Throw in resolving her parentage and I'll even buy one.
It disturbs me that even with Jeb, they seem to have been trying to make him genuinely "reformed" and virtuous, just because he suddenly turns over a new leaf.
I wonder if the writers were harboring any murderers in their basements, or something, or had "pasts".
over the years there are just too many examples on DS of reprehensible people waking up one day whistling and redeemed.
Not sure I want to become embroiled in a controversy (and I'm going out of town so I won't be able to get too embroiled), but I never watched DS looking for happy endings.While I was shocked at Vicki's fate, I wouldn't presume to dictate what I think should happen on a TV show or in a novel I read. Life is full of tragedies, and I thought this segment reflected that.
It disturbs me that even with Jeb, they seem to have been trying to make him genuinely "reformed" and virtuous, just because he suddenly turns over a new leaf. It makes me wonder after seeing Barnabas's not-so-gradual or understandable process of reformation, in 1968. I wonder if the writers were harboring any murderers in their basements, or something, or had "pasts". Before, I always thought it was cool that they questioned the rightness of having the law "redeem" people, but over the years there are just too many examples on DS of reprehensible people waking up one day whistling and redeemed.
That was a hard plot point to come across and I still don't buy it. We're suddenly supposed to like Jeb just because he decided not to be the Thing anymore? After murdering Paul Stoddard, Sheriff Davenport, and Inspector Guthrie (was that his name?) and framing Philip Todd for the murders, trying to kill both Maggie and Quentin, trying to get nearly everyone under the sun to murder Julia, and turning Barnabas back into a vampire again which threatens the existence of everyone around him... it's so nice of everyone to kind of forget all that for the sake of his love for Carolyn /sarcasm.