File: "FKSPOILR LOG9605" Part 1 TOPICS: Spoiler: Jane Doe Spoiler: Jane Doe, Flowers (2) Ashes to Ashes spoiler If not at Syndicon W, Ignore (Long) SPOILER: Jane Doe (11) Jane Doe (2) SPOILERS: Jane Doe (ep 19) Take 2 (2) Spoiler: JD, Nick-ping/LC-pong SPOILER: Jane Doe & LC's Buddy SPOILERS: Jane Doe; Companionship (2) Jane Doe--and the new off topic Jane Doe Spoilers ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 00:04:51 -0400 From: Sharon Scott <Sss44@a.......> Subject: Spoiler: Jane Doe Ho hum. I sat through it, but that's about it. I'm bored by Tracy and her problems. I want Nick & Nat & LaCroix stories, not Tracy. Especially this close to the end of the season. I was thinking that the flashbacks might have been more effective if they'd used the civil rights movement in the American South as the setting, rather than the European setting. Only one thought on LaCroix's eyebrows--he's the *arch*villain, so maybe that explains them. :-) Scottie scotts@b....... or sss44@a....... ========================================================================= Date: Tue, 30 Apr 1996 21:21:35 -0700 From: AKR <r@w.......> Subject: Spoiler: Jane Doe, Flowers On Tue, 30 Apr 1996, D Echelbarger wrote: > No, I noticed that immediately. > They were gladiolas. Oh, my. Continuity obsession demands that I interpret this. Continuity-obsession demands that I hypothesize that this is a sign of Reese's extreme, possibly even irrational, emotional involvement in the case, that he was jumping to ill-informed conclusions based on his opinions about the racist psychopath, before he really had any proof that he *was* a "psychopath" ("racist" was pretty clear, though). Of course, in Real Life, florists just don't sell cotton flowers... :) *** Amy, Lady of the Knight (AKR) r@w....... *** ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 04:52:48 GMT From: Karen Parker <horcgal@u.......> Subject: Ashes to Ashes spoiler this is a spoiler for ashes to ashes S P O I L E R S P A C E Ok, I hope I did that right so I dont get hollered at. Now, I read a spoiler post before that said in Ashes to Ashes Vachon dies and Tracey is the one who buries him near Screed. Well, IMHO a totally perfect and pretty sad song for that moment would be "I am stretched on your grave" by Sinead O'connor. I'm sure any Sinead fans out there will be hollering at me about what their interpretation of the song is, but I personally think it would be a great "vachon/tracy" song for that ep. Pounce if you must. Karen horcgal@u....... ========================================================================= Date: Tue, 30 Apr 1996 23:53:07 -0500 From: Jewels <jbaldwin@f.......> Subject: If not at Syndicon W, Ignore (Long) Please allow me to preface with this: I painfully regret sending a message out to more than one list. However, as I was not at Syndicon West, I do not know to whom I should directly address this, or to which list(s) they might subscribe. I willingly accept whatever consequences are appropriate. Rest assured, I will not do it again. This message is for all listmembers who were present at the con and met my baby twin, Christian. Feel free to hit delete at any time, I will probably be a bit emotional. Hello gorgeous. I wanted to apologize as necessary for my sister's coarse behavior and to thank you for your kindness. She told me that she was a complete a**hole to almost everyone, almost all of the time. She said that if the family were present, we would never live down the shame. Immediately, I knew what she meant, and hoped to offer an explanation. She probably seemed aloof. In truth, she was painfully shy. She said that while in the presence of Mr. B., she could hardly stand to look at him. That his presence devoured the room more fully than any Valiere or Moore (Baton Rouge old society). Which astonished me, actually, as she was not unused to the company of local performing artists. In any case, she said that she dragged a con photographer from the party to escape unscathed. Everyone, save the President of Mr. B's fan club, was in her perception, an angel. She quickly chimed in with Mama's old saying, "only the fragile among us are cruel. It takes great strength to be beautiful to everyone." (Mama equates beauty with warmth and generosity of spirit, not the physical.) I asked her if perhaps "cruel" was too strong a word to describe the woman she encountered. She said, "yes, distracted perhaps." She said that she was unable to spend much time getting to know any of you, as the hotel only allowed her to smoke outdoors, in the bar, and in her room. She was afraid that she was perceived as an alcoholic, because she was the only woman at the party drinking. I asked her how much she had. I was stiffly informed that she had a beer, and some champagne from the bottle at the party. I laughed and told her that unless she was tripping over feet, not to worry. (In the Coonass tradition, we were sipping J.D. and cokes before the training wheels were off.) She also admitted that she was accused of being an Australian, as her accent ebbed and flowed. I said, "Darling, (pron. Darlin'), unless they were from this part of the world, they probably don't hear many Louisiana-altered-by-many-years-in-Metro Houston accents." She said that when Tara asked, before the party, for suggestions on what to write on Mr. B's card, she replied, "I'd like to thank your mother for a butt like that. Love, Tara." I reminded her that she had never seen Mr. B or his butt in her entire. Nevertheless, at the time she felt it was appropriate. I am sorry that this thank you note is late in coming, but, you see, on the night of her return, my baby twin took her own life. The conversation I've recounted was our last. In light of this, and her just-completed time with you, I wanted you to understand her. I never want her to be remembered, not even vaguely, as less than she was. She was my twin, and I loved her. She is the third sister that I have lost since November. (There were six of us.) She was the gentlest, the softest of us. She mourned the loss of the South of her birth to the present one. She loved peonies and the sea. She was an afficionado, no, an artist of snail mail. She liked you all very much. Amicalement, Jewels ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 00:38:22 -0500 From: Sandra Gray <TMP_HARKINS@d.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe I wrote: >I'm a bit mystified as to why you think it was good for LC to take >revenge on Calvin Dianne De Sha writes: >"Good?" Who said "good"? Do you see quote marks around the good in my quote above? *I* used good as my own comment since Laura had expressed favorability (and no, that's not her "quote") for LC's actions with Calvin. She seemed to think it was a good idea (again, not a "quote"). >And LC does many, many things Nick detests in order to keep Nick >_alive_ Does he really? In the present time he doesn't seem to be doing too much to try to keep Nick alive. He doesn't seem to be "popping up" that much when Nick has tried various cures that might "kill" him. I wrote: >>But that line wasn't aired, so why discuss it? Dianne writes: >Umm... 'Pot calling the kettle black'? <g> I didn't bring up the topic. I just don't think that a big deal should be made out of something that wasn't aired (as it seems this cut quote has been). Particularly when there was something Nick said in the flashback that *was* aired that could be similarly twisted if one desired. >"He killed them." Ally, traitor; broken neck or drained-- ...Nick >makes exceptions to his "no kill" rule when he feels justified in it. Well, the leader of the allied group Nick was involved with also felt like killing the man. Resistance fighters probably tried all suspected spies? If this had been a standard war movie, would you be so quick to condemn a human allied member who killed a suspected spy? >Nick's code's a _bit_ more strict than that. Well, yeah, Nick said in Dark Knight "I caught a killer tonight. I'm paying my debt." But that doesn't mean Nick had any similar idea at the time of the flashback. In the 1950s, he taught archeology instead of chasing criminals. >("I will do good, but I will only kill people I'm angry with." is >certainly what he seems to be *living* ... With the exception of LC in Dark Knight, who is Nick killing in the present day out of anger? He thought that the guy in "Last Act" didn't deserve to live, but he didn't kill him (although he was pretty angry at him). --Sandra Gray, forever Knightie --tmp_harkins@d....... ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 00:50:44 -0500 From: Sandra Gray <TMP_HARKINS@d.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe Dianne De Sha writes: >Laura's point was that Nick makes exception to his "no kill" rule >when he feels justified in it. And that, often, makes him a hypocrite. In rereading Dianne's post, these two lines jumped out at me. Does anyone besides me see how ludricous this sounds? On the one hand, Nick is supposed to be a "hypocrite" if he makes an exception to his "no kill" rule when he feels justified in it. But on the other hand, Nick is being criticized in this thread for *not* making an exception to his "no kill" rule and killing Hitler. Apparently the guy can't be cut a break no matter *what* he does. --Sandra Gray, forever Knightie --tmp_harkins@d....... ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 02:01:11 -0400 From: Apache <lf@c.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe On Wed, 1 May 1996, Sandra Gray wrote: > Dianne De Sha writes: > >Laura's point was that Nick makes exception to his "no kill" rule > >when he feels justified in it. And that, often, makes him a hypocrite. > > In rereading Dianne's post, these two lines jumped out at me. Does > anyone besides me see how ludicrous this sounds? Well... no. > Nick is supposed to be a "hypocrite" if he makes an exception to > his "no kill" rule when he feels justified in it. But on the other > hand, Nick is being criticized in this thread for *not* making an > exception to his "no kill" rule and killing Hitler. No, Nick is being criticized in this thread for asking/wanting Lacroix to do it for him. > Apparently the guy can't be cut a break no matter *what* he does. Hey, he loves it that way. No other character on TV loves to suffer like Nick does. Those of us who pick on him are merely helping his penance along. You know -- ten Hail Marys and six decades of angst, then come back for more. It's a blinkin' joke, OK? It was a *joke* the first time, and it's still a joke! Ap. ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 02:33:51 -0400 From: Gehirn Karies <SoulDebris@a.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe Merc Cousin Lisa: >Here's a guy who kept women locked up in his dungeon while >he slowly killed them one sip at a time. Yeah, real nice guy that Nick. <very evil snickering> Would you like a can opener with that paragraph? Brutal Cousin Karies SoulDebris@a....... "Pain looks great on other people, that's what they're for." Andrew Eldritch Sisters of Mercy ========================================================================= Date: Tue, 30 Apr 1996 23:47:12 -0700 From: Dianne Therese De Sha <maeve@g.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe Dianne De Sha writes: > >Laura's point was that Nick makes exception to his "no kill" rule > >when he feels justified in it. And that, often, makes him a hypocrite. Sandra responds: > In rereading Dianne's post, these two lines jumped out at me. Does > anyone besides me see how ludricous this sounds? On the one hand, Um... excuse me? > Nick is supposed to be a "hypocrite" if he makes an exception to > his "no kill" rule when he feels justified in it. But on the other > hand, Nick is being criticized in this thread for *not* making an > exception to his "no kill" rule and killing Hitler. Apparently the No, Sandra... you're confusing your posters again. I neither feel, nor have ever suggested Nick _should_ have killed anyone. Hitler included. Dianne Dianne la Mercenaire... -*- <cat.goddess@p.......> -*-"We must be powerful, beautiful, and without regret."-*- ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 02:49:52 -0400 From: Ray Heuer <RayHeuer@a.......> Subject: Re: Jane Doe As to this "Schicklegruber" nonsense: Adolph Hitler was born Adolph Hitler. His birth certificate reads "Adolph Hitler". Adolph's father Aloys Hitler was illegitimate and bore the name Schicklegruber until his father acknowledged him long before Adolph was born. Certain historians have theorized that Aloys Hitler may not have been Adolph's biological father, due to his marrying well below his station, in fact marrying a household servant. However, legally and historically, Adolph Hitler, conceieved out of wedlock, was the child of Aloys Hitler and bore his name from birth to death. Hitler was also a poor sketch artist, and I find it odd that he would choose to do a sketch of a stranger "for practice". He was a fair-to-middlin' landscape artist, preferring to draw large structures such as churches and monuments. And no virtual chocolate to anyone who says he had an "edifice complex"! Nevertheless, I winced when LaCroix set the sketch aflame (why save something so carefully for 50 years and then destroy it on a whim?) I'm not sure that any of this qualifies as "on-topic", so - ObFK: Maybe Nat has a point about Tracy and the oxygen mask. Do you think her problem all along has been lack of oxygen to her brain? -- Ray Nat Vamp Camp Rage! Rage! Against the dying of the Knight! ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 02:50:05 -0400 From: Ray Heuer <RayHeuer@a.......> Subject: Re: SPOILERS: Jane Doe (ep 19) Take 2 Replying to my comment that Capt. Reese obtained the hairs illegally, Sandra Gray asks: > Then why is testimony obtained by a "wire" admissable? Usually (but not always), a court order and the consent of the person wearing the "wire" is required. In this case, however, Reese was in violation of a court order by being close enough to Manning to obtain hair samples. -- Ray Nat Vamp Camp New episodes have begun! Rage! Rage! Against the dying of the Knight! ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 02:00:28 -0500 From: Sandra Gray <TMP_HARKINS@d.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe Dianne De Sha writes: >No, Sandra... you're confusing your posters again. No, I'm not. Reread the quote I quoted: >Laura's point was that Nick makes exception to his "no kill" rule >when he feels justified in it. And that, often, makes him a hypocrite. It clearly states you're talking about *Laura's* point. >I neither feel, nor have every suggested Nick _should_ have killed >anyone. Hitler included. Glad to hear it. But I did not say you said that. Reread my post. --Sandra Gray, forever Knightie --tmp_harkins@d....... ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 00:06:19 -0700 From: Dianne Therese De Sha <maeve@g.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe And again... > Dianne De Sha writes: > >"Good?" Who said "good"? > Do you see quote marks around the good in my quote above? *I* used > good as my own comment since Laura had expressed favorability (and Well so we disagree on what she was expressing. This is the point I was trying to make. Of such things are discussions made, no? > no, that's not her "quote") for LC's actions with Calvin. She seemed > to think it was a good idea (again, not a "quote"). Any reason you're not quoting what she actually said? > >And LC does many, many things Nick detests in order to keep Nick _alive_ > Does he really? In the present time he doesn't seem to be doing too > much to try to keep Nick alive. He doesn't seem to be "popping up" > that much when Nick has tried various cures that might "kill" him. <blinks> <blinks again> Now he's not interfering in Nick's life *enough*? (Apparently showing up for a little talk with a tag-in-the-sunbeam chaser in The Fix doesn't count... or a series of framed murders in KI? [to get him to leave town and give up on the mortality attempt, which is suicidal to his POV]...) <sigh> I give up... > >>But that line wasn't aired, so why discuss it? > >Umm... 'Pot calling the kettle black'? <g> > I didn't bring up the topic. I just don't think that a big deal > should be made out of something that wasn't aired (as it seems this Just noting that you don't seem adverse to making a big deal out of this line-that-was-not either. (Want to add up your line count on the subject today? ;-) > cut quote has been). Particularly when there was something Nick > said in the flashback that *was* aired that could be similarly > twisted if one desired. "Twisted"? Let's try to give all the participants in this debate the benefit of the doubt, o.k.? > >"He killed them." Ally, traitor; broken neck or drained-- ...Nick > >makes exceptions to his "no kill" rule when he feels justified in it. > Well, the leader of the allied group Nick was involved with also felt > like killing the man. Resistance fighters probably tried all Trans: "Someone else wanted to also." Are you suggesting that makes it o.k.? (And, if not, why bring it up?) > suspected spies? If this had been a standard war movie, would you > be so quick to condemn a human allied member who killed a suspected > spy? <sigh> Did this start with "How dare Nick kill anyone?" No. The thread, at last recall, was Nick's "I have not/will not kill... only, well, I thought _he_ deserved it." (Since I've never seen one of your hypothetical human movie characters claim such a thing, what they do or do not do isn't exactly relevant to the discussion.) Dianne Signing off the ping-pong match... been there, done that ...and going in circles like this is making me dizzy... agree to disagree, o.k? Dianne la Mercenaire... -*- <cat.goddess@p.......> -*-"We must be powerful, beautiful, and without regret."-*- ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 03:10:12 -0500 From: Sandra Gray <TMP_HARKINS@d.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe Dianne De Sha writes: >Any reason why you're not quoting what she actually said? Two reasons: 1) I don't remember if I kept the post. 2) I was too lazy to go look and see. :) Why did you make a big deal about my using the word "good"? >Now he's not interfering in Nick's life *enough*? >[snip comments about LC in The Fix and Killer Instinct] That's only two times in two years. Where was he when Nick was trying to be "cured" by Marian Blackwing? Where was he when Nick hooked himself up to the machine that flatlined him in Near Death? He hasn't always been johnny-on-the-spot for all Nick's cure attempts, but if he cares about Nick staying _alive_, shouldn't he be? >"Twisted"? Well, imo, it's twisted to try to put all the deaths of WWII at Nick's feet. That is how this whole debate got started (and yes, I saw Apache post it was a joke, but I'm not the only one who took what she said as a serious comment). >The thread, at last recall, was Nick's "I have not/will not kill... >only, well, I thought _he_ deserved it." Yes, but it was originally why should Nick ask LC to kill Hitler instead of doing it himself. There have to have been mortals in any war who have killed based on suspicion. Other than Outside the Lines, how often has Nick killed someone since deciding he would not kill humans because he thought the person _deserved_ it. Damn few. Heck, Nick hypnotized a confession out of the murderer of Nat's godchild in Undue Process and *destroyed the tape* because it wasn't obtained ethically (even if it *was* true). When it came down to lying under oath in court about seeing a murder committed that Nick didn't see committed in False Witness, Nick didn't lie. If Nick hadn't broken the suspected male spy's neck in Outside the Lines, do you think his human allies would have let him live. The woman Nick later bit in that episode hit Nick with a bottle so that she could kill the man for the death of her brother (had Nick been mortal, he would probably have been knocked out and she would have accomplished her aim). War's a messy business, ethics fall by the wayside. Would you have condemned the woman for killing the man she thought responsible for getting her brother killed? Do you think her fellow resistance fighters would have condemned her? --Sandra Gray, forever Knightie --tmp_harkins@d....... ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 06:33:49 +0000 From: Karen Tobin <ktobin@t.......> Subject: Re: SPOILERS: Jane Doe (ep 19) Take 2 On 1 May 96 at 2:50, Ray Heuer wrote: > Usually (but not always), a court order and the consent of the person > wearing the "wire" is required. In this case, however, Reese was in > violation of a court order by being close enough to Manning to obtain hair > samples. Actually, maybe not. I'mnot sure how it works in Canada, but in the US, the fact that Manning contacted Reese and asked him to meet him woiuld render the restraining order void. Karen, Knightie/Heartbreaker (ktobin@t......., http://www.tiac.net/users/ktobin) Reference Librarian, Save Forever Knight Campaign/Almighty Address Goddess Forever Knight has been cancelled. To help, email me and/or visit: http://members.aol.com/CuznJamiMR/SaveForeverKnight.html ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 06:34:40 -0400 From: Jamie Melody Randell <immajer@p.......> Subject: Re: Spoiler: JD, Nick-ping/LC-pong On Apr 30, 1996 19:53:19, 'AKR <r@w.......>' wrote: >Therefore, when Nick suggests that LC simply kill the rat, he >is in fact offering what he thinks of as a kinder fate. Nah. Nick was just jealous. "I don't WANT a new baby brother, Daddy..." That's what I think was going on at the time. Any and all discussions of Hitler and his evil are/were merely 20/20 hindsight. -- - Jamie M.R. <immajer@p.......> - - Assistant Listowner, FORKNI-L - - NatPack, ConvCos, Ace-ist in RoadMode - - Illustrated Webgoddess & Keeper of Warm Fuzzies - List Rules - http://cac.psu.edu/~jap8/FK/FKRules.html ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 05:04:24 -0700 From: Roxanne Piccen <CHIRMP@a.......> Subject: SPOILER: Jane Doe & LC's Buddy My thoughts on the whole "Nick asked LaCroix to kill Hitler because he felt how evil he was but didn't want to do it himself" thread (I'm on digest, so indulge me): First, neither LC or Nick knew who Hitler was at that point in time. They both felt "bad vibes" and hatred emanating from him, but beyond that, they had no knowledge of the Corporal's future actions. As I recall the scene, LaCroix commented on the Corporal's potential as a vampire candidate and contemplated bringing him across. Nick got a disgusted look on his face, said he didn't need that kind of energy and told LaCroix to kill the Corporal and be done with it. I interpret this to mean Nick didn't want this person joining their vampire entourage. If LC must feed on the Corporal, then Nick would prefer that he finish the man off rather than bring him across. Nick didn't want or insist that the Corporal be killed; he actually appeared rather ambivalent about whether the man lives or dies. It seemed to me that Nick just didn't want to have the Corporal as a companion for eternity. BTW, I like Gehirn Karies' idea of having Schanke as LaCroix's buddy. I always did like that scene with the two of them in Close Call. I can just see them in Raven now: Schanke with a beer and LaCroix with his "usual". Schanke: "That must be a pretty good drink. What is it? It's the only thing I ever see you drink. Maybe I'll have one." LaCroix (lips curling up in an ever so slight smile): "Hmm. I don't think that would be a very good idea. A certain refined palate is required to fully enjoy the flavor and you, my friend, have not reached that point yet." Hey, didn't Jamie come up with LaCroissants as the LC/Schanke faction name? Roxanne (who has now moved from lurker to semi-lurker status) RoxanneP@a....... (Home) // CHIRMP@a....... (Work) ********************************************************* Save Forever Knight! // Save American Gothic! Check out: http://members.aol.com/CuznJamiMR/SaveForeverKnight.html http://www.best.com/~owls for The Trinity Guardian ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 05:25:56 -0700 From: LC Fenster <lucienlc@i.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe Sandra wrote: >>And LC does many, many things Nick detests in order to keep Nick >>_alive_ > >Does he really? In the present time he doesn't seem to be doing too >much to try to keep Nick alive. He doesn't seem to be "popping up" >that much when Nick has tried various cures that might "kill" him. Question for you, Sandra: What, apart from dying, could LaCroix ever do that you would consider favorably? Think about it. Is there _ANYTHING_? Here you're criticising him for NOT interfering in Nick's life. Last season, and at other points this season you have criticised him for being a control freak who insisted on controlling Nick's life. MAKE UP YOUR MIND! But then, as I said yesterday, you do love to have it both ways. :-) Cousin LaurieCF M+B+D+T+K ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 09:04:44 -0400 From: Kathryn Lintner <kat@S.......> Subject: Re: Jane Doe OK. I've been staying out of the debate as to whether or not Nick should have killed Hitler himself rather than asking Lacroix to do it. I can't take it anymore; I just *have* to defend Nick. I'm a Knightie; I can't help myself. From what I saw, Nick did *not* ask Lacroix to kill Hitler. Rather, he told him not to bring Hitler across, to drink from him if he wanted to but kill him and be done with it. That is *not* the same thing as asking Lacroix to kill Hitler so he wouldn't have to do so himself. Now, I will admit that I kinda dozed off once or twice during "Jane Doe" (I couldn't help it, I was tired. I taped it and will rewatch it later, so don't send the Enforcers after me!), so maybe I missed something. If I did, I'm sure someone will fill me in, but until I get new evidence, Nick is innocent of wussiness--at least in this instance. Kathryn ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 09:03:16 -0500 From: Sandra Gray <TMP_HARKINS@d.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe Laurie Fenster writes: >Here you're criticising him for NOT interfering in Nick's life. No, I was just taking issue with the statement "And LC does many, many things Nick detests in order to keep Nick _alive_". I haven't seen LC doing that much stuff that fits into such a description in the present day. Of course that doesn't mean he'd sit idly by if Nick *did* happen to regain his mortality. :) --Sandra Gray, forever Knightie --tmp_harkins@d....... ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 07:26:46 -0700 From: LC Fenster <lucienlc@i.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER: Jane Doe You wrote: Sandra writes: >I was just taking issue with the statement "And LC does many, many >things Nick detests in order to keep Nick _alive_". I haven't seen >LC doing that much stuff that fits into such a description >Of course that doesn't mean he'd sit idly by if Nick *did* happen to >regain his mortality. :) Oh, and do you think he would sit idly by if Nick were in real danger of dying? And you nicely avoided my question: what could LaCroix do, other than die, that would make you speak favorably of him? Inquiring minds want to know! :-) Laurie ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 07:44:13 -0700 From: LC Fenster <lucienlc@i.......> Subject: SPOILERS: Jane Doe; Companionship In an effort to provoke a more meaningful discussion than who is to blame for WWII, Nick or LC, when the answer is neither <g>, I propound the following: What it was in Nick that attracted LaCroix and made him decide to bring Nick across as an eternity-long companion? Cousin LaurieCF M+B+D+T+K ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 11:07:42 EDT From: Tanya Smith <bodybldr@v.......> [Subject: Jane Doe--and the new off topic] ======================================================================== Date: 1 May 1996, 10:57:55 EDT From: BODYBLDR at RALVM29 To: fkpoilr at psuvm.psu.edu Subject: Jane Doe--and the new off topic I think LC's question is valid but belongs on the forkni list. IMHO, though, Lacroix is bisexual and is also attracted to a complementary personality. Nick fits this description. I also think that Lacroix *REALLY* doesn't want Nick to do his bidding, for then he would cease to be a challenge. I think Lacroix has the guy mentality of "I want what I can't have, and if I can have it, I really don't want it anymore". If Nick were to succumb to Lacroix' temptations, he wouldn't amuse Lacroix anymore. Lacroix loves Nicholas' goodness, generosity and angst. It's the fuel that stokes the fire, so to speak. Just my controversial opinion though. ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 09:47:04 -0700 From: LC Fenster <lucienlc@i.......> Subject: Re: SPOILER; Jane Doe; Companionship Tanya wrote: >I think LC's question is valid but belongs on the forkni list. The reason the question is posed here on spoiler it was precipitated by LC's musing in Jane Doe about why he would consider bringing someone across, and any answers might also refer to that episode -- which obviously makes it a spoiler question. Laurie ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 11:42:28 -0500 From: Margie Hammet <treeleaf@i.......> Subject: Re: Spoiler: Jane Doe, Flowers AKR wrote: >On Tue, 30 Apr 1996, D Echelbarger wrote: >> They were gladiolas. >I hypothesize that this is a sign of Reese's extreme, emotional >involvement in the case, that he was jumping to ill-informed conclusions >Of course, in Real Life, florists just don't sell cotton flowers... :) I assumed the flowers were artificial flowers, made of cotton. I don't know if in real life artificial flowers are ever made of cotton, but I don't worry much about FK's lapses from real life. I'm perfectly willing to assume that if Manning wanted to get hold of cotton flowers for the sake of his nasty, racist joke, then he did manage to get hold of them. Margie (treeleaf@i.......) ========================================================================= Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 13:14:44 -0400 From: Celeste Hotaling-Lyons <celeste_hotaling-lyons@i.......> Subject: Jane Doe Spoilers Subject: Time:12:22 PM OFFICE MEMO Jane Doe Spoilers Date:5/1/96 Was it Sandra who said: >Predators in the natural world do not engage in >killing more than they need Oh, yeah, they do--that's a total misconception people have about The Wild Kingdom caused by watching too many phony Disney wildlife films as children (Disney also started the myth about lemmings jumping off of cliffs--it was two Disney cameramen who hired a farmer to push/terrify them off the cliff with a steam shovel while they filmed it...but I digress.) Gozer the Gammy-legged Cat & Mad Max have brought home several dead/almost dead/not very enthusiastic birds a piece already this spring. They do not eat them, but they have a great time playing with them. They really, really ENJOY it. I'm their mother, and a mother knows these things. Not sure what this has to do with vampires, though, unless, like a lot of predators, whether human or animal, they really, really enjoy the hunt & chase! Jane Doe--I'd probably been more enthused about it if it had either been shown earlier in the year (seems such a waste for it to be one of the Final Four!) or if it had been tailored to a character I'd liked, instead of to Reese, about whom I have no opinion whatsoever. I'll say one thing, though--golly, but Toronto sure seems to have a lot of Serial Killers in it! And I don't mean the vamps! I was entirely ready to toss off the little exchange between LC & Nick ("I'm going to bring him across!" "Oh, just kill him and be done with it."), as the sort of throwaway conversations people have on a train, not take it seriously at all, until it was confirmed later on by Nick saying "If you'd done as I'd asked..." This exchange does not make Nick look good. He seemed to actually want LC to kill the corporal, but was not ready to do it himself. He looks bad either way: if he sensed an Evil large enough to suggest to LC that he should kill the corporal, he looks bad because he didn't take that Evil in hand & destroy it himself. If he didn't really sense an Evil that was so strong, it simply *had* to be destroyed, then what the heck is he doing suggesting that LC kill the guy?! There are lots of things to say to LC to dissuade him from bringing someone across--"Hey, why doncha just *kill* him" should not be one of them, not if you are Nicky the Good Guy. Must have been having a bad hair day--he did look a bit dyspeptic, don't you think? Maybe the blood in the flask was old and was giving him a tummyache. JD Likes: When Mr. Serial Killer Author (Mr. S.K.A.) says to Captain Reese, "Well, they've teamed you up with an Aryan this time!" and Nick sort of looks around to see who the heck the guy's talking about. "Who? Moi? Aryan?" Nicky's little cat & mouse game (see above, about predators) with Mr. S.K.A. in the hotel. He enjoyed that waaay too much. Nat finally acting like, well, *Nat* this season. No hysteria. No hystrionics. Just a damn good job of detection, even if saddled with someone who wouldn't even take nausea pill to keep her focused. I mean, what's more important, proving yourself or getting the job done correctly? Take the stupid pill, you pill. The fact that someone in props aged the paper the drawing Hitler did was on to a lovely brown. Someone was *thinking*! JD Dislikes: As I said before... why did it have to be a Reese episode? After Reese has been told to avoid Mr. S.K.A., ORDERED to stay away from him with dire threats, he goes to meet with Mr. S.K.A. in the warehouse. I turned to my husband and said, "Ah! This must be the episode where Reese gets to act as an idiot plot device to keep the plot going. And I thought he was so sensible." If anything, given Reese's character, I'd say he'd stick even closer to The Book (as in 'by the book') after being warned, so as not to allow the guy to get off on a technicality after the inevitable arrest. Also got tired of hearing Reese lecture Nick *yet again* on "Why I don't like Mr. S.K.A." The audience got it the first time he told us, guys! Direction, lighting, whatever seemed OK--but the music was great! Since I got the CD, I've been appreciating the drama Fred brings to the show even more than before. Fred is the best--hope they continue using his talents when they Bring The Show Back (as they must do!!!) Cousine Celeste M+B+D+T+K =========================================================================
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