![]() His mom lied to him to protect him, she told him that she hid letters from his dad for years that his dad never sent just to make Tyler feel better and that hurt him. Tyler had only 3 people he kind of trusted after the apocalypse. There's something about it that is oddly compelling - even for someone like me, who watched it twice even though I really kind of hated at least half the episodes! At the very least I hope that the actors who played Jeevan, Frank and young Kirsten get tons more work - they absolutely knocked it out of the park. I 100% understand why people are obsessed with this show, though. When major plot points would take place that involved these characters, I just wasn't emotionally invested enough in any of them to really care. I never really bought into it, or even fully understood his motivations, or the motivations of those who were allied or against him, or of those who were first one and then the other for some inexplicable reason.Ī secondary problem was the Travelling Symphony, which was chock-full of too many barely-written, one-note characters. My main issue, I think, was the Tyler storyline. I even rewatched the entire season after ep 9 to see if I'd like it more on a second go, and no, it just didn't fully click. And yet I didn't love the show as a whole. ![]() I absolutely teared up during episodes 9 and 10. I loved that the series tackled trauma in new and interesting ways. The Jeevan/Kirsten/Frank storyline was heart-wrenching and delightful - possibly the most emotionally invested I've been in a TV relationship in years. ![]() Certain episodes I absolutely adored (particularly 1, 3 and 9). Station Eleven, for me, was a perplexing experience. ![]()
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