Thread:Jester of chaos/@comment-31330278-20180211164358/@comment-31330278-20191129234938

1. In her great book "Let Me Hear Your Voice", Catherine Maurice said that she had to eliminate her daughter's obsession to get her out of the autism and enable her to communicate. After thinking about "StarCraft" and the protoss, who are a whole race of telepathic autistic aliens without facial expressions, I began wondering if telepathy could help the girl communicating better with her surrounding. I'm not comparing a formerly autistic girl to a race of pure intellect, but I do wonder whether telepathy can make up for communication difficulties, or just depends on the individual's ability to communicate in non-verbal means. If someone else, anyone pops in your mind, would talk to you in telepathy without having any meaningful facial expression, do you see yourself communicating with him well enough?

2. The last two episodes I watched were less confusing, but still incoherent plot-wise. Tell me what you think:


 * Dean vs Robert - Dean and Roberts were best friends for ages. I knew Robert will end up dead, because of his best friend was called Dean, which throwed me back to Dean Karny. I knew it was coming, but common sense was against it, as Robert was revealed as a psychopath with the bad habit of cheating his significant others and Dean was the quiet and helpful type. It made much more sense that Robert would be the first intended victim in the show who survived and turned the table on the killer. He was stronger than Dean and could easily kill him. Dean came with all the weapons in the world, yet missed the first time and almost got killed. Missing Robert wasn't like a cruel man missing another one. It was Elmer Fudd shot a leopard and missed. The whole ordeal began after Robert had a thing with Dean's lover, which ironically invited Dean to kill Robert, and finished Dean's job by beheading Robert with a machete. I know psychopaths are weird, but it doesn't make sense. Unless Robert was cheating on her too, she had no reason to do that.


 * Jamie vs Holly (I think - Holly was bi-polar, with history of anger issues and assaults. On the surface of things, a very dangerous person. She met Jamie when she volunteered to babysit Jaime's children. The moment I realized that Jamie murdered Holly was when she and her husband decided to fake a robbery in an hotel they were staying in. The idea was tying up her husband, trashing the room and pretend to be robbed. That's something a psychopath would do. Tying up her husband is either a throwback or a prologue to Jill beating up Charlie for real before tying him to the chair as part of her wicked scheme. I choose to believe Jamie killed Holly because she was jealous and felt like her children love Holly better, because the other options are unthinkable.

3+5E. The probable outcome is that the Baelish type would choose genuine love over desire for power, at least in his final moments. Charles in his reversed Magneto version is the only possible exception. Do you see the black football player having these kind of debating with himself too, or does his PTSD/competitive nature will make him push aside both options? Also, I have several ideas to Abigail's possible enforcers:

A. "Marcus Elliot" - An overachiever former high school student. Like the canon Marcus from "Scream season 3", this guy will have a dark and troubled past. He'll be one of the few survivors of Neimerhold's original outbreak, occasionally telling people about the moment he went loose and killed as many feral humans as he could in a futile effort to keep them away from eating his friend's corpse. He won't be as gullible as the canon Marcus. People might fool him, but no one can make him feel guilty for hating people who hurt him deeply.

B. Jay Curry - a three-headed mutated Rottweiler who escaped his former master after the latter became paranoid. He would never kill a child, but his master's paranoia erased the part of his brain that was aware to his dog's complete loyalty. His times as a runaway led him to hang out with the wrong sentient beings, until Abigail found him and took him in. Specifically for Jay, a friend gave me the idea of considering him as a villain in "Police Legend" universe based on Cerberus. For the sake of this topic, Jay's "Neimerhold" version will be a lethal yet honorable mutated guard dog.

4. Tell me in details about the kingdom's destruction whenever you feel comfortable, but first, I would like to hear more about banning magic.

5A. Here's a PE proposal for William Carver. He's both a better villain than Ingrith and closer to your vision of Prince John's mother thanks to his 2018 Gisborne's multiple traits:

https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/User_blog:Ducktales37/PE_Proposal_-_William_Carver#WikiaArticleComments

PE gets Carver proposals, not the other way around. We saw people like him on the news and met them in our life, me at my dehumanization times that led to serious thoughts about the final jump, and you at the time when you lived with some of these people. He's worse than General Tiger, because he tracked down a group of refugees for retrieving a woman whom he raped before the story began, killed/hurt people for minor reasons (at least General Tiger can claim he keep the useful people. Carver just wasting them because he got pissed-off by reversible mistakes) and was serious about killing the said pregnant woman before letting her escape with her unborn child. You can choose to get Clementine out of there when Kenny trash Carver with a crowbar, or let her stay and look, but the bottom line is that Carver deserved it. Breaking Kenny's eye socket out of spiteful rage is one of Carver's lesser acts. By the time Kenny killed him, Carver already forced Carlos the doctor to slap his own daughter (Carlos refused and mentioned his broken fingers, thanks to Carver, as a limitation. Carver's respond was to remind Carlos that he have two hands), brainwashed many people, tried to turn Clementine into a psychopath like him, and I consider the possibility he killed someone of his own family. My main bets for the murdered family member are his abusing father/mother (being violent to children like Carver was cannot be natural), a mother/father who displeased him and his sibling whom he strangled with a smile.

5B. Rowf is most likey black, Snitter is mentally ill and the white coats people are likely racists. Spreading rumors that they're transmitting diseases have some strong holocausts subtext. One character i'm not sure about is the cockney fox who guided the dogs and taught them how to kill livestock for sustaining themselves. If you had to guess, which symbolism would you give to a cockney fox who creates bonds to a certain extent?

5C. Would you describe Xylus' naivete levels as similar to Charlie from "Hazbin Hotel", or more like the average anime hero type? Both options are good, because both are starting points for character development. From the 18 minutes I seen, Abigail is kinda similar to Charlie's dominant girlfriend.

5D. What a touching song. If you didn't tell me it's about a knight who's fighting for protecting his loved ones despite being brainwashed, I could think it's a song about someone whom a certain loved one have cancer. Reminds me of a soft version of "Never Too Late" by Three Days Grace. Is it intentional on the writer's side? Because Cancer and rethinking about the value of one's life are pretty much abysses.