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More Reddit Venting But Considering This Is The *third* Time Someone Has Tried To Argue That Allison
More Reddit venting but considering this is the *third* time someone has tried to argue that Allison faking her death with a stolen certificate should have had some kind of legal/karmic repercussion, I have to get off my chest the person who argued that Allison was taking the chance that Gertrude Fronch's relatives could find out she died and grieve away from them, which COMPLETELY DEFEATS THE ENTIRE POINT OF ALLISON TAKING GERTRUDE'S IDENTITY.
The most egregious example of someone making shit up just to be mad at a fictional character I have ever seen.
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monsterstaybroken liked this · 2 years ago
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cecret-with-a-c liked this · 2 years ago
More Posts from Armeniuslaurant
first impression of Therese in The Price of Salt

What's so good about the "Stay Broken" scene is that yes it's extremely romantic but it's Pattison at its most toxic and enabling, and it almost *immediately* backfires. Allison is pretty vaguely upset and self-loathing, and Patty comes in with "No you're great you've done nothing wrong keep being you (you're-so-pretty-I-love-you)"
And sure, that helps Allison not spiral in her next argument with Sam but now all of her own shittiness towards Sam has been absolved and redirected to Patty and guess what, Patty doesn't like that! Those broken edges Patty loves so much do indeed cut!
Patty pushes back, completely understandably for her own health, but can you imagine your oldest friend/lover/person you've assigned bearer of a "better" past self calls you broken, then your new best friend tells you they love you anyways and *then* a week later goes (paraphrased, and certainly interpreted as such by Allison) "Fuck you, you're broken. I don't want to ever speak to you again."
Jesus.







KEVIN CAN F**K HIMSELF | 2.07 The Problem
I report and block most obvious bots as expected, but I'm keeping the one that is a brunette in red and black plaid, because that feels like effort was put into targeting me.
I judge the value of fiction by the Kyuubey Test, which posits that something is automatically good if Kyuubey could get the protagonist to sign a contract