6.13 - "Dark Money"
This week, we got to see Alicia once again vie for campaign money when it seemed Prady had her on the outs, while Kalinda had to pay Bishop back for his favor. Colin Sweeney faced his doppelganger in court backed by Diane and Cary, who end up having to disprove the narrative that he killed his wife 6 years ago.
After backchanneling some more with Frank Prady, she finds out that he's in contact with the incredibly wealthy Guy Redmayne, and she moves to immediately undo whatever deal Prady might have with Redmayne in order to remain in the race, as Johnny tells her that financially, she's not doing so well. (Which is odd, when your PAC is being funded by none other than Lemond Bishop?) Meanwhile, she's made aware of a robocall sent by her PAC to offend conservatives with an overdone lisping homophobic call that was smearing Prady's image. She immediately took Johnny to task and ordered him to call off the robocall through his ridiculous West Wing-themed twitter account they use to (illegally) get in touch with Alicia's PAC.
Staving off Colin Sweeney's attempts to have her in the courtroom on his most recent case of ridiculousness, Alicia prepares herself for wooing Redmayne to relieve him of his money. However, Sweeney will not be ignored, and threatens to out her source of funding to the press. So, she gives him a few moments of her time for advice in the courtroom. As per usual, she and Sweeney play off each other so well. If only it didn't feel like Colin Sweeney's character was running a bit dry on content (How many times can he really come that close to getting caught for something bad and still escape unharmed?)
When she finally approached Redmayne, he turned out to be a CLASS ACT. And in case my italics aren't obvious enough, I mean he was more disgusting than Colin Sweeney this episode. Yeah. Not kidding. He immediately leaned in and started touching her while she made her arguments for his support. She would deflect as much as she could with humor and with physical distance, but he kept on with his advances. However, he stated clearly that he was a fan of hers given how she was able to maintain her family values throughout her life, which was immediately juxtaposed with him calling Prady a "fag" -- multiple times. Alicia looked like she had the wind knocked out of her.
He just kept on with the touchiness, and his obviously warped definition of proper "family values" at the expense of Frank Prady's assumed sexuality. It was simultaneously unsettling and hysterical. How many times in this episode did they use the word "Fag?" That's got to be some sort of record for primetime television. It was almost comic how out of touch this man was, but in the end, Alicia was receiving his support, so she took his offer of support and got away from him.
"Right, I'm rich ... So it doesn't really matter, does it?"
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"family values" |
Redmayne's claim to have strong support for people who represent positive family values is one of the most on-the-nose but still evocative pokes at American society the show's had in a while. Alicia's scene with him was very much to Asner's character a woman trying to earn his money by selling herself in some form, and he laid his hands on her, and told her how attractive she was, while also standing firm in his belief that she was a good wife as he was a good husband to his late wife. The irony of him creepily hitting on her, while she sat with the knowledge of her own extramarital affair weighed heavily on the scene. Seeing him outright in his bigotry to call the usually naive, but polite and well-natured Frank Prady a "fag" and using incredibly profane sexual imagery to describe Alicia... that just jolted me as a viewer.
In the last scene of the episode, Alicia was mulling over the sins of the day when her incredibly naive daughter Grace popped in and said the sweetest thing about how her mother was the best person she knew. Unable to hold back the self-disgust, Alicia started crying right in front of Grace. I found this to be a little overblown but still heartfelt. Grace can range from strangely wise to a complete buffoon on this show, although her actress does her credit. I guess that's what you should expect from a teenager, though? She accidentally knew exactly what to say to make her mother feel atrocious, that's for sure!
"All-American Mike says my dad killed my mom."
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"Gimme your lunch money, punk!" |
The first day, she noticed a Cadillac SUV following the two of them, and made note of it. When she reported to Bishop about it, he also pressed her for details about what Dylan discussed on the way home. It was never fully explained why, until one day Kalinda caught "All-American Mike" hitting Dylan in the face. After she scared the piss out of that bratty child, she took Dylan home again, only to see a Cadillac sedan following them this time. -- This aspect of the car rides is still unexplained -- perhaps Bishop knows more and will clue us all in later...But it seems as though Dylan has someone's attention that might want to hurt Bishop in some way.
When Bishop sees that Dylan has a black eye, he calls Kalinda in immediately. She plays dumb, but he loses his temper a bit, and gets scary. He tells her to leave so that he can handle it, but as she leaves, she turns around -- a fiery but frightened look on her face. However, the phone call she witnesses him making is to Mike's parents, who he asks politely to speak to their child about bullying Dylan. It's the hardest thing he'd ever done, he claims -- having the one thing, the one person in his entire life he was proud of being bullied by a "nobody" and he couldn't do more than act as a father would and talk it out like suburban parents with people of whom he had no opinion. Kalinda seemed relieved, as she expected things to play out differently.
"Call it Murder..."
- "I have the testicles of a 20 year-old!"
"Where -- in your briefcase?"
- Marissa is almost always referred to as crazy, or childish, etc. but she's usually the most balanced/mature character in the scene, how interesting is that?
- So, it seems that sex scene Alicia was having in the promo last week is really going to be part of an episode-long "dream" or "inside-the-mind" episode... A lot of the footage looked like a dream, so that fits.
- Ed Asner did a damn good job of playing the most unbelievably repulsive character we've seen in The Good Wife in quite a while.