And I was like, man, the beginning game of Thrones
is funny, you know, it's really funny.
Yeah, I agree with what you both said.
I mean, I think that Joe, to that last point,
I would anticipate more room to play in that respect once the timeline slows down.
You know, that connects to what we were talking about earlier,
where, like, on the one hand, it's, there is actually kind of like a leisurely pace inside
of the episodes because so much of it is oriented around Tyrion's favorite thing,
great conversations and elegant rooms.
But those are heavy, somber conversations.
about vast and meaningful things
in the history of the house
and the characters and the realm.
So once we are no longer zipping through
quite so many months and years at a time
and we slow down and live more fully
inside of each episode in a given moment,
I think there's more room for zingers,
you know, take the time to go enjoy a bowl of brown
return to the street of silk for another orgy.
I can't wait.
Steve Allman was our producer today,
Joanna Robinson and Mallory Rubin.
Thank you so much for joining me.
You guys have your House of Our Deep Dive on Tuesdays.
As I mentioned a couple of times,
Andy and I cover this show on the watch.
More from a critical eye,
but we still chat it up.
We break down a couple of the scenes.
And then we will be back next Sunday night for episode three.
Any closing notes?
Can we call you the Maggot King or is that?
I kind of like that.
Okay.
Yeah.
That feels like a strong meeting anyway.
We'll see you guys next week.
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