The theme this week is... adultery. Everywhere, all the time (no, not all at once). While Harper has made it her mission to become the Perfect Holiday Companion to impress an already unconvinced Ethan, her attempts are incredibly awkward. She's saved from pretending by Daphne and Cameron's very first disagreement as to what the day will be like. He, the dudebroiest dudebro to ever dudebro, wants to jetski (I hadn't realized this was even still a thing. Why would you want to bulldoze your way around the ocean, when you could sail?!). Daphne, on the other hand, wishes to visit Noto, a "beautiful baroque town on the coast". It took me a while to remember because it was a complicated trip, but I actually visited Noto when I was in Sicily and it's a lovely little city but once you've been on those steps you've about seen it all (also, surprisingly, pizza is very hard to find there?!). Then again, unlike Daphne, I didn't reserve the palazzo so maybe my experience was skewed. As a result, Harper finds herself peer-pressured into a day, then a night, with a suddenly honest Daphne. She knows Cameron isn't entirely faithful, but she's "learned to live with it", and, in her words, "isn't a victim". This kind of little coup, she says, is her way of getting even with Cameron. I'm not sure how much of this is sincere, or if she and Cameron are carefully orchestrating something to get Ethan away from Harper, but the dynamics are getting weird. Meghann Fahy (as promised) is wonderful though, and I'm going to need someone to point me towards those sunglasses of hers.
Back at the resort, the jetski bros are trying to outdare each other, first on the sea, and then at a party. Cameron (or "Cam" as he will now be known) is way ahead of "E" though, and after Lucia sets her sights on them, he's pretty much a lost cause. Ethan, despite all the temptation in the world, and a very lukewarm relationship with his wife, resists Mia's advances. The question, however, is for how long. On the other side of a spectrum, the man whose sexual dalliances have ended his marriage has finally found a reason to say no (hence why Lucia was on the hunt for rich, temptable men again): his son Albie. Can Dominic change that much, though? Time will tell, but in any case I'm having a hard time figuring out Albie's personality.
- Tanya: purely based on the annoyance factor, Portia might just come through with her threats and put Tanya out of her (self induced) misery
- Harper: if she pushes Cameron too far about his materialistic tendencies, he and Daphne could find a way go get her out of Ethan's life. FOREVER.
- Cameron: jetskis. Drugs. Adultery. Lawsuits. So many problems, so many opportunities
- Albie: he may fall off a cliff if he tries any harder to be the perfect woke man
- Rocco: Valentina hates him, enough said.
A lot of people have remarked on this already but I agree: this season focuses much less on the White Lotus staff, and it's a shame (we miss you, Armand!). It's also not even remotely a comedy anymore, but that's a discussion for another time. More Valentina with the kittens, please! More Valentina, period, actually. And less of that remixed score. Season 1's score was perfect, this one is, well... like the entirety of season 2 so far, not it. What did you guys think? Did you find this episode more exciting? As usual, sound off in the comments!