For weeks I had been thinking about Maggie's trip to Uganda, for weeks I imagined what she went through that caused her to alter her appearance so drastically. Never did my mind expect such a simple but poignant story. It's simplicity made it all that more heartbreaking, it was a gut wrenching story that was only excelled by Allison Pill's performance.
It also made me wonder have all the horrifying drama's and news stories I watched over the years desensitized me to anything less than bloodshed, torture or even rape? Because honestly, that was what I was expecting to happen. My stomach in knots every time we went back to Maggie's story, expecting something horrifying to happen. But it was a story about a boy called Daniel, who was fascinated by a girl with long blonde hair. I could recap how the story goes, but I won't as you should really see it for yourself.
The Maggie we knew is obviously gone, now haunted by guilt for pursuing this story to Uganda. What led to Maggie's story being told throughout the flashbacks was that she was now being deposed by ACN's lawyer Rebecca Halliday (played by Marcia Gay Harden) in a wrongful termination suit concerning Genoa. The subject of the deposition was whether or not Maggie was mentally healthy enough to function as a credible witness. The fact that she isn't taking her prescribed medicine is worrying. And I think we can safely assume it's Jerry Dantana's (played by Hamish Linklater) job that is lost in the end, he's the one aggressively pursuing this story and he's the one who got the tip in the first place.
Speaking of Genoa, the story hit another snag and rebound this week. At first it appeared all leads were dead as twitter user 'Hamni8' hadn't twittered in over 2 years. Unable to follow up on the source of the tweets, it was Jerry who literally wished for a stroke of luck that a lead would fall into their laps. And surely it did, or rather, it punched Neal (played by Dev Patel) in the gut.
Shelly Wexler (played by Aya Cash), spokesperson for Occupy Wall Street, went on the air with Will McAvoy (played by Jeff Daniels). After Will telling Neal last week that he would give the story some airtime, he totally destroyed Shelly on tv. And as much as I am 'part of the 99 percent', I agreed with Will. Occupy Wall Street spent so much of it's time standing for everything, that in the end they stood for nothing. So the only person who had a lead on the Genoa story stormed out of the building, hurt and humiliated and I can't say I blame her.
Shelly Wexler (played by Aya Cash), spokesperson for Occupy Wall Street, went on the air with Will McAvoy (played by Jeff Daniels). After Will telling Neal last week that he would give the story some airtime, he totally destroyed Shelly on tv. And as much as I am 'part of the 99 percent', I agreed with Will. Occupy Wall Street spent so much of it's time standing for everything, that in the end they stood for nothing. So the only person who had a lead on the Genoa story stormed out of the building, hurt and humiliated and I can't say I blame her.
The way Will went about it dressing her down was something else entirely. He was a smug and obnoxious as ever. However punching Neal because of how she felt was just childish and when Shelly belittlelingly reminded Sloan (played by Olivia Munn) that she was a college professor I felt she was just sad. It did get us some golden comedy with Sloan and Don (played by Thomas Sadoski) though as they tried to appeal to her but were just put off by her. But I liked how Will came around in the end, though still being obnoxious at first, and apologized for his crisis of confidence. Even after the Genoa story was back on track because they found the guy without the help of Shelly.
Miles away in New Hampshire Jim's (played by John Gallagher Jr.) story also came to a head. After another series of failures Jim seems to have finally given up on covering Romney's campaign. Getting kicked of the bus wasn't enough: Jim, Hallie (played by Grace Gummer) and Tequila (played by Cameron Gharaee) got cut from covering the campaign as well. Now missing campaign stories left and right both MacKenzie (played by Emily Mortimer) and Hallie's boss Evan weren't too happy about it. Turns out Hallie's boss Evan is a pig and in the end Jim sacrifices himself to get her the '30 minutes with the candidate' he has sought since the beginning. This stunt gets him pulled from covering the campaign, but he doesn't seem to truly mind. It's kind of gratifying to see Jim give up about the place he obviously doesn't belong and his likely return to the Newsroom. The kiss with Hallie wraps up the story neatly, though I wouldn't be surprised if she still shows up later on.
Miles away in New Hampshire Jim's (played by John Gallagher Jr.) story also came to a head. After another series of failures Jim seems to have finally given up on covering Romney's campaign. Getting kicked of the bus wasn't enough: Jim, Hallie (played by Grace Gummer) and Tequila (played by Cameron Gharaee) got cut from covering the campaign as well. Now missing campaign stories left and right both MacKenzie (played by Emily Mortimer) and Hallie's boss Evan weren't too happy about it. Turns out Hallie's boss Evan is a pig and in the end Jim sacrifices himself to get her the '30 minutes with the candidate' he has sought since the beginning. This stunt gets him pulled from covering the campaign, but he doesn't seem to truly mind. It's kind of gratifying to see Jim give up about the place he obviously doesn't belong and his likely return to the Newsroom. The kiss with Hallie wraps up the story neatly, though I wouldn't be surprised if she still shows up later on.
With Uganda, the Romney campaign and Occupy Wall Street now, more or less, wrapped up the Genoa story will probably take center place. While the fallout of those individual stories will surely be felt in the episode to come, it is time to see what went so horribly wrong with the coverage of Genoa and what the consequences of the depositions will be.
Overall it was another strong episode of the Newsroom, that is must see television based Maggie's story and Alison Pills performance alone. Though the episode as a whole hit all the right notes and was very good. I would have given the episode a perfect score weren't it for the convenience of how the Genoa story was continued, as it required a lot of suspension of disbelief.
You nailed it in the first paragraph. When they first showed the odd haircut in the season premier it struck me as a bit of a silly way to show character transformation, but her cutting her hair ended up being a very powerful scene, and the simplicity was what made it so evocative. I'm enjoying that they're continuing to develop Maggie as a younger version of Mac, which is playing particularly well as Allison Pill continues to absolutely kill it week-in week-out.
ReplyDeleteI too felt like you did that I was expecting something brutally horrifying that Maggie endured. I was thinking she was going to be captured & raped, or she was going to see Gary Cooper killed.
ReplyDeleteThe story they went with, still had all the impact needed, and didn't have to sacrifice Garys character.
The scene of her looking in the mirror cutting her hair explained everything to me.
I also felt the Geona tip was terribly put in there. They couldn't have at least figured a way to get there with a bit more prodding or coercing for that info? As much as I usually never find fault with their writing, this was 1 lazy moment.
I also agree that eventually Halie will come back into the story somewhere.
The 1st episode of the season, at the time, I felt was weak. But, as the other episodes of this season are unfolding, it is becoming a bit more understandable. This episode, with Maggies Uganda trip coverage, really fills in a large blank from the 1st episode.
I was totally thrown by how the Uganda thing played out. Like you I was expecting something big. I was also expecting the actual narration of it to stretch over a couple of episodes. But you're right the simplicity absolutely worked. So even though it wasn't what I was prepared for I loved it!
ReplyDeleteI also like how it ties with Genoa in the way it compromises Maggie's credibility as witness.... it's a very interesting way to connect the two from a character perspective.
The Shelly VS The Newsroom storyline was fun and interesting.
I'm on your and Will's side on the matter. I absolutely sympathize with what OWS stood for, but I found the whole thing to be somewhat pointless in the end.
However yes the way Shelly was treated was crappy. But I did feel she was somehow asking for it, and she certainly didn't handle herself too gracefully during the interview nor in the aftermath. So it was a funny mess all around, and I think Neal was the only one who drew the short straw here.
My favourite part was Will apologizing when he didn't have to and only for what he did do wrong. And I did appreciate that Shelly appreciated the gesture. It was a nice conclusion to the story.
Halley kinda bothers me... and even though I respect Jim's stance towards the Romney campaign and it was nice what he did for Halley, I'm glad that storyline is over....
I felt it was dragging.... because you're right Jim didn't belong there, and the fact that they had to get him out for there using the most convoluted and IMO unrealistic excuse ever, proves that.
(I mean really? He gave up an interview with a possible presidential candidate for a girl?).