A crazy outside of the box idea Petyr might have considered: He, of Bravosi ancestry and very successful in matters of finance, seeks employ with the Iron Bank and tries to get it more "active" in Westerosi politics (i.e. more controlling of Westerosi politics).
Last edited by JBatmanFan05; 08-28-2017 at 02:39 PM.
Things I love: Batman, Superman, AEW, old films, Lovecraft
Grant Morrison: “Adults...struggle desperately with fiction, demanding constantly that it conform to the rules of everyday life. Adults foolishly demand to know how Superman can possibly fly, or how Batman can possibly run a multibillion-dollar business empire during the day and fight crime at night, when the answer is obvious even to the smallest child: because it's not real.”
Jon is honorable almost to a fault, but he's punished by the writers for it when they make him make 'mistakes' because of his character (Jon didn't win the Battle of the Bastards - Sansa/Knights of the Vale did, Jon caused Dani's dragon to die by trying to be a hero against the wights, Jon bends the knee to Dani in the Dragonpit causing Cersei to refuse an alliance and Dani to get angry at him, etc, etc...).
I'm sure he'd love to know how. While everyone else was terrified, he was just fascinated. He may be an evil mad scientist, but he's still a scientist.
He knows that they're susceptible to fire and dragonglass, so he'll probably be working on weaponizing those to the max for the defense of the southern realm.
Technically it should be easy to eliminate Viserion... throw a piece of dragonglass at him and he blows up, hopefully with the Night King on his back. But I'm sure the writers will come up with some complication, like that dragons are immune to dragonglass. But if they do that, there should also be drawbacks too. It would be cool if Viserion is only a kinda-wight like Benjen, and his loyalty to Dany will manifest itself and bite the NK in the ass.
Solid season finale.
After last week's epic action set piece it was nice to get back to character interactions and intricate talks for most of the episode. We got lots of fun little reunions at the big power meeting, one of the top three most satisfying deaths in Littlefinger's trial, a big old confirmation that Jon Snow is indeed not a bastard and a nice ominous set piece that shows just how dangerous the White Walkers are now.
The most satisfying scene was definately the Starks finally taking down Littlefinger by turning all his machinations and plots against him and showing that without any of that he's just a lonely little man only looking out for himself. Nice to see that finally caught up to him.
Depsite my general dislike of Cersi, she gets a point for pointing out that she's decided was going to help the people who would totally turn against her once the white walker crisis was averted. Granted, she was lying about helping them. But at that moment I still think she made a fair point.
I wonder how many characters will make it through the final season.
But it's also about the passage of time here as displayed in the show, of which then travel time is only a symptom. Indeed, I had no idea that Cersei, Jon, and the rest of the meeting were waiting for hours for Dany to arrive with her dragons, because there was no clue about the passage of time. Only Cersei's pithy line of, "...you're late" did it actually show. Compare to the past couple seasons where it took characters weeks to travel from Winterfell to King's Landing, and spent months wandering in Essos heading west or beyond the Wall.
I wrote a scene for Season Eight: (feel free to use this HBO)
Lannister General: Queen Cersei, what is our plan to defeat the White Walkers?
Cersei: We don't help the Northern effort and in fact hurt it and pray Jon and Daenerys win anyway against this ancient legendary threat that's at least 100,000 strong.
Lannister General: My queen, what if...they don't win against this awesome ancient evil?
Cersei: Well, we'll cede Westeros to this Night King and a small group of us will miserably struggle to survive in powerless exile on some islands. Sure, I'll open myself up to a high risk of eventual mutiny or power struggle, but so what.
Lannister General: My queen, what if the White Walkers find a way to get to our islands via ships or, say, a dead dragon?
Cersei: Ha! Dead flying dragon. Next you'll be asking me about grumpkins and snarks I expect.
Last edited by JBatmanFan05; 08-28-2017 at 03:52 PM.
Things I love: Batman, Superman, AEW, old films, Lovecraft
Grant Morrison: “Adults...struggle desperately with fiction, demanding constantly that it conform to the rules of everyday life. Adults foolishly demand to know how Superman can possibly fly, or how Batman can possibly run a multibillion-dollar business empire during the day and fight crime at night, when the answer is obvious even to the smallest child: because it's not real.”
It's been a complaint for many this season but this was the first scene that bothered me a bit as it ruined that line. There really was nothing to mark the passage of time, there should have perhaps been cut scenes developing other elements interspersed in the middle of that scene to help create the illusion of time passing.
Jon is sometimes punished for his faults ... but he usually come out on top anyways. So that's not so bad. call it luck or main character plot armor or whatever, but his code of honor hasn't truly failed him yet. He's fumbled the ball, but has still always managed to recover and get first down.
Jaimie brought this up within the show before he finally left KL. Cersei plot is stupid, but i get a sense she doesn't really care anymore. She's just in the now. I'm really interested in how the show resolves this situation which seems like a political, military quagmire. I just hope they don't cheat and sell the WW's short.
How about this
The only way whitewalkers can reproduce is to turn infant humans right?, so they need a steady supply of them. Wiping out mankind would mean dooming themselves to extinction. I'm betting the Night King's true objective is to take the Iron Throne for himself. Humans would then be under his control, and every town and city in Westeros would have to pay a tribute in newborn babies for their king's generous protection (i.e. not being destroyed by the army of the dead). Since wights do rot and eventually fall apart the deceased would also be reserved for them. No more burials or cremations. Walkers would become the new nobility and all humans their subjects ... forever.
Who are you referring to here? What episode and season would help.
This family tree should give you an idea.
Jon and Dany are roughly the same age but given their familial ties they're pretty close genetically. Speaking in genealogical terms, Dany and Jon are from different generations. Jon is Dany's nephew once (one generation) removed; is the expression.
It's just oogey if you think about it too much. However, in the roughly 25-26 states in the US and a dozen or so first world countries around marrying your first cousin (the child of one of your parent's siblings) it legal.