01-09-2019, 12:30 AM
Quote:Not wanting to sound like a broken record, since I think you are old enough to remember what they were, but you push me into it.The reason I apply logic is because the show is a product. It has a frame work. It has a skin that dictates how it looks and feels. As in the manufacture of any product there has to be logic so the parts fit together. Yes what they do on the show my defy logic. It may not even seem rational. But that does not mean their isn't a logical reason for why a character does something illogical. Take the argument about Juleitte trying to kill Adalind. Where they showing her trying to kill Adalind an failing. or where they trying to provide a reason for Adalind to be scared. If she was trying an failing you would expect them to show disappointment. Instead the response was that of intimidation. Take the Knives it was after Juliete intimidated ADalind that she realized she was changing. Up to that point Juliette was kind to everyone. Even when ADalind showed up with Diana, her kindness beat out her hatred. As a hexenbiest the first two times it bothered her that she was able to be cruel. She even said as much to Nick and then in the shop. It was the last time in the spice shop that being intimidating no longer bothered her.
There is no applicable logic to the behaviors of made up characters in a non-existing world. I do not have the ability to make it any plainer to you.
Since you wish to insist and continue apply this concept called "logic" to your analysis of a some writer's fantasized characters in a fantasized world? Knock your self out. (Trows in the hat)
Embrace your inner Biest..... We all have one