I’m sorry for this late reply, I have been gone, family health, personal health, it’s all been a bit overwhelming and likely will be for the foreseeable future. Sort of desperately seeking distractions at the moment. Thank you for the kind message.
Tag: anon asks
i really like your takedown of the season 2 finale on the 100 with that total turn of events where Lexa actually has a cool plan so i’m now wondering like how could she have turned around the hakeldama mess? I don’t think they did right there but I don’t know how or what to do different.
I’m so very sorry for the long delay on an answer. I’ll do my best here, but I’m sure others have covered this as well.
I think Lexa’s biggest mistake here was not taking charge immediately. She allowed Clarke to influence ‘blood must not have blood’ and she walked away, went home to Polis and sat it out until it literally killed her.
I don’t know the logistics for the Grounders, but if they had the ability, I would have immediately ordered all the bodies to be gathered up and placed on some mass transport system (wagons? biers?). Since she had already ordered her army to Arkadia (that was seemingly forgotten in the episode), she could have ordered her captains/generals to have her army circle the camp, with something akin to fireballs/flaming arrows at the ready (do they have something like Molotov cocktails?). Just have them lit up, prepared to fire on Arkadia (threatening to burn it down before any Skaikru can get a shot off might be an effective threat, and they’ve got plenty of explosive material there, not to mention the immediate loss of life). Lexa has to turn this situation to her advantage, not let Pike rest on his murderous laurels in Arkadia. Take the fight to him, immediately, catch him off guard. She also spreads the story to her people that they have to save their brothers and sisters in Arkadia who have been ‘terrorised’ by Pike and his conspirators, setting up a redemption for Arkadia once this is all over (to Clarke’s obvious relief).
So she’s ordered her army to surround Arkadia, ready to burn it down at a moment’s notice. She has her soldiers bring the bodies of the dead before Arkadia’s gates and lay them out, for the Skaikru to see what Pike did (if they’ve got consciences, this will affect everyone and force them to a decision about whether to support a mass murderer – a bit ironic, really). Lexa eads this charge herself, she has to. She announces to Arkadia Pike’s crimes, the bodies of the fallen, that they are about to burn down Arkadia, unless Pike and his conspirators are handed over. She gives them one hour. Might be useful to have Clarke speaking to them as well, telling them to surrender (I’d never have let Clarke enter the camp, but use Octavia as a means to deliver the message, to help push the others to the right side).
Being closely surrounded, their camp about to burn, being low on food (Pike already told us this), now aware of the deaths he caused, the Sky people will have no choice but to either give up Pike or fight to the death. Kane should be the voice of reason here, pointing out Pike’s folly, they are surrounded by thousands, on land that belongs to the Grounders, and they’ve wronged them, again, more lives taken for no good reason. Kane believes in Lexa’s fairness, knows if they surrender, the rest will come to no harm. If Pike has a shred of decency left (he’s a ridiculous character in many ways, the school teacher who went this far without considering reality is a major stretch of believability), he’ll surrender and order his people to stand down. The Grounders may not have bullets, but they have a righteous cause on their side and they can let Arkadia burn.
With Pike and the others surrendering, Lexa might need to cancel blood must not have a blood for a bit, since it’s doubtful the Grounders will accept banishment for him. Pike is executed while his seconds, including Bellamy are reprimanded into Indra’s custody for their punishments (life working on farms, taking care of the families of the fallen or something similar).
Kane, being the pragmatic leader he is, orders the Arkadia guards to surrender their weapons. This will cause controversy (and not all guns will be surrendered, obviously). They make a show of this to Lexa and her people as a sign of goodwill and Kane reaffirms their desire to remain part of the Coalition. Lexa keeps turning this into a positive as she praises her army for their strength and compassion and saving the lives of their Arkadian brethren (using such language to keep Arkadia in the family, as it were). She orders supplies for Arkadia to help them through the winter and offers to have hunters teach them the best places to hunt, forage, etc. A new summit will have to go forward with new plans for how Arkadia can ‘atone’ and be a useful part of the world.
Lexa makes the point that Arkadia needs to open her gates, take down her walls in order to integrate and find peace amongst their people. Isolation only leads to suspicion, dislike, lies and, eventually, violence. Kane agrees (though he’s going to be fought on this by so many who do not want the ‘purity’ of their way of life invaded). Jaha, yes, chipped Jaha, speaks to this as well, reinforced by Alie, who wants to control Arkadia for her own reasons.
Alie, the hidden danger, decides they need to control the Commander. To this end, she orders Jaha to seek out Clarke Griffin.
Does this make any sense? Just a few thoughts on it, but, like I said, I think others have covered this in various ways and so much of series 3 is just a narrative mess that goes nowhere, rewriting the whole thing is the only good option to make anything fit.
Thanks for your question and your patience.
Hi there I read your comment on the grounder’s spinoff but everyone I talk to says its a good bet, netflix would be stupid to pass up on it and so would Alycia. Can you give me al ittle more like break it down a little why it won’t or will happen? I think its a longshot but theres so many of us who are so desperate for it to happen.
I feel for everyone on this. I know you want it. I’d watch if it happened, but it won’t and here’s why:
This boils down to business relationships. Netflix already has a business relationship with The CW. So does CBS (co-owner). If Netflix thought for a hot second that a Grounder’s spinoff was doable, it would go through the hierarchy at WB/CW, first. If JR has legal rights (as their creator), he gets a say and he will get credit. There’s no avoiding it. If they did a spinoff, it would be entirely under their terms (their money). They’d deny even having seen the fan trailer. They’d keep far away from any fan ideas to avoid any legal concerns of credit.
Keep in mind, too, back in 2016, JR talked about writing an origin story (book) for the Grounders. This would be a complete conflict with a fan-centred project. He has the business relationship with the networks. His ideas would be the ones the spinoff is based upon (whether this book ever happens, who knows – his career is likely to see a slump after t100 is cancelled).
As far as ADC is concerned, this would be a backward move for her. The CW is unlikely to do any sort of spinoff (least of all something to please a fandom that thoroughly humiliated them), and the 100′s ratings suggest it faces cancellation, soon. ‘Lexa’ is a big taboo for that network now. The only way I can see ADC returning, albeit briefly, is if she is invited back for some flashback material or something in the finale, if warranted (like Clarke obtaining the flame). I’m sure lots of little boxes would need to be ticked off before she’d agree to it. Is this likely? No idea.
What might be likely is, a few years from now, if someone decides on a reboot. Someone with some vision who recognises what failed before and where it could be improved and decides to make ‘Clexa’ a proper part of the show. That could even be one of you. Even so, JR could still get some sort of credit.
I love this fandom, how rich and creative it can be, and I wish everyone on this project well and hope they find their way to applying their gifts to even greater things and, one day, taking over the industry.
Very best to you all.
if you had to keep the season 3 ending, how could we still bring Lexa back?
Right. Apologies for the delay, I’ve had a think.
So what you want is an alternate season 4? Right. You asked for it. It is Long.
**
Instead of returning to Arkadia with Bellamy (in this universe, Bellamy gives himself up to Indra after the fall of the City of Light to await punishment for his participation in the massacre – Jaha is arrested as well), Clarke takes off with Murphy and Emori, meeting up with Raven and Monty – they will all travel back to Becca’s home/lab (Emori being the guide). Raven isn’t convinced of Alie’s tale of melting reactors and a radiation deathwave (sounds hokum to her) – she sees no spike in background radiation from Arkadia.
In Polis, Indra works with Kane and the other ambassadors to calm the people and get back some sense of normalcy. Bellamy is sent to work farmland for some northern villages – Indra deciding to follow ‘blood must not have blood.’ Octavia sees him off, telling him she might forgive him one day – but it will be years. For his punishment, Jaha is assigned to clean up Polis and help with the wounded. In too much shock at all he’s done, Jaha doesn’t resist.
It has been agreed amongst the ambassadors that no new Commander will be chosen for now, but all the ambassadors will work together to maintain order. Kane affirms Skaikru’s desire to remain part of the coalition and is accepted as their new ambassador. Abby remains in Polis as well, helping with all the wounded. Indra reminds the people not to forget the wisdom of Heda Lexa, and to respect her wish for peace. Many saw Lexa in the City of Light and is it generally believed that she acted as a sort of guardian angel, returning from death to protect her people from Alie.
**
Clarke has kept the Flame.
When her small team arrives at Becca’s lab, there is a surprise: a Flamekeeper named Gaia is present with several women warriors – whom Clarke immediately recognises as Lexa’s handmaidens/personal guard – and Luna (there is no insane security perimeter covered by hundreds of armed drones).
Clarke is surprised that any Grounders know of the place, much less seem familiar with it. Emori explains how she used to distract Alie while The Commander and her people used the lab – though she never knew what for.
Clarke has Questions right off the bat – why are they there, are they aware of what has happened in Polis, and, angrily – why did Lexa’s personal guard abandon her on the night she was murdered?
One of the handmaidens, an older woman named Kell is offended, telling Clarke that they never abandoned Lexa.
In Polis, Indra privately grieves the losses of the last several weeks – she asks Octavia if she hates her for sending Bellamy away, but Octavia is surprised Indra didn’t just kill him for what he did, he deserved it. Indra tells Octavia how, after the massacre, Lexa turned her back on ‘blood must have blood,’ how Lexa had plans to further involve Skaikru in the education of their people, wanting to build a school, and how besotted she was with Clarke, she just wanted peace for all of them. Still bitter about Mt. Weather, Octavia tells Indra that if Lexa was so interested in being friends, she shouldn’t have abandoned them. Indra shocks her with a revelation about Lexa’s choice (or lack of it) at Mt. Weather.
Bellamy, with his guard, meets Echo again – he is not pleased to see her, but she points out he cannot judge anyone. She asks him about the massacre, were they so afraid of Azgeda? Bellamy says they didn’t distinguish between Grounders and Lexa’s betrayal had stung them all. Echo tells him he’s a fool. Lexa was betrayed, not Skaikru. She tells him Skaikru set themselves apart too much, hiding behind walls. If they’d made some effort to integrate a little, many misunderstandings and tragic events might have been avoided.
**
In Arkadia, Jasper keeps busy writing. Harper questions him – he’s clearly changed. Calmer, no anger or resentment. He tells Harper he’s writing of everything that has happened to them since they came to Earth, how they came to be there, all the people they lost. He wants to write a history of sorts so that others will know. Harper asks him about his experience in the CoL. He tells her it was perfect but all wrong. Nothing should be perfect.
**
At Becca’s lab, Kell explains to Clarke how they were misdirected by Titus on the day Lexa was shot. Afterward, he brought her body to them for them to prepare for cremation. Angry at him for not contacting them immediately (and knowing far more about Lexa’s anatomy than Titus), they disobeyed Titus’ orders and took Lexa’s body to the lab, putting an unknown cadaver in her place for the funeral.
Clarke is stunned to learn Lexa is alive, but comatose, and Luna was called upon to be a blood donor. Luna points out that Lexa did save her life more than once. She owed it to her.
The handmaidens and Gaia are guilt and grief stricken that they did not take the Nightbloods with them – but Titus had them under a full guard (one that, ultimately betrayed those poor kids).
Kell is concerned that Lexa might have brain damage since she was under for over ten minutes and the Flame was removed. She hopes the Flame’s return might restore her.
Whilst Raven and Monty use the lab to explore Alie’s doomsday story (as well as all of Becca’s work), Clarke goes with the handmaidens to give Lexa the Flame.
Luna isn’t impressed with anyone, is hateful of the whole Flame/Commander/Becca/Alie business, gives Raven, Monty, Murphy and Emori a little-known history lesson about how the Grounders and their system of government came to be.
**
Passing near the remains of Mt. Weather, Echo tells Bellamy how Queen Nia had been working with Mt. Weather, promising them she’d deliver ‘donors’ in exchange for guns. Bellamy asks her if they have them. Echo confirms that Roan forbade them, had them locked away.
In Polis, Octavia is assigned to help Abby and slips to her how Lexa had been told by Emerson that Skaikru and Ice Nation and Mt. Weather were working together to betray Lexa and her army – told right in front of her warriors (including Indra). Lexa didn’t believe it, but her generals did and she knew that if she didn’t get her army off the mountain, quickly, her people would probably slaughter Skaikru. Demanding the return of her people, Lexa left. Octavia acknowledges they might have misread Lexa. She’s still angry, still hurt over Lincoln, but doesn’t know who to blame anymore.
**
At Becca’s lab, Gaia administers the Flame to sleeping Lexa. The handmaidens and some of the Flamekeepers and the Commanders had always known of the place, though it was largely avoided to isolate Alie. They needed to keep an eye on her and to make sure her code never infiltrated the lab network.
Lexa wakes, confused, wondering where is Clarke and Titus and Aden. Is Alie gone? Clarke enters and the others leave them alone – Clarke overwhelmed and Lexa apologetic, telling her that she would have told Clarke everything – she just didn’t get the time. She hopes Clarke will give her that time now, and Clarke affirms she can have all the time she wants, forever if that will do. Lexa is despondent over losing her Nightbloods.
In the lab, Raven and Monty learn of Alie’s deception, but find something else they didn’t expect – they are not part of the only human colony. There are other survivors – groups located in Norway, Africa, South America and New Zealand. Raven, curious how so many people could have survived a vast nuclear apocalypse, learns of strange environmental factors that led to these pockets of habitable space. She decides they need to try and contact these survivors somehow.
No longer needed, Luna intends to return to her people, but not before seeing Lexa again. Their reunion is bittersweet and proves they were once close and Lexa did all she could to protect Luna and her people on the rig from exposure. Luna wishes they’d kicked Titus off the tower when they were kids.
Gaia and the handmaidens confer about the best way to return Lexa to Polis and restore her as Commander. Lexa is nervous about this, wondering, since now all the Nightbloods are dead, if it isn’t time to try a new form of government. She plans on returning as soon as possible to help oversee the changes and work with Skaikru to better integrate the clans into a stronger social structure that benefits all. Clarke isn’t happy about this, telling Lexa she has a chance now to be her own person, to not be a servant to her people. Lexa takes Clarke to Becca’s mansion.
In the mansion Clarke marvels at the comfortable home and how it has been maintained. We learn Alie employed robots and drones to keep it clean and tidy. They wonder together about having a home of their own, what it might be like. Lexa’s sense of obligation is going to win out, but Clarke tries to convince her they could have their time, now and let the world go on without them. Lexa reminds her of all the sacrifices made, how she must honour them and help her people rebuild. How she wants Skaikru to be teachers. Clarke could teach art, if she wanted. She promises Clarke they will have their own home and tells Clarke she loves her and reaffirms her oath of faithfulness.
**
Bellamy, Echo and his guard reach the northern villages to find they’ve been destroyed. They find some bodies – with bullets in them. It is a harsh reminder of the last massacre. Bellamy demands who is in charge in Azgeda now that Ontari and Roan are dead? Were any of them ‘chipped?’
Tracking the attackers, Bellamy and the others are horrified to see a well-armed army of Azgeda warriors. They are captured and the leader, a dark-skinned woman with a mad look about her and tattoos that suggest she was once with a clan other than Azgeda – is angry at her people being used by the woman in red, blaming Skaikru for bringing her to their people and causing havoc. She claims to be Nia’s rightful heir – after Nia had kidnapped her and tortured her – she is owed Azgeda – and the Coalition.
The woman tells Bellamy and Echo that she died for the Coalition and, therefore, she will take it for her own. Bellamy is confused by what she means – Echo explains to him how Nia had traded her from Mt. Weather with a dozen of her own warriors, twisted her mind, meant to use her as a weapon against Heda Lexa.
The woman rouses her warriors, telling them to prepare for invasion. They chant her name: COSTIA.
Terrified, Bellamy and Echo plan on their escape to warn the others.
**
In Arkadia, Kane and Abby have returned and are discussing the likelihood that they will have to tear down their wall and further integrate with the Grounders in order to survive. Abby isn’t sure they’ll ever be able to, but Kane assures her there is a way and they will find it. Raven radios from the lab and confirms Alie’s lie, but that there are other pockets of humanity around the globe. She thinks they should make it a priority to contact them or find a way to travel. Abby openly considers the possibility – there might be better options than staying with the clans. The other survivors might be more like them. Kane points out that hasn’t always been a good thing.
Abby wants to talk to Clarke, but is told she is busy and that they will be returning to Arkadia soon.
Nyko arrives with some more sick Grounders – though they were never chipped. Abby is able to take a better look at what is causing their illness – it wasn’t radiation poisoning, but something akin to Mt. Weather’s acid fog. Some of the survivors confirm a ‘cloud’ of sorts – from the north. Kane orders Miller and a few others to investigate.
**
In Polis, they have also been updated on the new acid fog survivors and that Alie’s story was a lie. Indra is told that Kane has sent some people to investigate where this new ‘acid cloud’ came from. Having a bad feeling, Indra orders Octavia to take a group and investigate as well.
**
Learning of the new acid cloud business, Raven and Monty programme some drones to have a look. Emori speculates Azgeda might be up to something. Gaia, Kell and the other handmaidens agree, with Kell particularly concerned about possible new leadership in Azgeda.
At the mansion, Clarke and Lexa have hardly got out of bed, unaware of what is brewing beyond the walls. Murphy interrupts them to let them know they need to start heading back.
**
And I’ll just leave it here for now. 🙂
ho doc i am so frarking irritated about the cbs star trek crap i dont have the money for all this i got netflix an thats all im willing to pay for i wont igo illeagal but i bet thats what everyone does.
I feel you on this. I know we’re lucky in the UK we get to watch it on Netflix and don’t have to sign up for anything extra, and I don’t know why it has to be so different for you. It’s such a greedy move in a direction (with streaming services) that I’m not sure is sustainable. Who wants to pay for multiple streaming services? If all the networks do it, it will crash and only those who can afford it will be able to watch. I truly believe it’s the wrong approach.
Maybe a temporary fix for you might be this (it will require you to avoid spoilers for a long time): sign up for All Access when the show is on its last episode, pay for one month and binge the whole series – then cancel.
I’ll be curious of how many people might do such a thing and cancel and show how CBS could fall down on this plan. The big problem: we lose a potentially great show with great representation. It might just be international viewers that carry it.
ever feel like you’ve outstayed your welcome
All the time.
Is Ali Smith’s novel gay? What’s it called?
Well, she’s written several novels – I’ve mentioned ‘Like’ recently, perhaps you are referring to that one? It is entirely centred around a f/f pairing, both of whom have rather tragic difficulties communicating with one another (one is a deeply closeted, ambitious English academic, the other is a wild-eyed Scot she meets as a teen on holiday). Their relationship isn’t a healthy one, but it is deeply intriguing, and a bit of a mystery unraveling it through the course of the book (the first half is told from the perspective of Amy, the academic, some years after she knew Ash, the Scottish one – the second half a diary Ash left behind that illuminates Amy’s story).
If you’re looking for ‘romance,’ this might be a disappointment or an angsty, mystery-driven thrill. Smith is a latter-day Virginia Woolf who delights in language, dark humour and the inner lives of complicated people. Her books are rarely straightforward, more puzzle-like, allowing the reader to interpret ideas and relationships presented in various ways. I find them rewarding, but they aren’t exactly happy-go-lucky affairs.
Most of Smith’s books (and short stories) are f/f centred, including Hotel World (another one I highly recommend).
Thanks for your question (apologies for the long-winded answer).
you should write that AI Lexa story like a fix it for season 2. I dig that trojan horse idea. waaaay better than wimping out so clarke can commit genocide.
That each finale of each season set up the conditions for an insane number of people to die either then or in the near future – what does that say, really? It just doesn’t go anywhere. This show likes to collapse in on itself as Eddie Izzard might say, like a flan, in a cupboard.
I think any fix it fic might be on hold for now, but I do like the idea, so it might happen.
The Flame and The Dame deserves more kudos. I’m reading all kinds of steampunky easter eggs and all the themes relating to memory, depersonalization and loss, chaos theory (really??)and it kind of needs to be a graphic novel yesterday. So follow your advice and leave it up and please finish.
This is very kind, thank you.
do you have a fav fidget/stim toy you can recommend? thank you
While I use things like fidget spinners and cubes, I still prefer elastics which are simple, and I really like these tangle toys a lot:
