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Community - Basic Email Security - Review: "Amazing at first, then everything crashes"

Apr 15, 2015

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Halfway through this episode I was so happy because the episode felt amazing; it was classic, vintage Community style with secrets coming out, and everyone confronting each other in conflicts that showed how fundamentally flawed these characters are, and how they respond to each other, allowing the actors to play with everyone in the cast - except for Jim Rash - to their greatest strengths. I thought it would be an automattic A, but then everything started to crumble when Gupta was asked to perform.

How can I grade an episode that is both an A and a C at the same time? I guess that my only choice would be to make an average grade, but that doesn’t feel fair to those great first 19 minutes we have; though repetitive, it is the same plot structure that worked for both “Cooperative Calligraphy” and “Cooperative Polygraphy”, making this the third installment of Community’s “Secrets Laid Bare” as Abed says, and it is pretty great at first. And yet, I can’t give it a high grade because the last minutes were sorely disappointing.

This is the third episode in a row in which an episode of the show left me disappointed; once again Community is victim of its length, as if the episode ended with another note by minute 21 like it used to do on NBC then this would have been a great episode, but sadly it prolonged far more than necessary, it was left with an open ending, which is as a whole hugely different in tone than the first two acts of the episode.

That’s my biggest issue, how the episode so drastically changed when the leaked emails didn’t just involved the Greendale committee, but the whole school, pushing everyone against each other. Conflict only really work in Community when it used to strengthen the bonds between the people who study and work on Greendale, and for a minute there it seemed like the show was going there, but then it shifts completely once the hackers leak everyone's e-mails.

One can assume that as Frankie said, they are bound to bounce back from this one, and she is right - they bounced back from Chang’s tirant reign on season 3 -, but we don’t get to see it, making it feel like there is going to be no continuity from here onwards.

I think my biggest disappointment of the season so far is that the show is gradually moving from a linear storytelling format to merely just a procedural format in which the show just brings up something to deal with each week. What happened to season long characters arc? What happened to their dreams and aspirations? What happened with the crazy storylines? I understood their absence at the beginning of the season, but 6 episodes in I don’t see anything sprouting from the storylines, it seems like the episodes are becoming irrelevant as that I can miss it one week and come back another week.

That’s not to say Community doesn’t offer big laughs and golden lines week to week, because it still does that, but it certainly lacks a sense of purpose. I’m starting to wonder if Harmon’s desire to call it a quit after the show was cancelled is affecting the way he does the show, as Abed himself appointed season 2 as “the golden era”, as if Community couldn’t be as good again.

But it can, 6 seasons in there is nothing stopping the show to reaching season 2’s highs, the new cast members Paget Brewster and Keith David offer more than enough energy to capitalize on their talent and bring on new faces of our main characters, they make room for new material for our core cast and they have proved to fit right in. And also, Greendale is a place where everything can happen, so growth is more than welcome and newer story arcs can be build around it.

And yet here we are… at the end of the episode I honestly felt as if the writers just said “nah, who needs resolution?” which is a slap on the face after what started out as an outstanding episode.

To its credit, it does feel like the episode allowed Frankie and Elroy to be closer to everyone else now that their secrets were exposed, and for a moment there I felt the sense of unity that makes for a great Community moment. But the tone is off… way off. These episodes usually led to huge poignant moments of bonding, but here it ended with a punchline instead and it just didn’t land.

As I write the review I realize just how much this season is hurting from a sense of purpose and how the length is truly hurting what are incredibly solid - and even brilliant - storylines.
Every single reaction to each character reading what they said about each other on their emails were golden moments, showing the rapid fire comedic momentum Community delivers so well, but then everything falls apart, little by little.

Gupta’s act, even while meant as an irony, just didn’t land on any level, then there’s the whole school practically ripping each other out, which could have led to a good moment of unity later on, but instead everything is left on the open. And it’s not that it’s a bad thing, it that it doesn’t go at all with the tone the episode built up.

It’s really sad because the ending of the episode may foreshadow an ongoing continuity irrelevance from here onwards; you may watch the show weekly, but would you miss out on anything if you skipped one? Maybe the chance of laughing at good jokes, but it seems to me the era in which Community told stories is over. Maybe this is the era in which it becomes a typical comedy in which nothing ever changes and everything resets at the end of each episode, but if so, then it’s going to be a very sad era.

I hope I’m wrong, I hope that I’m merely exaggerating, that this was just a misstep at crafting the ending and not a sign of what’s to come, but I’m certainly worried. I love Community because in spite of being a comedy it has always been able to build up character arcs and stories for them that showcase evolution as good as any drama series does and as a whole get you to deeply feel for them while also delivering great comedic moments. Should that era come to an end, maybe there’s no reason to continue the show moving forward.

Just this once, I’m going to break my grade on two, because it’s not fair for the amazing first 2 acts to get squeezed with the ending.

Grade: A for the first 19 minutes / C- for the rest

Stray Observations:

-Elroy has a thing for the lunch lady who serves the hot food.

-Britta: “It is freedom of speech! An amendment so important that it is literally the first one they remembered to add.”
Elroy: “The white people?”
Frankie: “With penises.”
Jeff: “We rather call ourselves people without color or vaginas.”

-Elroy: “These guys are giving hackers a bad name. And hackers is already a dumb name.”

-Elroy to Chang: “Point your little finger to me and I will eat it!”

-Abed: “How much of the leak did you read? I have a right to fit in!”

-Annie mentioned Abed’s girlfriend, so that gives me hope that we will see Rachel again… eventually.

-Frankie’s sexual preferences has been discussed since episode 4 and this episode just outright tackle it, as a poll is run on a chain of emails. And Annie tried to win and wrote something gross. I can’t help but feel curious towards what they may have wrote.

-Frankie: “If you people were trapped on a tiger infested island with no food or water you would judge every ship that came to save you!”
Annie: “How do the tigers survive with no food or water?”

-Frankie writes to her dead sister as a coping mechanism. That was short poignant moment that the show could have capitalized on, but instead it let it slide.

-Elroy made 3D models of Frankie, Annie and Britta’s bodies for a game. Wow.

-Annie: “Jeff! Gross! And Britta, great way to memorize the date of your big victory.”

-Elroy: “Jeff writes to astronauts. Talk about creepy.”
Jeff: “They are national heroes!”
Elroy: “Yes they are. Leave them alone!”

-Frankie: “You two dated?”
Elroy: “This was a study group?”
Abed: “Yeah, Chang was our teacher.”
Frankie and Elroy: “What?!”
Chang: “That’s right. And frankly, haven’t been well utilized ever since!”
That was a great meta gaga. And I’m inclined to agree, though this season has managed to use Chang well.

-And well, after that the episode just… crashes… so I decided to just leave the lines that worked. Though Garret and Leonard’s feud was fun.

-Sorry if this review sounded depressing, but this was just such a good episode ruined by its final minutes. I hope next week this doesn’t happen. As a whole I’ve been liking season 6, but the pacing has to be improved in order to make the extended length work and the storylines need to be more cohesive and build some continuity. Otherwise, this is a completely different show with Community’s characters and setting.

About the Author - Pablo
I'm currently studying Psychology while also writing fantasy books (one already published in my home country, Chile, you can check it out on the facebook icon). I watch many different types of shows, including my favorites Revenge, Game of Thrones, Once Upon a Time and about 23 more. Currently writing reviews for Once Upon a Time, The 100 and Community
Recent Reviews (All Reviews)

34 comments:

  1. I had a few gripes with this episode myself:


    - it started out great as a big meta joke about the Sony-hacks (Community being produced by Sony makes this even more hilarious) and while the set-up was great it felt as if the show spent almost 50% of its time on the part with everyone throwing around their anger about having read the emails. Some lines were fun obviously but overall it felt like padding out the episode


    - it was almost too meta, the references to Troy being lost at sea, Pierce masturbating himself to death (I'm still 100% convinced that an upcoming last scene will feature Jeff entering his appartement and Pierce sitting there saying "Oh, hey Jeff"), Abed calling the episode the ending of a narrative trilogy, Changs comments about being underutilized paired up with the general meta-nature of the episode did completely oversaturate the meta-nature of the episode






    However I have to say that this episode was still above the general comedy quality level, it was pretty darn hilarious thanks to the writing and flawless delivery (this show has indeed a flawless cast).


    I have to disagree on the procedural statement, while there has always been a red line connecting most episodes it was always a rather procedural-ish storytelling. This season fits in well with the tone of the others

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  2. Remember Scandal's episode "The Lawn Chair"? How they pulled off the Ferguson crime and others, they pulled it off their way. This is Community pulling the Sony-hacks their. I love the ideology of this episode, just look at the bigger picture. The episode was great, I can't understand why the negative review. Anyways, thank you for taking time for writing the review and sharing it with us.

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  3. This was, to me, the weakest episode of the season. I get what they were trying to do with all the meta jokes, like the whole thing kind of being like the Sony hack and how Chang hasn't been well utilized since he was a teacher, but on the whole, the episode wasn't huge on the laughs for me.

    Normally one of these type of episodes, as you said, the "Secreta Left Bare" episodes, would excite me but this one didn't. Those other 2 had the group confront and react to all these secrets about each other, and some were hilarious and awful but I enjoyed hearing them. This one was much less so on the enjoyment. I got some chuckles out of some, but no real good big laughs.

    And the end, I thought the actor from the Broken Lizard movies was poorly used and that part was just a pain to watch. We didn't really get to see any of the fall out from the emails leaking for the whole school. Briefly, but not enough. Then it was easily wrapped up and that was disappointing.

    I too wish there was a season arc instead of more just case of the week episodes, which are my least favorite in procedurals.

    Last, did you see the email about Buzz Hickey's Memorial Services?

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  4. I agree that it was flawlessly delivered, but until the 19 minute mark where I stated that things start to all apart.


    Community is a sitcom that, in particular, has always had character arcs and stories going around them during each season. For instance, last season, the story was saving Greendale and the characters arc were Abed learning to go on without Troy, Jeff and Britta figuring out their feelings and set them straight once and for all, among many others. I feel this season is missing that: it is missing an overreaching storyline that made Community the show that it is. Over the last couple of episodes I felt the show begins and end with each episode and that there is no grand scheme anymore, which is where my complaint begin.

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  5. I'm always happy to agree to disagree, discussions would be boring if people agreed all the time :).
    Thanks for dropping by!


    I honestly think the episode was great up at a point in which it fell apart. The ending was poorly executed IMO and left a bad taste in my mouth, which is why I broke the grade into twos. I honestly love the episode until the 19 minute mark, but thereafter I feel the episode takes a completely different route and it is off with what the episode was building towards, which is why I hate it so much.


    In fact, it portrays a relevant complaint of the season as a whole, that I feel there is no overreaching storyline like there were on the previous seasons. It feels like Community is leaning toward resetting everything at the end of the episode instead of growing as it used to do in the past, and that's what makes me truly sad, because this is a show that has evolved constantly, and I don't want it to halt, and to a degree I feel this a premonition of Community becoming a show that simply doesn't grow anymore. I hope I'm wrong, but recent episodes have me worried

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  6. The grand scheme is reinventing yourself and accepting new elements, well at least I think so.


    And how did Jeff/Britta resolve their relationship arc? All I got from that was that both of them are eventually going to end up together (only thing that made me glad was that it ended Jeff/Annie and its shippers once and for all)


    But didn't they have this ambiguous scene with Leonard and Garret looking dramatically through the studyroom window in the season premiere. Also we had a reference to Pierces ghost

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  7. I agree about the ending, I found it to be incredibly disappointing - as I pointed out in the review -, but the "Secrets Left Bare" part were actually quite funny to me, I did laughed a lot with them, which is why I gave them the A for their part; I just feel that Frankie and Elroy allowed for some refreshing energy there enhancing the comedy of the lines and they were greatly delivered by the cast.


    But the ending.... oh god, it was so poorly executed that it just left me with a bad taste on the mouth.


    There is still time for a season arc, but I'm starting to doubt it'll come; I'll continue to watch Community and I'm sure I'll keep enjoying it, but I don't want to miss out on the evolution of the show due to a decision to treat as a procedurial instead of developing its masterful season long arcs.


    And yeah: I caught the memorial service email on my third watch, which is why it's not on the stray observations section. I love that Community hasn't forgot about delivering easter eggs, they are always entertaining to hunt! At least that aspect of the show isn't gone

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  8. The Jeff/Britta thing was resolved on the season 5 finale when they decided they were not made for each other, kind of a closure point.


    And the ambiguos scenes we have had this season only work for set up, but not actual storylines being developed, they are two very different things; we haven't seen any of those stories being treated yet, and I don't know if they'll come to be something else.


    So far I'm enjoying season 6, but there are things I sorely miss about Community that were on the previous seasons; there are new elements that are more than welcome, but some others are hurting more than they are helping, at least IMO

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  9. huh, I didn't get that from this at all. It more felt like a "we'll marry when we're actually ready and grown up". However as a ship hater I was probably reading into it what I could so I could get rid of the Jeff/Annie fandom


    True, however we might see a character arc developing throughout the season? Like the Deans and Frankies sexuality


    I'm loving season 6, overall it's a lot lighter (I mean literally, the lighting is better) and the character evolution for Jeff, Annie, the Dean and Britta was amazing so far


    Plus I'm loving the closing scenes btw.


    The only things I'm missing are the themed episodes (Paintball!) and departed characters (if Donald Glover would do "The Lazarus Effect" why wouldn't he do Community? Also Chevy seems to be open for a guest appearance or two)

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  10. I didn't dislike the ending as much as you did-I would've bumped it up a grade, personally, mostly 'cause I liked everyone sitting together in the study room at the end trying to figure out what the "lesson" was for the episode-but I do agree that it did seem a rather pat, rushed resolution of sorts to the craziness that had been building throughout the episode. Maybe they could've shown a little of the riot, or maybe, after Frankie had barricaded everyone inside, they could've had the group discuss the things they'd learned about each other that they'd all argued about earlier (and really discuss it, 'cause yeah, there were some pretty big bombshell/unsettling revelations made worth actually dealing with instead of just brushing off as, "Well, it's to be expected from this screwed up group". Namely Elroy's creepy activities and Frankie's incredibly depressing comment about her sister), and had the "lesson" discussion in there or something instead. That might've worked better. And maybe the storyline with the stand-up comic could've been better handled, or taken out altogether, and just had the focus kept on the e-mails or something.
    I do agree that the rest of the episode was good, though. I liked the meta jokes (and for some reason, the idea of Frankie being in the know about certain "eras" of the show really made me smile. I don't know why), and everyone yelling at each other over the disturbing e-mail revelations was pretty entertaining and a classic "Community" moment.
    I do agree that it'd be nice to have some season-long story arcs setting up, 'cause you're right, we haven't really had much of that this season, and those always added to the show in the past, gave them something to anchor whatever else was going on. Hopefully they can build on what has happened up to now this season and we can see it starting to pay off and be referred to in future episodes.
    Nice review, as always-honest and full of legit critiques. I am glad you were able to still find some good stuff to enjoy, though, at least, and I hope future episodes will have more of what you're looking for.

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  11. "we'll marry when we're actually ready and grown up"
    This is how I've read the history between Jeff and Britta, too. I've always felt they fought like a married couple as it was, it's just a matter of their maturity catching up with them to make it a real thing.
    I'll say this, though, I wouldn't be opposed to Jeff and Frankie if the show ever wanted to go that way someday. I'm really liking the scenes they have together. They both have that "this place is batshit insane" mentality going on, they can relate to each other on that level :p.

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  12. I'm absolutely against shipping and pairing in shows but that's just how I read their plot (and even in this episode they had a similar scene).


    I actually read something about Frankie and Annie....

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  13. I like shipping here and there-there's a few pairings I've liked on some of the shows I watch-but I don't get hung up on or all demanding about expecting them to happen on TV, and it's certainly not the main reason I watch a show. If people get together on a show, cool, if not, cool, I'm fine either way. If I'm ever really in the mood to see a couple characters get together, I'll just go read fanfic, LOL.
    Oh, really? What'd you read about them?

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  14. Huh? What are you talking about, buddy? Harmon confirmed on the commentary for Basic Sandwich that Jeff is in love with Annie and his love for her opened the secret door. He confirmed in the same commentary that Jeff and Britta are "unhealthy" for each other.

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  15. Being against shipping is the same as saying you're against romance in movies and TV shows. That's all shipping is, romance. The act of rooting for two people to end up together.

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  16. Problem is Harmon confirmed that Jeff is in love with Annie.

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  17. "And how did Jeff/Britta resolve their relationship arc? All I got from
    that was that both of them are eventually going to end up together (only
    thing that made me glad was that it ended Jeff/Annie and its shippers
    once and for all)"

    Quite the opposite, actually. Confirmations from Dan Harmon, Ryan Ridley, and Andy Bobrow make it clear that Jeff and Britta is sunk once and for all, and that Jeff has fallen in love with Annie, which is why his feelings for her start Borchert's computer.

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  18. Really hate how they haven't mentioned Borchert even once this season. Where is he?!

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  19. Exactly this. Harmon also makes it clear in that commentary track that the only reason Jeff and Britta get engaged is because they're panicking about the school closing for good. Neither actually wants to be romantically involved with the other.

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  20. That's not Harmon's intent. He's said on multiple occasions that Jeff N Britta are good as friends but would be a toxic couple because they bring out the worst in each other. I happen to agree with that. I'm not much higher on Jeff N Annie, but Harmon is as he continuously praises that pairing and says what a blissful relationship they would have as a couple if they ever got together. The final nail in the coffin was Harmon saying on the commentary that Jeff has fallen in love with Annie and that when he looks at Annie, things run through his blood that just don't when he looks at Britta.

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  21. I'm so over the shipping stuff for Community
    For someone who's supposedly over it, you sure wrote quite the manifesto about your favorite pairing in your multiple replies here.

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  22. There's a difference between being a shipper, and providing facts. I think that's what Winger77 is going for. You and the other guy don't seem to know what Harmon said about the issue. So he/she is telling you what happened. Knowledge is never a bad thing. Like when I wasn't sure what the ending of TDKR meant, I welcomed the confirmations from Nolan and Bale and others about how Bruce is alive and just faked his death.

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  23. And while it's nice to hear what a showrunner says about the pairings, I don't really go by that when it comes to what I personally like. Jeff and Annie do have an entertaining chemistry, yes, but I also like Jeff/Britta, too, and I would regardless of whatever Harmon or the show's intent/implication is, or what happens or doesn't happen on the series itself.
    And like I said earlier, I've got pairings I like, but I don't get bugged about the idea of them ever becoming canon, or matching whatever the show's intentions were. This is a community college. People date around. *Shrugs*

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  24. You can like whatever you want. No one can take that from you. I was just pointing out that everything he has said and shown in Basic Sandwich indicates that it's going to be Jeff N Annie, rather than Jeff N Britta. That shouldn't stop you from hoping for a Jeff N Britta outcome. But I only replied because it seemed you didn't know about Harmon's confirmation about what happened in Basic Sandwich. That's all.

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  25. Okay, but on an issue like this, it's still ultimately subjective. People can listen to what the showrunners claimed all they want, or see the implications in an episode all they want. Doesn't mean they're automatically going to be converted into supporting a pairing as a result-if people don't like it, they don't like it. And people like Mac, who I know full well is flat out against shipping altogether, won't really care what the showrunner says-they're not a shipper, so it's not going to mean squat to them anyway.

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  26. It's not about conversion. This whole thing started because that other guy seemed to think Basic sandwich sunk the Jeff N Annie ship. It didn't. It did the exact opposite. It revealed that Jeff is in love with Annie. That's a huge deal for someone who used to laugh at the concept of love in season 1. It's knowledge he and you didn't previously have. Learning what Harmon said know will help you better understand what he may have planned for season 6.

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  27. Never got into the Community fandom for exactly that reason, I hate ships. They ruin everything to me (you commented somewhere else that hating shipping is pretty much hating romance, it's not. Shipping is excessive focus on the romantic arc, it's the hyperbole of it).


    Shipping = worst thing that happened to television history.


    Maybe I interpretated the episode this way because I liked to think that some show was free of it


    (you sound pretty invested in the ship though, just judging by how you sound)

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  28. I really don't want to read the shippers response to that, shippers are usually vile creatures, I don't dare to go down that road.

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  29. well lit rooms, it's a bit overexposed at times but I'm glad that it's not as dark as the early season 5 episodes.


    And frankly it was only this episodes that had them raving at each other, the other ones were actually pretty enjoyable

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  30. teaching law at Subway :P

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  31. I'm not. Believe me, no one was more shocked to hear Harmon confirm all that. Then looking back on the episode, i noticed some details that made me think "Oh, okay. It was about Annie." And I agree about the whole ship war thing. Oliver being interested in every female he meets is what ruined Arrow for me.

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  32. Looks like we do have some common ground, awesome :D


    My guess on Harmon not bringing it up is because it's just not a huge focus in the grand scheme of things. Whatever storyline causes controversy is probably not good for YahooScreen.


    TV lives of controversy and events that lead people to watch an episode in a specific timeframe, internet TV is relying on customers coming back at any given point.


    Not sure but I'm glad he hasn't put anything of that into season 6 so far, it's not like it was a huge plot threat to begin with

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  33. But Jeff being in love with someone for the first time in his life is a big deal. He was always a notorious commitment-phobe. It certainly should never take over the show. But I'm sure you agree that Harmon pretending his confirmation never happened would be bad writing. He has to at least bring it up again and deal with the Jeff/Annie stuff once and for all. Either sink it for good, or make it happen, but don't reveal he loves her (and have his feelings for her save help to save Greendale by allowing them to escape the secret room) and then never mention it again. That's not me being a shipper. That's me being a fan of plot continuation. If Basic Sandwich had revealed that Jeff is in love with the dean, I would say the same thing.

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  34. I used to be okay with shippers till I saw the hate Joss Whedon got for pairing Natasha with Bruce Banner rather than the people they wanted her to be with. The guy actually got death threats just because he sunk their ship.

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