Jodi Walker
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I'm Jodi Walker.
Did you like this episode?
It could be Rob Mahoney.
Did you like this episode?
All right, Jodi, what do you think?
Okay, well, thank you for coming to me second.
I strangely, you know, I think I had a tougher time with the middle of this season where some of these like big changes and more bringing in of politics and this fascist party and Nazis were like in the middle, I was finding that a little strained.
And here at the end, having not entirely trusted the process, for me, it's worked.
Um, I, because I think for me, it looped in a lot of the personal stuff with Yaz and Harper, which is of course the beating sad, maybe dead heart of this show.
All right.
We are at a place where I think what worked for me about this finale and the way that the end really brought it together is that Harper's endless desire to be singular and Yasmin's endless desire to be a part of something and how those are so things that could work for good.
And when...
I want to say the deck is stacked against you because anyone can take the other path.
But when maybe the bad workers in the world or the industries that surround you are begging you to go astray, how easy it is to do that in the wrong direction.
And I know that this turn for Yasmin feels extreme, but in other ways, it
feels so easy and and more than most of the personal beats in this show the way that it has been laid out that Yasmin wants to be necessary wants to be a part of something and she's so bold as to have actually said it at this point that that made sense to me even though it was really tough to take something that I think is really interesting um
Well, I think Yasmin is always seeking to be saved by power or some adjacency to power.
And she wants so badly to become her own daddy in this situation.
You know, she wants to be the person in charge while rarely...
committing to the systems and while also being a woman.