csb
Well-known member
Watched The Politician on Netflix and it's like someone watched Dear Evan Hansen and Mad Men and decided to do a thing.
Is this your first time through? The ending to this show is one of my favorites.In the middle of season 3 of Breaking Bad.
Yep, first time through for me. Not first time for my husband, but it's also one of (if not his number one) favorite shows.Is this your first time through? The ending to this show is one of my favorites.
Yep, first time through for me. Not first time for my husband, but it's also one of (if not his number one) favorite shows.
I think it's all worth it. Walter does turn into a jerk as you've seen, but there are just so many unexpected events that kept me engaged.Though if I'm being honest, Walter's character has been bugging me for a while and I don't find myself as engaged with the show as I once was. I do appreciate the character development I see happening, however.
Yes. This.Mmmmmm, I watched it and as someone who has a high functioning older brother...It rubbed me the wrong way. It's seems like they tried to make the 'perfect autistic series', which...it's not like that in real life?. Tbh, Sam as a character felt more like an aspie than a person with autism, but now that Asperger's is under the autism umbrella...Idk. My brother is 33. We grew up before autism was 'cool' and more visible. My parents made the choice to keep him instead of sending him off to a hospital for extended day camps. I grew up with a non-verbal older brother who only learned to 'talk' at 12, who was much bigger than me, and who had tantrums that often ended up with him locked-in his room so he could burn out/break things without hurting others. He won't 'grow out of that', like Atypical seemed to imply with Sam only having one sensory overload and then implying a majority of those outbreaks happened when he was younger?
And it's great that Sam gets to go to college, as in Season 3, but my brother will never have that. He finished high school, due to my mom pulling him from the sensory/special school that was making him do the same things over and over again, but now she's dealing with Social Security attempting to take his benefits away because he 'makes too much money' working part-time at Target. My parents have accepted they will always take care of him (even as they've retired) because he is high-functioning enough to not want to live in a group home, but not high-functioning enough to be able to live by himself without constant calls/reminders to shower/shave/take over the garbage/etc. It's having to deal with everyone acting like Autism Speaks is a good group, when it is mostly insulting to those with autism and implied autism needs to be 'cured'. I know that's not entertaining tv, but that is the reality for a majority of the parents and family who have children with autism and I get what they're trying to do, but at the same time...idk.
I mean...I still have to hold my older brother's hand when we go to theme parks because he gets overloaded and will just stop in the middle of a crowd. My brother is 6'3", 250 lbs of muscle, and he doesn't look me in the eye. And I get what Atypical wants to do, but having participated in the autism community from a young age, when children were still 'sent away', I'm sad they missed showing more of the hard-hitting points of the autistic community.
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