"the lightning", you have made it to the top of the mountain and the only thing left is to be struck by the lightning. and the only difference is if you're ready for it or not.
@@milesward1211 As in you need to "find someone that makes you feel like you've been struck by f'kin lightning" I'm presuming. And she wasn't ready for Roy. Or rather, the other way around. Or, a third option.
@@danrenshaw3702 Keeley's journey through this season is of a very positive person (see a theme?) daring to try new things and dealing with failure and of the hurt of being as open as she is (her venture suffers because of her relationship with Jack, her sexuality - of which she is open and comfortable with - is shared online in a manner she is not comfortable with), but ultimately picking yourself up and trying persevering. Roy's is one of facing your insecurities (with Keeley, with riding a bike...), looking at the parts of you you're ashamed of and learning to grow past and with those parts, losing the fear/agression in opening up to others (key moments: his relationship with Jaime and Rebeca hitting the nail on the head on how his "Woe is me" shtick is not working anymore) and ultimately learning that a person is a work in progress that deserves to be loved. It follows through nicely with the seeds of his self doubt in previous seasons as to who he is beyond Roy Kent, footballer: when he's forced to look at himself beyond that, he sees someone who, in his own words, is holding Keeley back. And he wants to improve, but right to the very end he equates that with "being someone else", instead of "being a better but still - fallible - Roy". Whatever is supposed to happen between them - are they going to be a couple, friends, on-again-off-again, a three-way relationship - really doesn't matter, because the message the show conveys is "Whatever it is, they're going to be healthier for it"
"Short for anything?" "Maybe" "and is this your place maybe?" That got me so good 🤣🤣🤣
"Once you make it to the top of the mountain, whats left for you but lightning." I love that.
I couldn’t believe that Keeley and Mae never met before this scene! 😮
Exactly my thoughts
A rare, totally unbelievable moment for the show.
They have. In season 2 when Ted meets Rebecca’s mom and they eat lunch there. Continuation error
@@Rolando14001 Yeah, this really bothered me. She’s been here before and they’ve totally met.
Or she just never payed genuin attention to mae, or she was too drunk...
Mae casually throwing in some Niechtsze
I love this
Same here. I like Mae a great deal
It is a great name. It’s my mom’s name. And her middle name begins with a B. So she is, in fact, Mae B.
Is she saying "enlightenment" or "liking it"?
She's saying Lightning
"the lightning", you have made it to the top of the mountain and the only thing left is to be struck by the lightning. and the only difference is if you're ready for it or not.
@@milesward1211 As in you need to "find someone that makes you feel like you've been struck by f'kin lightning" I'm presuming. And she wasn't ready for Roy. Or rather, the other way around. Or, a third option.
@@danrenshaw3702 Keeley's journey through this season is of a very positive person (see a theme?) daring to try new things and dealing with failure and of the hurt of being as open as she is (her venture suffers because of her relationship with Jack, her sexuality - of which she is open and comfortable with - is shared online in a manner she is not comfortable with), but ultimately picking yourself up and trying persevering.
Roy's is one of facing your insecurities (with Keeley, with riding a bike...), looking at the parts of you you're ashamed of and learning to grow past and with those parts, losing the fear/agression in opening up to others (key moments: his relationship with Jaime and Rebeca hitting the nail on the head on how his "Woe is me" shtick is not working anymore) and ultimately learning that a person is a work in progress that deserves to be loved. It follows through nicely with the seeds of his self doubt in previous seasons as to who he is beyond Roy Kent, footballer: when he's forced to look at himself beyond that, he sees someone who, in his own words, is holding Keeley back. And he wants to improve, but right to the very end he equates that with "being someone else", instead of "being a better but still - fallible - Roy".
Whatever is supposed to happen between them - are they going to be a couple, friends, on-again-off-again, a three-way relationship - really doesn't matter, because the message the show conveys is "Whatever it is, they're going to be healthier for it"
In real life there is no way this would have been the first time Keeley met May(be).
"The man" in this case being Friedrich Nietzsche, from his book "Thus Spoke Zarathustra". Mae appreciates philosophy. Could she be more awesome?
First
Of all the characters in the show, Kelley was the one I couldn’t warm to, it seems she wasn’t able/capable of introspection
Really? Wow!
Can't agree. there--but readings can differ, or they're not readings..