The Ringer-Verse - 'House of the Dragon' Episode 4 Reactions | Talk the Thrones
Episode Date: September 12, 2022Gods be good! Chris Ryan is joined by Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson to give their immediate thoughts and reactions on the incredibly messed up fourth 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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Hey everyone. This is Chris Ryan from The Ringer. As many of you have heard by now, we lost a
treasured colleague and friend over the weekend. Jonathan Charks passed away on Saturday.
John was 34. He leaves behind a wife and a son, and we are obviously mourning his loss and sending
all of our love to his family right now. If you go to the ringer.com slash Jonathan Charks,
that's J-O-N-A-T-J-A-R-K-S. You will find a memorial page for John, which has links to his
GoFundMe that benefits his family.
family and the amazing writing he did throughout his experience. I encourage you to go there,
and if you can, please support the Charks family. Briefly, I will just say that John was among
the first people that we hired to work for the Ringer. So he was instrumental in defining the voice
and perspective of the site. He has as much to do with what this place is as anyone else.
And throughout his experience with cancer, John communicated eloquently about the challenges he
was facing, both through his writing and his podcasting. You could never stop John from talking
about his passions. It's one of the things I loved about him. Over the last few months,
whenever we would talk, whenever I would reach out to see how he was doing, I would try to
keep it very John focused, and the next thing I knew we would be talking about James Hardin
or Better Call Saul. He really loved this stuff. He loved talking about it, celebrating it,
debating it, illuminating it. We're going to keep putting out our pods and writing while we grieve,
but we wanted to let folks know that John was in our hearts and that his family was in our thoughts.
Thanks for listening.
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And welcome to Talk the Thrones.
My name is Chris Ryan.
I am an editor at the ringer.com.
And I am joined by Ringer senior staff writer Joanna Robinson
and the mayor of the street of silk.
Mallory Rubin and we're here to talk about the fourth episode of House of the Dragon.
It's called The King of the Narrow Sea.
It's so wonderful to have, would you call it a family reunion here today, guys?
Yeah.
A pleasant targ gathering, classic coming together.
We share everything here on Doctor Thrones.
So that was an episode of TV.
And I'm going to ask you just straight off the bat.
We could start with you, Mow.
Of the many, many things, what was the most fucked up thing that happened in that episode of House of the Dragon?
Let me say that this was my favorite episode of the season.
I loved it. Same.
Let's start there.
What was the most fucked up thing that happened this episode?
I think that you are supposed to say, or you might be expecting me to say,
Damon Targaryen trying to fuck his niece in public in a pleasure house?
I got to be honest.
I'm not sure that cracks my top five.
I'm serious.
I think the final four for me would be a ancient man from House Dundarian and a young boy from
House Blackwood back to back, proposing to Reneira.
House of the Dragon, Hot D.
on a three-episode streak of involving children and marriage plots.
Also, Lord Dundarian, the deep dry moat line.
I don't think that's going to get it done.
Next contender would be Allison needing to give Vassaris a sponge bath to gently dab his sores while he guzzles wine in the tub.
Uh-huh.
My next contender would be the...
harrowing, haunting Vassarous Allison's sex scene.
And then I think my next pick in my final four here would be Allison's judgment against
Reneira, the real disgust in her eyes at the prospect of Reneira sullying her virtue.
Those are my top four.
What about you guys?
Joe, what about you?
Anything outside of Mallory's four contenders there?
I think the cherry on the top of the royal marriage bed, which was my number one, would be
the like the rat from the depart
at the end of the departed
that like scurries across the top
of the four poster
just real
real fine
fine night for Allison
Ty Tower
how about you Chris
I think probably
the overhead shot
of Vissaris's sore
covered back
as he
as he performed his marital duties
with his young wife
was probably the moment
where I was like
is this really
where I've arrived in my life that this is what I'm doing.
Deeply miserable,
unhappy life, yes.
We can go through the episode itself.
This was a very, I wouldn't say claustrophobic,
but in previous episodes we've either had a set piece
or an adventure out into the woods.
This was largely taking place within the walls of Kingslanding itself.
You know, there was obviously a great escape out of the castle
and into, what was that district called again?
is that the circus district?
What was happening?
I mean, it's obviously like a place
that looks like Bourbon Street.
Yeah.
It's straight to meet on Mardi Gras, right?
Just where anything the heart desires is available.
Drama, theater, you know, sample plates for some of the food stalls,
and then any sexual perversion you wanted to explore,
you could do that in the neighborhood that Rainier escapes to.
I'll just go through the episode itself.
So this is the fourth episode.
It's called the King of the Narrow Sea.
That's in reference to what Damon has been crowned
after his victory over the crab feeder.
But I'll get to that.
So it opens up with Renira.
I kind of a Westerosi version of The Bachelorette,
which Mallory referred to.
And it would be funny if it wasn't so dehumanizing for Renera
and honestly fatal for a lot of her suitors
who are clashing while online to give their spiel
about why they deserve to be Renera's husband.
She bails on this dating game early with Sir Kristen, humiliating all the dudes and her father,
who are trying to pair her off for political benefit to various families, but ultimately
the Targaryens.
She gets back in King's Landing just in time as Damon shows up wearing a crown of wood or
kind of looks like a crown of thorns.
And this is a party foul because you're not supposed to be wearing a crown when you address
the real king.
But after hearing about Damon's conquest and the stepstones of Asseris daps up his
brother and is just like, you're back.
You're back of my cool book, you know?
And at a party later on, Renira and Damon talk in Valerian about the joys and pains of
marriage.
Beceras hears from Otto that Corliss is going to marry off his daughter to the guy who
runs Bravo, which would create a serious, like, financial, military and politically, like,
family worth reckoning with if that would happen.
There is an increased urgency around marrying off Renira, which is interesting because
that night, she goes out to what I would, to have what I would have.
I would call, I guess the British call a hendu. Is that what that is? Right? It's her and Damon,
Street of Silk, Pleasure House, you know, some great, like, food offerings, and then basically
a tapestry, to borrow a phrase used in this show episode itself, of sexual pleasure. And it's just
like, really just like an absolute mural of flesh. Everybody's going out.
each other.
Yeah.
Guys, girls, whatever, family members, old, young.
It's just like, honestly, the czar of the Telestrator couldn't even diagram the things
that were happening in that pleasure house.
But what does happen is Damon and Radira, they just get swept up in the moment.
And despite the fact that he is her uncle and she is quite young, they still.
start doing, like it starts a little bit of the air kissing, you know what I mean, which is
pretty illicit. And then there's some stuff happening below the belt line that we're going to
have to really talk about because I'm not exactly sure what happens. We'll get to it.
Going frame by frame? Yeah. Can't wait. Maybe.
Play by play.
After Damon, we have Damon's kind of like either his senses come to him or he fails to
perform. Renira deuces out on that situation, goes home and immediately sleeps with Sir Kristen.
to seal the night off.
While all this is happening,
we get a very cool scene of Viseris and Allison
making more heirs together that made me die a little bit on the inside.
Turns out Otto's got some little birds on the street.
So he tells Viseris that the word around the schoolyard
is that Reneer has defiled herself with Damon.
Veseris gets mad at everyone over this,
including Otto, Rennira, and Damon.
Allison, who had been snooping on this situation,
snooping seeming to run in the Hightower family,
confronts Rennira on the Damiener.
on the Damon stuff
and she basically lies on her dead mother's name
saying that she did not
hook up with Damon.
I guess technically...
Actually, we should amend our most fucked up thing
from the episode.
Yeah, swearing on your dead mom
that you didn't hook up with your uncle's...
Very rough.
Coming to number five.
Despite her protests,
Vassarrest is very pissed
and essentially marries her off to Corliss's son
but not before
he stops to do a little show
and tell with a dagger.
and tells her about how there's a prince who was promised
and that's the secret that we're guarding
and we got to get ready for the Song of Ice and Fire
Season 7 Game of Thrones.
A lot of people have thoughts on it, but, you know, like...
He was like, have you seen Rise of Skywalker?
Are you familiar with daggers that have detailed descriptions?
Have you logged into Reddit recently?
Anyway, so she understands or gets an even greater understanding
of what the sort of Targaryan family responsibility is
that's greater than any kind of sitting on a throne
or having a crown or running a kingdom.
It's really about this oncoming future evil
that they have to combat with the prince who was promised leading the way.
She gets what she wants.
Oh, so Renira agrees to this proposed union,
but her price for this is that Otto has to go
because she's like, this guy has been messing around for too long.
He's moving against you politically.
He's got you marrying his.
daughter, he's telling you that I'm, I'm, I'm trouble. We got to get rid of this guy. So she's
like, I'll marry Corliss's kid, but you got to get rid of Otto. He goes through with it.
He also goes through with having his maister, bring her a cup of abortion tea at the end of the
episode, which is just like, again, like number seven of the fucked up things that happen.
Okay. I want to talk a little bit about the ending of this episode, the dagger scene.
because this was something that I obviously noted.
Both of you reacted to quite passionately in the first episode
when Vassaris talks to Reneira for the first time
about the dream and what the Targaryens are actually responsible for.
Was, for me, a novice when it comes to this stuff,
and Joe, we can start with you here.
Was this a huge revelation to hear the prince who was promised
be uttered on this show,
or is this just a continuation of the song that Pissaris has been singing since the first episode?
It feels like a continuation of that first episode song,
but the fact that it is literally written on the dagger is truly wild to me.
This answers a couple questions for us about how the song was passed down through the generations.
Like, if people, if some kings died without passing it down,
did their heirs remember to shove the dagger, the family heirloom and the fire?
and reveal the writing there.
But I have follow-up questions for that.
Like, did Peter Baylish, Littlefinger, who had that dagger for a while,
never think to shove it in the fire?
Like, I feel like, I feel like that's something he would always be checking for visible ink.
Well, has Peter Balish ever seen Lord of the Rings and seen the one ring cast into the flames
to reveal the inscription?
A lot of this comes down to what other pieces of nerd culture, the characters in this show are
familiar with.
It's a great point.
But the fact that he's literally inscribed on the knife that then will kill the Knight King
in the future when Aria wields it is, of course, interesting.
But I think for this show, what's really interesting is this conversation,
what it boils down to when he says, you know, there's something more important than your
desires, Reneira, right?
Is this idea of duty, which Mallory likes to talk about a lot.
Molly loves this talk of, like, duty versus love and what do you choose in the world of
Westeros?
Love this the death of duty.
And I, and when she brought that,
up before we started watching this season, I was like, well, we're not going to get a lot of
talk about duty from the fucking Targaryens. Like, the Targaryians don't care about duty.
That's a stark concept. It's not a Targaryen concept. But this idea of the realm, which is
like what Varus would talk about all the time, like, what do we owe the people that we rule?
And this comes up in this very episode when they're out on the street watching a mummer's
farce, Chris's favorite thing.
Chris is Mommer's.
And Renier tries to chime in and she's like, Lies, like, Lies.
Lennar, and Damon's like, it matters what the small folk think.
Like, their opinion matters.
She's like, no, it doesn't.
And so her disconnect from the fact that to be queen means you have a responsibility to the
kingdom and all these people out here are your responsibility.
It's not just an inside the keep power play.
That all sort of came bubbling in the services episode, right, Mal?
Like, what do you think?
I'm currently thinking about how Reneera sounds like Saw Guerrera, shouting,
lies deception. So I'm just going to keep referencing other stories instead of talking about
this one, I guess. I was really, I was really, we've talked in each pod about the time frame.
And one of the spots that I found myself thinking most about the passage of time was this sequence,
because it's really notable to me that the premiere concludes with this massive reveal from
Vassaris to Reneiro, which is a huge canon download, but also more so even than naming her air,
the thing that cements that the trust and the choice and how, how, how, how,
real that is to him, how serious he is about it in that moment that he is passing down that
information to her, the burden of their rule. He then waits four and a half years to show her
this, to take the next step. And I think that is so emblematic of his failure and like deeply
rooted struggle as a father or limitation maybe as a father, as a mentor, as a king. He always talks
about the necessity, the burden that he carries, the weight that they shoulder, the things that
he needs her to be thinking about instead of just her own desire, as you mentioned that quote,
Joe. But he rarely takes the time to explain how, to show her what that looks like tangibly.
This should have been the next day for them. I'm glad to see. I'm glad to see she's finally graduated
from Cup Bear to having like an actual seat at the table, the small council. Oh yeah, I noticed that.
Yeah. But I think Chris for like what's also true, I love what.
you said there, Malin, I think what's also true, if we think about this is a succession story.
Yes.
The question of who has what information going forward, like the Mummers Fars lays it out for us that, like, you know, we've got Agon, the baby, Reneera and Damon are these sort of like contenders for the throne.
Who knows what going forward? Which of the Roy kids on Succession has some sort of like secret intel on Waystar Roy Quo that like might be important going forward?
So that's going to be interesting to think about who knows what as we figure out.
out who should sit their butt on that big chair.
To that point, I was pretty struck by the fact that the Kingsguard is bringing
Reneera into his chambers.
Kristen and another member of the Kingsguard are right there at the open door and Reneer
walks right up to the fire and the blade.
This is in plain sight.
This is multiple people in this moment can see that there.
And not that they're there to hear the Prince that was promised line and the subsequent
discussion, but people.
who are paying attention, and especially in an episode where the little birds are brought in
and Masaria's role is the white worm.
Where Allison is just like, I'm behind this changing.
Yeah, like we're meant to think in this episode about who is observing, hearing, seeing what.
And the fact that that was just out in plain sight really stood out to me.
Maseris needs to be a little, either needs to be a little more careful with this thing he thinks
this is this preciously guarded secret or just tell everyone.
You two don't regularly roast your carving knife?
Like that's not, just, you know, cleaning it.
Maybe he'll be able to tell them, yeah, I'm just using this to cauterize my most recent sore.
You know?
I wanted to, I guess the reason why I wanted to ask you, you know, Andy and I just had this discussion for the watch for tonight where Game of Thrones the show early on introduced this idea that winter was coming.
That for all of the, like, political, who's going to, you know, Ned and Circe and, you know, Robert,
Barathian and all the stuff that was happening in that first season. Very early on, they gave us a
glimpse of this existential threat that these people would eventually face. And in some ways,
that was the, it wasn't the only story engine, but it was the overstory engine. Like, eventually this is
coming. Eventually, we can, we can always check in on this every couple of episodes and be like,
is winter here? Is winter going to be long? What are we going to do when winter comes? What does that
mean. And House of the Dragon, probably like in, at least in terms of its text, does not have
something like that, right? Like it doesn't have a near supernatural kind of threat facing these
characters necessarily that I know of based on what we have seen so far. And that's,
I thought it was interesting that they have now returned to this idea that something governs
who becomes king or queen and what they do with that.
power beyond just like, how can we, in Damon's words, purify the Targaryen bloodline and restore
it to its glory that, like, that's what Damon ultimately wants to do, even though he's probably
also weirdly into his niece. So I wanted to throw that out and ask the two of you to the extent
that you're capable of answering that without giving away, like, well, this is what's going to happen
in this show. Like, whether or not you feel like this is the showrunners bringing in something
that's like, here's just a little seasoning to make this feel bigger than just Targary and Civil War.
I mean, I think it achieves that. I think it's doing a couple things. First of all, I guess this is, you know,
and we talked about this before, I think in episode one, but this is something that George R. Martin came up with,
this idea that, like, this traces back to Ake on the Conqueror. It's nowhere in the text that we've read.
And so it's, like, sent all the book readers in this huge, you know, downward spiral of who knew what when.
and like how does this explain how various Targaryans reacted whenever winter came?
They're like, winter's here.
Is this the winter?
Like, is this the one?
So, you know, keeping our eyes on winter.
But I think to your point, it gives more connective tissue to the original series,
which is obviously something HBO wants.
They want this to feel like a show that is both new yet familiar.
And this is a major way to do that.
I think it also connects to that larger through line of portents, signs.
signs, portents, the dreams, the prophecies.
And Joe made a really wonderful observation.
I believe this was on our episode two, House of Our Deep Dive, though.
Don't quote me on that because I can't remember which pot is witch anymore.
But Joe spoke so beautifully about this larger idea of Targaryan madness and the weight
that this information would have on each of these rulers and how interesting
that will be to track across this show and this story?
Like, what does this do to people once they know?
Is this what drives the Mad King Mad?
Right.
Exactly.
And like we're watching in real time,
the weight that this is inflicting on Vassaris,
a character who is already so inclined to put stock into his own dream,
this idea that we heard him discuss with Allison
by the bonfire, that pop and bonfire in episode three
about the power of prophecy compared to the power of dragons and the way that he so desperately
wanted to be a dreamer, he is really inclined to believe that this is the most serious thing in
his life and in the world. What does that do to a person? How does that influence the decisions
they make in the way they treat the other people in their lives and the expectations that
they hold for their children or anyone else around them? And I think that that will then continue
to be true for anyone who receives that information. So Joe called that out early and I think it's
really going to be central to the entire story that we're watching. The last,
larger quote about Targaryian madness is that Targaryian, when a Targaryian is born, a coin flips.
One side is greatness. The other side is madness. So it's sort of like, what will this do to you?
Will it drive you to greatness or will it drive you to madness? This big, huge burdensome knowledge that you have.
And she's already talked, she talks about it both in kind of like a dark way at the at the mummer's farce that she's at this week where she's just like, I don't give a shit with these people thinking of me.
Like, if I want to, I'll just ignite them.
Yeah.
Alarming.
And in other situations,
mostly related to, I think,
you know,
the treatment of women in the world that she's in.
She's just kind of like,
I don't really feel like we need to adhere
to the old ways of doing things
or what tradition is said.
And we know that eventually a Targaryen
will want to smash the wheel.
And like that,
that is something that runs through.
So I'm also kind of curious
about how it plays out
in terms of Targaryan traditionalists
or Targaryan reformers,
you know,
because sometimes,
sometimes the latter is actually not great.
Sometimes the ladder can be a reformer
but winds up lighting everything on fire in their wake.
Well, it's all connected, right?
Because if you think that you're reforming
in pursuit of saving the world,
then you'll stop at nothing to achieve that.
Now, Danny, from everything we know,
did not ever receive this information.
This, as far as we can tell so far
and maybe we'll learn more,
dies with Ragar.
That's our assumption at the moment.
But even so more broadly
for these other characters
in this slice of history,
I think this also connects to this other through line
we've been discussing a lot,
which was also really present in this episode,
this idea of loneliness.
I imagine even dragons get lonely, as Viceris says.
We've mentioned on many pods,
the Aman idea about Dineris,
Targary and alone in the world is a terrible thing.
The loneliness of this knowledge
is a specific thing for Viseris,
is a specific thing for Reneira.
But even though it is so particular to them,
it is something that connects them to Damon,
to Alicent, characters who are also defined
by feeling utterly,
utterly isolated from the people
that they would seek to be close to.
I have a cure for loneliness.
Is it sex?
Is it a field trip to the street of silk
with your uncle?
It's throwing on some Barney sweatshirt
and a beanie.
A slouch beanie.
And going out with your uncle.
This was an incredible outfit.
Seriously.
Getting in your cups.
I have this outfit.
And then going down to three submit bases.
Smiths in a nightclub in New York City in the early 80s and find it out just what you're into.
So let's just talk about that scene because honestly there, I mean, like there was a lot that
happened in this episode, but they made the choice to make this the centerpiece.
Some episodes are Dragon battles.
You said earlier there was no set piece.
I don't know what the fuck you're talking about.
Yeah.
Well, I guess I stand corrected.
This was the set piece of the episode.
It was this sexual ballet.
Extravaganza.
Oh.
Extravaganza.
Yeah.
I liked flesh mural, which is what you went with earlier.
I have a couple of things.
Either one of you answer any of these things to me.
I'm just going to point out some observations, okay?
Uh-huh.
So let's just go before the pleasure house.
I think Damon flying over the boat and buzzing the tower, so to speak, in the earlier scene.
Real maverick energy there.
Yeah.
There's a little bit of, that feels like a little bit more a loaded gesture after we see what happens in the rest of the episode, correct?
Yeah, a little, just the tip, foreshadowing.
Oh, Jesus.
No.
For me.
Yes.
Joe?
For me, I thought an important moment there is how, like, genuinely and, like, tenderly concerned Kristen Cole seemed to be for Reneera.
Yeah, he's a good guy.
You know, like to go from the unpredictability of Damon to the safe nurturing embrace arms of her.
or Kristen Cole.
All right.
So when we get into the pleasure zone,
I guess I just want to ask this.
Are you saying pleasure zone
because you said Buzz the Tower
and you have danger zone in your head right now?
Should we do like a little remix right here?
I'm also running out of ways to say...
High way to the pleasure zone.
I was just thinking of the auto zone.
Anyway, let's talk about the pleasure zone.
I guess I'm going to ask this question on a podcast.
Damon couldn't perform
because he chronically fails to do so
or because the little voice inside his head told him not to have sex with his niece?
I think this is going to be the riff that drives House of Ar apart, that tears us apart.
Because I think it was more than just a performance issue for Damon.
I think there's something.
Yeah.
Okay, never mind.
We agree.
Never mind.
I thought, given the barrage of texts we've gotten from Mallory on this issue,
I thought she was going to come down firmly on it was a performance issue.
So the read that we have is that they're getting after it.
It's getting hotter and hotter and steamy.
and steamier, he then all of a sudden stops kissing her and is like, I can't. We can't.
But she's also like, you definitely want to though, right? Right. Like, I'm trying to like read the
choreography here. It's really interesting that this is what I'm discussing on it.
No, no, but keep going. Yeah. Keep giving us. But I think it's worth noting because it's like,
what are his designs on her and like what's the purpose of this? Like, they obviously have chemistry.
Ever since he first got here when she was 14 gross,
but definitely in this episode,
he's looking at her like a cat looks like a bull creed.
Like that is something that he has been doing.
On the bridge at Dragonstone, they have,
sparks are flying.
Sparks are plenty.
Another question to ask, and you might ask it, Chris,
is like, you know, about how much of this is a calculated political play
for Damon to put Rainier in a position to compromise her so much
that Viseras is forced to marry her on.
to Damon and then Damon gets to be king anyway, which, you know, we get that conversation
with Viseris later.
I think all of those ingredients are in the mix and is what makes Damon such an interesting
character because I think that move that he makes right before they start to go at it where
he pulls the slouch beanie off.
Yes.
To make it so that everyone knows who this is down there, that seems like the part of Damon
that's like, I'm going to compromise her and then I'm going to get what I want.
I was almost bummed out that Otto had such an obvious, like, the kid hanging outside
because it would have been really funny if someone was like, Otto, Otto.
I saw the princess at a pleasure house and people were like, well, were you at the pleasure
house?
And the guy would be like, uh.
Oh, God.
But I mean, that's the thing.
And that's what Viseris and like, Viseras says, so what?
When Otto's like, you're the princess is at the pleasure house.
He's like, so what?
And then I love how you were making Christ do the play-by-a-play much with the way that Vassaris is like, you got to say it, Otto, if you're going to walk into my room to keys my daughter or something.
You got to do the whole thing.
Speak it plainly.
Yeah.
He's like, so what if she was there?
And then he's like, well, she was, you know, fucking her uncle publicly.
That's a bummer.
But so I guess the rules are she can go and observe.
And there were many, like, well-dressed lords there.
So it's like, it's not a problem to be in the pleasure house.
It's a problem as a royal woman to lose your virginity before the political marriage that you're supposed to have.
Mal, any comments on Damon's performance anxiety?
Many, most of which I'm afraid to make on a podcast, I think you two summed it up well.
I thought that the flimsy nature of the disguise was notable to me as well, even before he removes the beanie because we have this moment where Renira fleeing from the,
Flaming Hot Cheeto vendor.
Runs into a member of the Goldblok who recognizes her immediately.
Like it's no secret that they will be recognizable.
These are two of the most recognizable people in the entire world.
Damon himself, whether he actually said air for a day, is not relevant.
I mean, it is more broadly, but in this sense is not.
What's relevant is that his exploits in Pleasure House,
make their way back into the Red Keep, and he knows that.
And so he brought her into that situation, knowing that.
I think that is true.
I also think it's true, as you said, that they have genuine passion for each other.
These are people who are drawn to each other magnetically.
The way when she is on the marriage tour, receiving all of these suitors, she has no interest in, what is she doing?
She's holding the necklace that he gave her.
When he walks in, fresh haircut, shiny armor, gray scale riddled crap feeder hammer in his hand,
she is looking at him with lust in her eyes.
And he looks at her with much the same expression in the godswood later.
So they are drawn to each other.
You can feel that magnetism in that sequence.
The exact play-by-play of what is unfolding with the removing of the hat, the kissing,
pinning against the wall.
I have such detailed notes on this scene.
You would not believe it.
Save it for the deep time.
We got a deep time for that.
Fear not.
Taking off her, opening her shirt,
taking down her pants,
turns her around on the wall,
then she turns back and kiss him
and that's when he pulls away.
And I think it is a mixture of...
Do you think we could put the old BS report warning
at the top of House of R this week
where it's like,
this is a free-flowing conversation
that occasionally touches on a mature topic?
That's a good idea.
It's a good idea.
You know, we did see him in episode one under Wadjo and I have subsequently taken to calling
his cloak of shame.
So he has had some performance issues before.
And that's okay.
It happens nothing to be ashamed of.
I'm only pointing it out because it seems like an issue for him.
And that's, you know.
I would say that Damon is a character riddled by desire or driven by desire, but riddled
by self-doubt.
And I think that this scene embodies a lot of that, but so does his subsequent
conversation with Vassaris in the throne room later.
After talking with you too, I am convinced that his ultimate goal, like, is I knew if I did
this, we would get caught because I was going to expose us.
And that this is what Viseris would say and that this is the only way I could reveal to
him like what the choice should be, which is to marry me off to her and create the super
Targaryen.
The thing he says in the book, which is even a little tougher than what he says,
in this episode.
He says,
"'Give the girl to me to wife,
who else would take her now?'
That's what he says to the Sarah's.
But I think it's a little bit more complicated.
Dame, come on, man.
But I think it's more complicated than that, right?
Mallory, hit it.
All of that is there.
True.
And hard to ignore.
But I couldn't stop thinking about the conversation
that Damon and Renera had
after the welcome home party.
God's one.
What a location for that little shind?
They're getting as much use out of that wherewood tree as they can.
They're like, what can we set under this tree?
One of the things that Damon says to Rainera,
and that is a really, really rich and intriguing conversation
where Renera reveals and shares a lot about how she feels about marriage and childbirth
and all of these very real things that are weighing on her deeply
and that she is rebelling against.
And one of the things that Damon says to her is,
you cannot live your life in fear or you will forsake the best parts of it.
And I think that that is as central to his character and as central to what is unfolding here
as the ambition and any sort of scheming or striving because he's like a very spirited person.
And it's a lot of this second son little brother energy where so much of his life has been
defined by needing to prove his worth and trying to earn other people's affection.
and doing the things that makes him happy.
The way that he says, like,
fucking is a pleasure,
that's a person who means that.
Spends a lot of his time living inside of that idea.
And I think that that's the thing
that he wants Renira to embrace
and really experience too.
But more than one thing can be true at once.
That's why he's an interesting character.
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In the previous episode, Otto tries to marry off Reneera to a two-year-old.
He suggests that they do that.
So my question to you, Joe, is
how scandalous would it be
if Damon was just like a suitor
and that there wasn't the added component
of did Damon take her virginity?
I think, so if we're ranking like the scandals here,
the options, I think that
Damon, if Damon didn't have,
already have a wife
and wanted to marry his niece, Renira.
Damon's first wife.
She's a real problem, right?
Yeah.
But if he wanted to marry Renira, that's super normal.
Like, could not be more normal in House Targaryen, right?
Right, Mallory?
I'm not wrong about this.
Positively tame.
Yeah, I wasn't sure whether that had societally been starting to age out a little bit.
But I guess not.
The Targaryis are still marrying like siblings to siblings.
Like, it's totally fine.
No prob.
The question of Sir Kristen and Damon, like, pre-marriage.
I think I've been.
I think in terms of marriage, in terms of your wish last week, Chris, of like, can she marry good old Chris and Cole?
That's way more scandalous than marrying her uncle is marrying, you know, someone of lower station on the Kings Guard, etc.
So like if premarital sex is off the table and it's not, it's on the table, it's on the, in the pleasure palace on, you know, whatever.
But like when you say it's on the table, you mean like it's on the painted table.
I do.
Any other surface that they can find.
Yeah.
Orgy tapestry.
you could possibly find.
Yeah.
Like that's, that's, and I don't know what I'm genuinely, like, we're recording this a little early.
I'm really curious to see what happens with the discourse.
We're not here to talk about the discourse, but I don't know how how clutch the pearls are
going to be.
This is something that we've been trying to like ready people for.
This is a Targaryen show.
Like incest is everywhere.
I thought, I thought everybody was going to lose it after the first episode with the, the
jousting, dying childbirth montage.
And people seem to roll with it.
So what's a night at the pleasure house with your uncle, you know?
I guess the question, like, if you want to relate this to Jamie and Circe and, like, how people felt about that and that show versus this show, like, that was presented as shameful.
And this incest, Targaryen incest is supposed to be pretty, like, normalized at this time.
And there's also the age gap.
And it doesn't, like, I'm not clutching pearls necessarily, but I feel like people are going to want to talk about.
how Damon is essentially groomed Reneer,
which is not true.
I'm sure it will come up.
Yeah.
So, I don't know.
The truth is,
is they do not do the deed.
Right.
So,
Reneira coming back,
and she's probably thinking to herself,
you know,
well, I'm going to just deny everything
until I'm, like,
because ultimately at the end of the day,
this is hearsay.
Why does she go so far
as to swear on her mother,
her dead mother that nothing happened to Allison.
Were you surprised when it happened when she said that?
Like, I'm not surprised that she doesn't trust Allison.
Like, after everything that's happened, like, at the start of the episode,
you're seeing these women, like, come back together in a way that's very, like, hopeful,
opening up to each other, grabbing each other's hands, talking about how they missed each other.
And so you're like, okay, are we moving back to her, okay, we're going to run out of a dragon
and eat cake together?
Like, let's do it, ladies.
And then this happens.
And I was watching, yeah, going, why, why, Reneira?
Why are you?
Like, I really, I feel like my read on Allison in this episode is that if Reneer had told her the truth,
Allison would have helped her and protected her.
But I can understand why Reneer would feel that that was not the case.
I feel like Allison came at her with real horror in her eyes and judgment in her words and on her face.
And we have a lot of shots in this episode of events.
Allison, you know, gazing out at the sept.
I think there's a lot of real tragic stuff happening with Allison's in this episode.
And I have a lot of sympathy for her.
But inside of specifically that scene with Reneira,
I think that Reneira sensed that this was not something that Allison would approve of or understand.
And like, even in that bench sequence at the earlier in the episode at the, at that party,
where there is this tenderness and sort of rediscovered affection between them that we can assume,
at least, is the first time they've experienced anything like that with each other for years,
based on where we saw them last episode, right?
Yeah, yeah.
But even inside of that, there is such a tension point over this idea of, you know, being made to produce airs.
And Reneera is saying that with such disdain.
And, of course, that is Allison's circumstance.
and we see that play out on her face in real time
to the point where Reneer even grabs her hand and apologizes.
She apologized. She's sorry, yeah.
Yeah.
And I thought that one of the most compelling parts of this episode
in terms of really reinforcing this theme and this idea
was this cutting between.
Because you have the contrast of what happens with Reneer and Damon
and then Reneer and Kristen,
which I also think is interesting and notable
in terms of the very raucous public,
sensory overload nature of the Damon scene
and the very interesting.
intimate, personal, quiet, private Kristen sequence, the way he folds and looks at his white cloak.
Like, you're not just addressing a person. He's uncloaking his vows. But we are cutting between
Allison. We see her, that conversation on the bench. We see the look on her face as she is
rocking their new child, Helena, the baby who won't stop crying. She is drinking a potion
before bed.
I presumed that was a sleeping
a sleeping potion
of some sort.
She looks miserable
and deeply lonely
throughout this entire episode.
The bathing sequence.
She's summoned
to Viseris's chambers.
And the camera is above,
so we see these sores on his back,
but also this vacant expression
in her eyes.
I was wondering if that shot
was because Patty wasn't there that day,
so they needed like a back double.
I actually also wondered that
if for like everyone's
comfort or whatever. But like also, I mean, to your point, Mal, like, that angle makes her look
so pinned down. Oh, yeah. So I agree with all of that. I think you're dead on about all of that,
especially like when she's jiggling Helena on her hip, the wall, the window looks like a cage,
like looks absolutely like a cage. It's like she's trapped and she's feeling trapped.
I still feel, I don't, I'm like, I'm curious what you think, Chris, like I still feel like,
yes, Allison is judging her and would judge her and wouldn't understand. She wouldn't be like,
that's fine that you went out with Damon. But I think if Rehnero was like, I don't know,
I was confused. I got swept up in the moment, like something like that. I don't think Allison
would run to her father. I don't think that's what she would do in this moment. This is the
interesting thing with what they're trying to do on this show with like the time span. So one of the
fascinating things that happens to you as you age out of childhood and into adulthood is how you define
yourself and is Allison defining herself as Viseras's wife, as Reneer's friend, as Otto's daughter,
you know, is she defining herself as the queen, you know, as the mother of the would-be possible
heir of the throne? You know, like, there are so many different questions of identity that go into,
especially this point in people's lives, even if in such a fucked up world as Game of Thrones,
like, still, you're like, huh, like, do I think of myself as this or do I think of myself as that?
Joe, I take your point, like, if Rainer had been like, honestly, like, I got kind of hammered
and, like, next thing I knew, I was in this crazy place.
And, you know, within my family, it's not out of the question for the stuff like this to happen.
But, like, I'm glad I didn't do it.
I don't know.
I mean, would she have been more scandalized if she had been like, and then I came home
and immediately lost my virginity to Sir Kristen?
Like, how far could the truth go there, I guess?
Yeah, that's a good question.
I think what, so I agree, Joe, I don't think she would have just run off and tattle.
and spread the reveal around.
I'm with you there.
To me, what I guess feels more germane
than that hypothetical
is the fact that we don't get to see
because Reneera doesn't feel
like this is a person she can tell the truth to anymore.
And, you know, we hear Allison say it,
Chris, to that point of how do you think about yourself
and who you are and who you've become?
I think this is something that Allison
is tormented by right now,
and it's really devastating because she says,
when she's telling Rennara that she's glad she's home,
she says, I find I have few friends
lately. I like to believe I'm the lady Allison, but all anyone sees when they look at me now is the
queen. And again, so if you think about those cutting scenes in that contrast, where she's trying to tell
Reneira earlier, like, oh, what misery, all of these men vying for your favor. And Reneer is saying,
to me, that is misery because this is not what I want. I don't want to be a pawn and someone else's
political game. And Allison's like, I didn't have a choice at all, right? And so she is some choice.
Yeah. Well, but but but to Rainira, that's not, that's like small progress or no progress at all because the reality is she feels trapped in her life just as Allison does. And I think that's one of the tragic things unfolding here is that actually both of these women are trapped by their circumstance. And will, will they be able to live in that truth together or will it drive them apart? And so Renera, just for that night gets to not only experience freedom and we hear her literalize that and say that. Like I just want I don't want to think about my, the, the, the, the, the,
the burdens of my inheritance for tonight. I just want to, I want to have fun. I want to be free.
That freedom, but also that pleasure. And you can see her in real time, both with Damon and
them with Kristen, like, coming alive in her own body and really, like, experiencing what it,
what it means to grow up and be a woman and feel that spark with somebody else. And that's not
something that is a part of Allison's life. And that's, like, devastating. So I thought that was all
really effective and well done. And obviously, it's a scandalous and salacious episode, but I
thought it was like a pretty thematically powerful one too.
I want to circle back that to Chris's.
I think Chris is, I think you're right, Mallory.
And I think Chris's question is really key here of like how does Allison define herself?
Because I think it's so interesting that the show wants us and wants Allison to ask that
question of herself in a way that the book decided it did not have space for.
And that's what is like the benefit of spending these few episodes with these younger actresses in this role.
because this time for Allison especially is something we don't have any context for in the books.
And so I really appreciate that this show is deepening the interior lives of these young women on the road to what's going to come next.
It's so much more nuanced and so much more, you know, with love and respect to George, he was trying to write a fast, jaunty little history and actually finish a book.
Like, it's just so much more time and complexity to a character.
What I love about someone like Allison at this point is like we've seen her last week.
I think Chris noted this last week, like play the game.
She can play it.
She can steer Vassaris in a certain direction.
She's not even playing the game this week.
She's just trying to figure out if she wants to even be in the game or what her role in the game is and all that sort of stuff.
And I think that's really interesting.
Let's talk a little bit about Allison's father.
So quite a comeuppance for Otto this week.
He winds up being.
Couldn't have happened to a nicer guy.
Yeah, and he was playing the game on the edge and he fell off the edge.
You know, like he was definitely pushing his agenda and people started to figure it out and really blew up his spot.
I guess my question to you, Mal, is when Reneira is like, fine, you want me to marry Corliss's son, you got to clean up your own house then.
Obviously, he's been, Vissaris has been looking at auto askew going back at least last episode, if not more.
and that comprises, you know, years of time.
I think that he can look at marrying Allison
as the ultimate act of his own will
since he turned down, you know,
marrying Corliss and Renice's son,
so, or daughter.
So, like, he is obviously like,
that was an act of free will,
but maybe he's now looking at that is like,
was that sort of orchestrated by Otto?
Now he's got this gossip monger
who's telling him about what his daughter is doing
and having his daughter followed,
and he's just like,
what is going on with you?
But I guess my question is, is like, do you think that he fully understood the Vesaris,
understood the sort of machinations of Otto?
Or did Reneer, yeah, did Reneer blow his mind with her?
This guy's fucked up.
And if you want me to do what you want me to do, you got to get him out of here.
I think somewhere in between.
I think that this had been a realization and a reckoning that was building over time.
And the conversation with Reneira was the final straw that forced Viseras to act.
But that's like, again, this key aspect of his character and his arc.
It always comes down to the moment where he is forced to act, where he has no choice but to make a decision because of a pitch or an appeal or a plea from somebody else.
And so the fact that actually I think this had been dawning on him definitively sooner and it took a moment like of this tension and consequence for him to actually do something about it says a lot about their relationship.
but it's in a sad way too, because I think that Viseris,
this connects to that loneliness discussion,
actually has a lot of gratitude toward Otto.
And he voices that here.
He says, like, you taught me how to be king.
He would have been utterly lost without this guy.
And that's a very real thing.
But it's also a real thing that Otto has manipulated and led him toward decisions
for quite a long stretch of time here.
So, Reneer's not even the first person to bring this to his attention.
Like, look back to episode one when,
Damon is saying why this guy instead of me?
And Vassaris in that moment is saying an unwavering and loyal hand.
And Damon says a second son who stands to inherit nothing.
He doesn't cease for himself.
So these seeds have been planted.
In episode three, Viseras starts to vocalize some of it when he pushes back on the
Agonne agenda and says enough of the fucking politicking.
The Agonne agenda.
The Agen's agenda.
But I was like,
whoa, like actually said out loud,
whoa, when he brought up his father,
Baylon, the Spring Prince, and went that far back.
I didn't get that. Can you guys,
can you guys help me out with that? What was going on there?
So, you know, we didn't have time actually
to really get into the, to bring up
bail on last week. And honestly,
we don't really now either. But it,
he's a very, like all
members of the Targaryan line,
like they're always a shadow and a
looming specter in these people's lives.
And Baylon
died after, or,
a royal hunt, which is why I thought we might talk about it a little bit last week.
And maybe that was something that was on the Sarah's mind in some capacity.
But he was not initially Jeharis's heir.
That was Reneas's father.
Baylon was the second son.
And after his older brother's death, he became the heir, beloved by all, spring prince,
Baylon the brave, and just dropped dead because of his appendix exploded.
Burst belly.
Burst belly.
A great Georgism there.
And that is when Otto moved into power, as we hear in this moment.
And the way that Vesaris was looking that far back into that depth of history,
Jaharis's reign, not even his own, to say, when was the point where you started thinking
about yourself instead of the realm instead of me?
And like, to your point earlier, Chris, about how Otto was trying to work Vassaris,
like, what's the most effective way to control somebody?
It's not to constantly make them do things.
they don't want to do. It's to make them think they do want to do the thing. And that's why I think
hearing Viseris talk about Allison here was so damning, much more so than everything with Reneira,
honestly, because he's saying this was the thing, the only thing that pulled me out of my grief.
And for that to have had some sort of ulterior, sinister motive is like a devastating thing
to have to confront. What do you think Viseres' first clue that maybe Allison wasn't in love with
him. Was it when he like tried to force her to look at him while they're having sex and she gives him a fake smile and then like turns away from him again? Was it that?
That's such a weird like vibe where he's just like, I'm here with all my like leprosy nurses getting bathed. And then I was like, I got it. You know, this doesn't, this doesn't drink wine in the tub. Like he's constantly. Come on. Who among us? Constantly guzzling the booze.
Do you know what the best feeling in the whole world is, Mallory?
Joe's like, I love a glass of wine in the tub.
And honestly, so do I.
So, no judgment.
This is not about wine in the tub.
It's about Fasaurus.
The best feeling in the whole world is the Bull Durham.
It's the hot shower, ice cold beer at the same time.
Wow.
Yeah, yeah.
You get like a champagne of beers in the shower.
Oh, my God.
He brought Kossner into him.
What are you going to do?
Now I'm thinking about Crash Davis and won't be able to concentrate on anything else.
Now I'm thinking about.
Costner ironing and his boxers.
Thanks, Chris.
The thing with the thing with the Viceris firing auto scene,
part of it is like, I feel like he's building up his file for HR.
He's like, this is why I had to let this guy go.
Here are all the previous offenses documented.
But it's also very classic Viceris to try to please everyone and please no one at the same time.
Like he's trying to please Reneer here by getting rid of Otto,
but also telling Otto, but also telling Otto,
you were good in these ways, but also bad in these ways.
And Roonnier, okay, I'll do what you want here.
But now you got to marry Lenore, like all this sort of stuff.
That's the half measure, the shitty two stabs to kill the stag move from Viseris.
I really love, like, you know, it's Agon the Conqueror, the Mad King.
Vesaris, the people pleaser.
Yeah.
He's just like, he's just a guy who just can't help and help.
It's a better moniker than, you know,
maggot fingers or whatever other names he might earn.
I'm glad you mentioned the stag and the double thrust and the hunt there
because like that whole, that show, that play acting,
were you guys struck?
I was so struck by, first of all,
how many of the scenes between Vassaris and Damon have taken place in the throne room?
Going back to the premiere, right?
It's so interesting to me that every time Vassar's faces his brother
in some sort of tense moment.
He needs to be standing in a hall surrounded by statues of Targaryen kings,
the iron throne looming behind him to remind Damon,
but also honestly himself, yes, that he is the one in charge.
And you mentioned the crown, Joe.
So he receives, Damon comes in and he's looking great.
He's got the fresh cut.
He's got his driftwood crown on.
He's holding, he's in his armor, he's holding the cap of his hammer.
Do you think he got that on Etsy?
Like, where did that crown come from?
from. Oh no, they totally gave me this. This is just like a gift. All the people in the
stepstones, they were like coming up to me, tears in their eyes. Corlis crowns them in fire
and blood, notable. Yeah. But we have, we see demon coming in just looking like flying in on his
dragon, amazing, coming in, having defeated his enemy, seasoned in battle. We hear elsewhere in this
episode of Asaris, who's nostalgic, talking back to their mother, saying like, I wasn't the warrior.
I wasn't the one who could do these things.
And Vesaris has to receive these decorative adornments.
He receives his crown.
He receives Blackfire.
We are coming off an episode where we see Damon Weald Dark Sister, the other ancestral Valerian steel sword of House Targaryen and cut through legions of foes with frankly ease.
Viseris is using Blackfire as a walking stick.
It's a walking stick.
Yeah.
You pointed this out a couple of episodes ago, Melody, that he was like leading on it.
this episode, he was, it was just like, oh, it's a cane.
It's a cane for him, this, this ancestral sword.
It's, it's a tough move.
You know, you mentioned it like where those, where those conversations always take place.
I don't think I've ever seen Damon the least bit afraid of Fissaris.
I don't even think when Fissaris has that dagger to his throat, he's like, you're not going to do this.
And he is suggesting some truly, you know, earth-shaking shit where he's just like, you should marry her off to me, you know, like, and
he's just like, I'll fucking kill you.
And Damon's just like, no, you're not.
I don't know why.
I don't know what the hold is that he has over him
or whether he just thinks that Fissaris is just ultimately
like weak sauce, but it is kind of notable.
Maybe it's Matt Smith's performance.
He never seems the least bit shaken by Fasars.
Yeah, he was flat out on the floor
and seemed way more in control of that situation
than the king.
Yeah, for sure.
Who becomes hand?
And is it hard?
I would just imagine, like, when you fire,
your hand, there's just a lot of, like, you're very politically vulnerable. So is, is Corliss a logical,
like, if we're going to truly unite the House Valerian with House Targaryen? Corlis should get this
job. Obviously, my personal pick would be Lionel, strong. But where does he go next, Joe? I don't think,
how do I answer that, Chris? Oh, because you do know.
Yeah. Our time also stands to that. I guess I'm sorry. I got. I got.
I keep forgetting.
I do think we can safely say the show has to this point set up no sensible alternative other than Lionel Strong.
That's the only actual choice that Viseris has to make.
Whether he makes that choice is another matter.
Corliss, we're on step one of working to bridge that divide with the Reneira-Lanar marriage pact.
But Corliss is multiple years deep into giving Viseris two very public seahorse-shaped middle fingers.
Thailand, Lanister arrived, like, very recently.
Melos is basically, like, their maggot and tea, like, Instacart guy.
That's not going to happen.
And Beesbury is only there as, like, a sound bike guy, you know?
Tyler Lannis.
I don't know.
Like, the...
Can I just talk about Mastor Mellos on the Moon Tea for a second?
Yeah, please.
I completely understand.
Is that what we call it?
Yeah, that's what it's called in short-term art.
I completely understand
that we're trying to keep the circle of confidence tight, right?
Real small, small circle here.
I just still would not have sent an 80-year-old man
to give my daughter some mooney.
It's not what I would have done.
I completely agree with you.
I have a, like, we can wrap up soon,
but I had a question, this is sort of an odd scene.
Masaria.
So, I guess, moved out of Dragonstone, right?
So here's my take on what's going on here.
I think she hasn't seen Damans and she walked out of that scene in Dragonstone.
And I think she's back at King's Landing.
I think there's an implication that she owns property.
She tells them to pay for the room on the way out.
The first thing you should do once you get a little bit of money.
Yeah, invest in the street of silk and get some property.
She's also turned herself into something of a spy master, which is really fun.
Because you mentioned the little bird.
What's the chain, when that kid shows up at the palace,
They say it's a message from the white worm.
The white worm is one of Masaria's names in the book.
Lady Misery is another fun one.
And then later we see that kid come in when she's with Damon and give her some money.
So she's the one who sent the little bird to Otto.
Did she do that to fuck with Damon because she's pissed at him at what happened with
Dragonstone or some other thing or just to earn some money because she doesn't care?
I don't know exactly what her motivation was, but she's back in town.
She's no longer a sex worker.
She's now some kind of spy master, right now?
And she's been doing this for some time.
Because one of the things that Otto says to Vassaris is, as your hand, I must maintain
trusted sources of information.
And this person's never steered me wrong.
Never led me astray.
So Masaria and her little birds have been feeding auto reliable intel for some time now.
I have one more like kind of like help me out here question.
I obviously am familiar with Bravo's in the main show.
Oysters, clams, and cockles.
But marrying into the Bravo's family or whatever,
like they are the big bank of this world as much as they are in the future.
Right?
The Iron Bank of Bravo's, like that's already a thing that they have money there.
There's been a long history with Targaryans sort of having difficulty with Bravos
because the Bravosi, the Free Cities hate the Targaryans
and because they come from Valeria, so they hate the Targary.
I don't know that they would necessarily like the Valerians that much better necessarily because they're also an old Valeria family, but at least they don't have dragons, I suppose.
But yeah, this is a big, this has been a tricky.
Yeah, that's true.
This would be like a tricky diplomatic relationship between like a daint between Bravo's and the Targaryens.
So if Corlis gets Bravo's on his team, that's just a major unbalancing of the scales in terms of these families.
for sure. Okay. Well, any other closing notes that you wanted to drop on this episode? I know obviously
you'll go really deep on this on House of R on Tuesday. Malory, Mallory, did you do any research for
where do X hands go aside from being beheaded? Where do whores go? Where do X hands go?
You know, yeah, I actually was thinking about that since Chris had expressed an interest in chatting about that.
I was just like, is he just hanging around? Because his daughter's still the queen. So does he like,
is he exiled or does he get like? Royal father-in-law? Yeah, right. There's some
options, right?
Like, Tywin just went back to Castorley Rock.
He was the Mad King's hand, right?
And then Jamie Lancer gets appointed the King's Guard, and Tywin's like, fine, I'll go back
to my beautiful estate and, I don't know, plot your downfall, I guess.
Brennan Rivers is a hand that was sent to the wall.
That's something that happened to a hand of the king.
I was thinking about Roger, our guy Lord Roger Barathean a lot, because that's, like,
pretty recent Targaryan history since that happened.
early, admittedly, in Jeharis's reign, but still, like, a hand who, a hand who overplayed his hand
made way too risky of a push. And Chris, actually, you'll love this because this connects to incest
and Targaryans like it to fuck each other.
Full circle, baby.
Jay Harris. And his sister, the good queen Alessane, they were brother and sister who really wanted
to marry each other no matter what other people told them.
That's actually what led to the doctrine of exceptionalism,
which you've heard us talk about before.
This actual writing into law of the idea that, yes, correct,
incest is bad.
The faith of the seven prohibits it, except we're different.
We're the Targaryen so we can fuck each other all we want.
Back off.
And Lord Roger, who married Jahars' mother,
was not in favor of this match and thought it would lead to the realm
rebelling against them and citing the rage of the faith again
and ended up going through all sorts of plots and schemes,
schemes and plots our fave there.
And ultimately was removed as hand.
But Jeharris, who, as we've noted before, was named the conciliator and gave a lot of grace
and second chances to people eventually welcomed him back into the fold.
But with multiple conditions and a really dope, let me walk you by my dragon in the courtyard
to remind you that I have this and that you shouldn't fuck with me again.
So it's possible to maintain some sort of relationship, but it's also very possible that you end up like Ned, beheaded, or you end up like Lucas Harroway, the hand of Magar the cruel, beheaded because Magar thought that he was working against him.
It really seems like it's one of two options. You get to beheaded.
Or you go on. You go chill for a bit. And then you'll find your way involved in political plots in the future.
Ryan Redwine who started this season of television as the Lord Commander
was a notoriously shitty hand of the king.
Couldn't last a year.
Didn't make it a year.
And then got eaten by crustaceans on the beach.
So they just put him back on the Kingsguard.
Lord Commander of the Kingsguard.
Great work if you can get it.
One last thing before we go on this note.
And I just want to say rewatching this episode, it's like Feast for the Eyes.
There's a lot going on.
But actually my favorite shot,
and maybe performance is from Riesufant's Auto High Tower
right before he goes into Vassaris to tell him this.
It's a slightly overhead shot of him,
and it's just him weighing like, is this the move?
Yeah.
Is this the move?
What's the move here?
And the look on his face when he gets fired,
and he's like, that wasn't the move.
I chose poorly.
Exactly.
I really loved that.
It chose wrong.
The only other thing I was going to say is just the bracken,
Blackwood dispute for book readers.
Great to see on the screen.
What a treat.
It's interesting.
I mean, like that that was the original,
that was the kid and the other guy.
Yeah.
Really fun.
Those guys worked out their differences.
Those houses meet each other.
We were produced by Steve Allman today, as always.
And it was wonderful to talk to the two of you,
Joanna and Mallory.
You can hear them on Tuesday on House of R doing a deep dive.
Just hide your kids for that one.
Or don't because apparently there are no rule.
You can listen to The Watch on Sunday nights as well,
and we'll be back next week with episode five.
It's great chatting with you.
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