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Tuesday, 10 October 2023

Gen V: First Day

 "That is really Freudian..."

Two episodes in and... this is just as good as The Boys. No wonder it seems to be doing very well indeed. It's the same mix of plot, character, satire and outrageous humour. I for one am loving it.

We begin with university leaders, and Ashley from Vought, cynically doing PR after last episode's explosive events. Marie and Andre are to get all the credit; Jordan just won't do in the red states, what with the "pronoun ***ery", as Ashley puts it. So Marie, who was to be expelled, is suddenly catapulted into the top ten, status, stuff, popularity. Will it spoil her?

She's a fascinating character. As Dean Shetty correctly says, she's determined to do good in order to atone for her past, and to win back her sister. She has genuine moral integrity, unlike may characters... yet this is in conflict with the ambition that is every bit as much a product of her past. As she tells Andre- who seems to understand- she's taking the luck that comes her way because, without it, people like her would have very bleak prospects indeed. Not all of us have superhero dads.

And so it's no surprise when, being interviewed on telly, in the end she does as she's told rather than give Jordan credit as she'd meant to. Her background is precisely why Vought can control her, good person though she is.

There's a parallel with Emma who, for the second episode in a row, is exploited and abused. Both of them are being used, and both have powers that are not pleasant to use. The parallel scenes of self-harm are revealing.

There's also some very dark humour with Cate's mind control powers, and she and Andre do some interesting detective work into the Woods. The two of them are fascinating characters too. This is bloody good stuff.

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