ducky23 said:sycasey said:
IMO, expecting a show like this to remain "surprising" all the way to the end is unreasonable. At some point you need to resolve things in a dramatically satisfying way, which means you're going to have to do stuff that people have predicted would happen. I don't see any way around that. GRRM might have done it differently, but eventually he would have done it.
Even so, I think Arya being the one to deliver the final blow to the Night King WAS something of a surprise. Most people expected it would be Jon, because of the prophecy stuff surrounding him. I also wouldn't call this "unearned," since as this episode did a good job of calling back, there was ALSO some prophecy stuff surrounding her (just not as foregrounded), and we DID spend a lot of time watching her become a master assassin. I'm not even bothered by questions like, "How did she slip by the rest of the Night King's army?" They showed us a long sequence of her being quiet and stealthy and slipping past everyone's notice, as per her training. That's how she did it.
I'm glad you brought this up, because how they wrote the whole Arya thing is a perfect example of how the ending should've been surprising, but thru poor writing, the ending wasn't surprising at all.
First they have a scene in the very beginning where melisandre and Arya stare at each other for a long time. Ok it makes sense why Arya stares at Melisandre. You could say it's because Arya recognizes her from before, she's the one who kidnapped her blacksmith boyfriend, blah blah blah. But why is Melisandre staring at Arya so intently? Right there, it's pretty clear Melisandre thinks Arya is special. And everyone knows all Melisandre's character does the entire series is look for the one to fulfill her prophecy. So I'm sure I wasn't the only one who was thinking, hmmm maybe Arya is the one to kill the night king.
But then, the later scene where Beric dies, the writers do everything in their power to write in big bold letters, Arya is the one. First she says beric can finally die cause he did what the lord of light wanted (sacrifice himself to save Arya). Then Melisandre says the whole brown eyes, BLUE eyes, green eyes thing. And then off Arya goes. Gee, wonder where she's going.
Then they show a whole bunch of battle scenes with other people, except Arya. And during that whole time you're thinking, ok when is Arya going to come in and save the day. So when it happens it's not a surprise.
Now imagine if they had cut the scene with Arya and Melisandre staring at each other. And let's say they had cut the dialogue between Melisandre and Arya when beric dies. I think even without Melisandre directly saying it, most viewers would figure out that the reason he was brought back to life 6 times was to save Arya. Good writing is not always about explaining everything to the viewer. It's about allowing the viewer to figure it out themselves.
Same with the eyes dialogue. If you edit out that whole part, think about how much better and more surprising the ending is. Plus once people have seen the episode, they can go back and say, "oh yeah, Melisandre said that whole thing about the eyes back in season 3 or whatever. Wow, it all makes sense now." But the writers robbed us of figuring that out ourselves as well. And they definitely robbed us of the surprise of Arya coming in from out of nowhere to kill the night king.
Compare that to the red wedding. There was some foreshadowing of the red wedding, but all pretty obscure. The clearest foreshadowing was the playing of the rains of castamere. But even with that, you didn't have some character say "oh that's weird, why are they playing rains of castamere, isn't that a Lannister song?" Nope. None of that. The audience is left to figure out the significance themselves.
In my opinion, good writing shouldn't have to spell out everything for the audience. And it shouldn't cater to the lowest denominator. That's where GOT has changed from earlier seasons. It's kinda like the difference when sorkin left the west wing. It was the same characters and same story, but the writing was just not as intelligent.
MoragaBear said:
She also looked up at the musicians with a concerned expression when they started playing The Rains of Castermere, which was about the family the Lannister's wiped out to secure their power and settle a grudge.
Though again: they do this and still have people complaining that it didn't make sense for Arya to be the one to kill the big boss.ducky23 said:
Whereas in the last episode, Melisandre spells everything out. She's basically directly telling the audience "look here, beric was brought back 6 times by the lord of light and he finally just died saving Arya. Arya is special you idiots. Oh and remember when I told Arya about the blue eyes?" Everything is laid out in the dialogue. Rather than having faith the audience could figure it out themselves, they had to make it blatantly obvious what was going on.
sycasey said:Though again: they do this and still have people complaining that it didn't make sense for Arya to be the one to kill the big boss.ducky23 said:
Whereas in the last episode, Melisandre spells everything out. She's basically directly telling the audience "look here, beric was brought back 6 times by the lord of light and he finally just died saving Arya. Arya is special you idiots. Oh and remember when I told Arya about the blue eyes?" Everything is laid out in the dialogue. Rather than having faith the audience could figure it out themselves, they had to make it blatantly obvious what was going on.
I get that different people have different standards for this stuff, but personally I'm at the point where I just find most of the criticism of GoT episodes exhausting. It reminds me of the Itchy & Stratchy kids focus group on The Simpsons:
"So you're saying you want a realistic, down-to-earth show that's completely off the wall and swarming with magic robots?"
If it does the obvious thing, it's too obvious. If it does the unpredictable thing, it doesn't make sense. If it does bad things to the heroes, it's too nihilistic. If the heroes win, then they're playing it too safe. The quiet, character-based setup episodes are too boring. The big action episodes don't have enough character development. And so on.
I can see SOME argument that the writing is not as strong as it was when the show had the Martin books for backbone. But at the same time, I think people are assuming a lot about the stuff they don't like being only the show's invention and not what Martin was planning. Maybe what Martin is struggling with in trying to finish his series is exactly this: how do you actually END a story that is about subverting expectations without making the whole thing feel pointless? There's no way to please everyone with that. At this point everyone has a way they THINK the story should go.
Ok, that's fair. But here's my response. I don't think the director/writer should give two ****s about what someone like me thinks, or what anyone thinks. They should make the best show/movie possible, not caring at all how its going to be received by critics, fans, the mass audience, etc.sycasey said:Though again: they do this and still have people complaining that it didn't make sense for Arya to be the one to kill the big boss.ducky23 said:
Whereas in the last episode, Melisandre spells everything out. She's basically directly telling the audience "look here, beric was brought back 6 times by the lord of light and he finally just died saving Arya. Arya is special you idiots. Oh and remember when I told Arya about the blue eyes?" Everything is laid out in the dialogue. Rather than having faith the audience could figure it out themselves, they had to make it blatantly obvious what was going on.
I get that different people have different standards for this stuff, but personally I'm at the point where I just find most of the criticism of GoT episodes exhausting. It reminds me of the Itchy & Stratchy kids focus group on The Simpsons:
"So you're saying you want a realistic, down-to-earth show that's completely off the wall and swarming with magic robots?"
If it does the obvious thing, it's too obvious. If it does the unpredictable thing, it doesn't make sense. If it does bad things to the heroes, it's too nihilistic. If the heroes win, then they're playing it too safe. The quiet, character-based setup episodes are too boring. The big action episodes don't have enough character development. And so on.
I can see SOME argument that the writing is not as strong as it was when the show had the Martin books for backbone. But at the same time, I think people are assuming a lot about the stuff they don't like being only the show's invention and not what Martin was planning. Maybe what Martin is struggling with in trying to finish his series is exactly this: how do you actually END a story that is about subverting expectations without making the whole thing feel pointless? There's no way to please everyone with that. At this point everyone has a way they THINK the story should go.
Ugh, "Mary Sue" is such a dumb description for Arya. They literally showed her going through YEARS OF TRAINING leading up to this moment. She didn't just get her assassin abilities in an instant. It's not a contrivance.okaydo said:sycasey said:Though again: they do this and still have people complaining that it didn't make sense for Arya to be the one to kill the big boss.ducky23 said:
Whereas in the last episode, Melisandre spells everything out. She's basically directly telling the audience "look here, beric was brought back 6 times by the lord of light and he finally just died saving Arya. Arya is special you idiots. Oh and remember when I told Arya about the blue eyes?" Everything is laid out in the dialogue. Rather than having faith the audience could figure it out themselves, they had to make it blatantly obvious what was going on.
I get that different people have different standards for this stuff, but personally I'm at the point where I just find most of the criticism of GoT episodes exhausting. It reminds me of the Itchy & Stratchy kids focus group on The Simpsons:
"So you're saying you want a realistic, down-to-earth show that's completely off the wall and swarming with magic robots?"
If it does the obvious thing, it's too obvious. If it does the unpredictable thing, it doesn't make sense. If it does bad things to the heroes, it's too nihilistic. If the heroes win, then they're playing it too safe. The quiet, character-based setup episodes are too boring. The big action episodes don't have enough character development. And so on.
I can see SOME argument that the writing is not as strong as it was when the show had the Martin books for backbone. But at the same time, I think people are assuming a lot about the stuff they don't like being only the show's invention and not what Martin was planning. Maybe what Martin is struggling with in trying to finish his series is exactly this: how do you actually END a story that is about subverting expectations without making the whole thing feel pointless? There's no way to please everyone with that. At this point everyone has a way they THINK the story should go.
The term Mary Sue was trending because many felt what Arya did was unearned.
Anyways, I thought this article was interesting in terms of GOT subverting expectations.
https://www.vox.com/platform/amp/culture/2019/4/29/18522731/game-of-thrones-season-8-episode-3-battle-of-winterfell-not-that-deadly
Like I just said above, if the director truly believes that those accommodations fits his/her vision, I'm fine with that. my problem is if the director is knowingly making those compromises, with the understanding that it would effect the quality of the product.sycasey said:
People also criticized Peter Jackson for changing Tolkien's narrative to make things more accessible for the masses.
I mean, he did okay with all of the money and Oscars and stuff. But just saying, LOTR fans criticized the movies on the same grounds.
I also think this is complicated. TV shows have different narrative needs than movies and both are very different from books, and those differences are related to how the audience receives the story. So already right there you're making compromises for the audience, but they are the kinds of compromises that every writer makes in moving from one medium to another.ducky23 said:Like I just said above, if the director truly believes that those accommodations fits his/her vision, I'm fine with that. my problem is if the director is knowingly making those compromises, with the understanding that it would effect the quality of the product.sycasey said:
People also criticized Peter Jackson for changing Tolkien's narrative to make things more accessible for the masses.
I mean, he did okay with all of the money and Oscars and stuff. But just saying, LOTR fans criticized the movies on the same grounds.
Look, I don't know if that's what happened in GOT, but I have my suspicions.


GBear4Life said:
Whenever people are this attached to a show and its characters, people nit pick, it's just the way it goes. People criticize things that they love, I would presume they all enjoy the show just as much.
The show is clearly trying to tie up everything pretty economically, and it affects the narrative, often adversely.
I'm open to entering this magical land of dragons and zombies in cinema, but the internal logic has to make sense within that framework.
Basically tens of thousands died over a Night King that was pretty easy to kill, and whose lieutenants must have been enjoying the starlit sky as Arya ran up and tried to dunk on him. The way he was killed didn't do justice to him being part of the storyline since the opening episode.

GBear4Life said:
Basically tens of thousands died over a Night King that was pretty easy to kill, and whose lieutenants must have been enjoying the starlit sky as Arya ran up and tried to dunk on him. The way he was killed didn't do justice to him being part of the storyline since the opening episode.
GBear4Life said:
Everyone knew it required dragon glass (we did not know fire couldn't kill him)
Following the internal logic established, Arya doesn't get close to him in that situation, nor would the Night King be in a trance with the reflexes of geriatric all of a sudden. And yes stabbing somebody the same way you stab any other human to kill them I'd say is easy.
GoT didn't do enough to earn that ending, IMO. I'm not disappointed overall, just my take on the Night King end.

GBear4Life said:
Everyone knew it required dragon glass (we did not know fire couldn't kill him)
Following the internal logic established, Arya doesn't get close to him in that situation, nor would the Night King be in a trance with the reflexes of geriatric all of a sudden. And yes stabbing somebody the same way you stab any other human to kill them I'd say is easy.
GoT didn't do enough to earn that ending, IMO. I'm not disappointed overall, just my take on the Night King end.
Frankly I think Arya has earned most of all the ability to deliver the blow.sycasey said:Ugh, "Mary Sue" is such a dumb description for Arya. They literally showed her going through YEARS OF TRAINING leading up to this moment. She didn't just get her assassin abilities in an instant. It's not a contrivance.okaydo said:sycasey said:Though again: they do this and still have people complaining that it didn't make sense for Arya to be the one to kill the big boss.ducky23 said:
Whereas in the last episode, Melisandre spells everything out. She's basically directly telling the audience "look here, beric was brought back 6 times by the lord of light and he finally just died saving Arya. Arya is special you idiots. Oh and remember when I told Arya about the blue eyes?" Everything is laid out in the dialogue. Rather than having faith the audience could figure it out themselves, they had to make it blatantly obvious what was going on.
I get that different people have different standards for this stuff, but personally I'm at the point where I just find most of the criticism of GoT episodes exhausting. It reminds me of the Itchy & Stratchy kids focus group on The Simpsons:
"So you're saying you want a realistic, down-to-earth show that's completely off the wall and swarming with magic robots?"
If it does the obvious thing, it's too obvious. If it does the unpredictable thing, it doesn't make sense. If it does bad things to the heroes, it's too nihilistic. If the heroes win, then they're playing it too safe. The quiet, character-based setup episodes are too boring. The big action episodes don't have enough character development. And so on.
I can see SOME argument that the writing is not as strong as it was when the show had the Martin books for backbone. But at the same time, I think people are assuming a lot about the stuff they don't like being only the show's invention and not what Martin was planning. Maybe what Martin is struggling with in trying to finish his series is exactly this: how do you actually END a story that is about subverting expectations without making the whole thing feel pointless? There's no way to please everyone with that. At this point everyone has a way they THINK the story should go.
The term Mary Sue was trending because many felt what Arya did was unearned.
Anyways, I thought this article was interesting in terms of GOT subverting expectations.
https://www.vox.com/platform/amp/culture/2019/4/29/18522731/game-of-thrones-season-8-episode-3-battle-of-winterfell-not-that-deadly
Anyway, I kind of liked that most of the major players survived this round, because early in the series, as well-done as it was, I had concerns that the whole thing was just a big monument to nihilism: all your heroes die, you're silly to believe in them, etc. That's a kind of limited teenage worldview, to my mind. If they want to say something about real-life history and politics then it's really more of a murky middle ground between good and bad most of the time.
But it seems like the show is finally having to acknowledge the need for positive catharsis for some of the main characters. I'm sure there will be complications from here on out and not everyone will survive the end of the series, but that balance should be there. Even GRRM himself I think said that he planned for the ending to be "bittersweet," not an all-out downer.
Oski87 said:sycasey said:Ugh, "Mary Sue" is such a dumb description for Arya. They literally showed her going through YEARS OF TRAINING leading up to this moment. She didn't just get her assassin abilities in an instant. It's not a contrivance.okaydo said:sycasey said:Though again: they do this and still have people complaining that it didn't make sense for Arya to be the one to kill the big boss.ducky23 said:
Whereas in the last episode, Melisandre spells everything out. She's basically directly telling the audience "look here, beric was brought back 6 times by the lord of light and he finally just died saving Arya. Arya is special you idiots. Oh and remember when I told Arya about the blue eyes?" Everything is laid out in the dialogue. Rather than having faith the audience could figure it out themselves, they had to make it blatantly obvious what was going on.
I get that different people have different standards for this stuff, but personally I'm at the point where I just find most of the criticism of GoT episodes exhausting. It reminds me of the Itchy & Stratchy kids focus group on The Simpsons:
"So you're saying you want a realistic, down-to-earth show that's completely off the wall and swarming with magic robots?"
If it does the obvious thing, it's too obvious. If it does the unpredictable thing, it doesn't make sense. If it does bad things to the heroes, it's too nihilistic. If the heroes win, then they're playing it too safe. The quiet, character-based setup episodes are too boring. The big action episodes don't have enough character development. And so on.
I can see SOME argument that the writing is not as strong as it was when the show had the Martin books for backbone. But at the same time, I think people are assuming a lot about the stuff they don't like being only the show's invention and not what Martin was planning. Maybe what Martin is struggling with in trying to finish his series is exactly this: how do you actually END a story that is about subverting expectations without making the whole thing feel pointless? There's no way to please everyone with that. At this point everyone has a way they THINK the story should go.
The term Mary Sue was trending because many felt what Arya did was unearned.
Anyways, I thought this article was interesting in terms of GOT subverting expectations.
https://www.vox.com/platform/amp/culture/2019/4/29/18522731/game-of-thrones-season-8-episode-3-battle-of-winterfell-not-that-deadly
Anyway, I kind of liked that most of the major players survived this round, because early in the series, as well-done as it was, I had concerns that the whole thing was just a big monument to nihilism: all your heroes die, you're silly to believe in them, etc. That's a kind of limited teenage worldview, to my mind. If they want to say something about real-life history and politics then it's really more of a murky middle ground between good and bad most of the time.
But it seems like the show is finally having to acknowledge the need for positive catharsis for some of the main characters. I'm sure there will be complications from here on out and not everyone will survive the end of the series, but that balance should be there. Even GRRM himself I think said that he planned for the ending to be "bittersweet," not an all-out downer.
At the end of the day, she has been my favorite character, and I fully expected her to come through at the end. Frankly, I think she takes the throne. She was a survivor, with a singular focus and a high level of commitment.
GBear4Life said:
Following the internal logic established, Arya doesn't get close to him in that situation, nor would the Night King be in a trance with the reflexes of geriatric all of a sudden. And yes stabbing somebody the same way you stab any other human to kill them I'd say is easy.
dajo9 said:
Arya, a trained assassin, only requires a defense of her heroics because of sexism
sycasey said:GBear4Life said:
Following the internal logic established, Arya doesn't get close to him in that situation, nor would the Night King be in a trance with the reflexes of geriatric all of a sudden. And yes stabbing somebody the same way you stab any other human to kill them I'd say is easy.
The Night King had perfectly good reflexes. He caught her in mid-flight. She just outsmarted him with her knife trick.
I don't know what kind of "internal logic" you're talking about. I'd say the internal logic of the show suggests that a Faceless One would be the perfect candidate to slip in close to the enemy commander without his notice.
GMP said:sycasey said:GBear4Life said:
Following the internal logic established, Arya doesn't get close to him in that situation, nor would the Night King be in a trance with the reflexes of geriatric all of a sudden. And yes stabbing somebody the same way you stab any other human to kill them I'd say is easy.
The Night King had perfectly good reflexes. He caught her in mid-flight. She just outsmarted him with her knife trick.
I don't know what kind of "internal logic" you're talking about. I'd say the internal logic of the show suggests that a Faceless One would be the perfect candidate to slip in close to the enemy commander without his notice.
Maybe this is a dumb question - as I recall when she destroyed the Freys, she can still take the image of other people, yes? Maybe she took the image of one of the Wights?
Oski87 said:Frankly I think Arya has earned most of all the ability to deliver the blow.sycasey said:Ugh, "Mary Sue" is such a dumb description for Arya. They literally showed her going through YEARS OF TRAINING leading up to this moment. She didn't just get her assassin abilities in an instant. It's not a contrivance.okaydo said:sycasey said:Though again: they do this and still have people complaining that it didn't make sense for Arya to be the one to kill the big boss.ducky23 said:
Whereas in the last episode, Melisandre spells everything out. She's basically directly telling the audience "look here, beric was brought back 6 times by the lord of light and he finally just died saving Arya. Arya is special you idiots. Oh and remember when I told Arya about the blue eyes?" Everything is laid out in the dialogue. Rather than having faith the audience could figure it out themselves, they had to make it blatantly obvious what was going on.
I get that different people have different standards for this stuff, but personally I'm at the point where I just find most of the criticism of GoT episodes exhausting. It reminds me of the Itchy & Stratchy kids focus group on The Simpsons:
"So you're saying you want a realistic, down-to-earth show that's completely off the wall and swarming with magic robots?"
If it does the obvious thing, it's too obvious. If it does the unpredictable thing, it doesn't make sense. If it does bad things to the heroes, it's too nihilistic. If the heroes win, then they're playing it too safe. The quiet, character-based setup episodes are too boring. The big action episodes don't have enough character development. And so on.
I can see SOME argument that the writing is not as strong as it was when the show had the Martin books for backbone. But at the same time, I think people are assuming a lot about the stuff they don't like being only the show's invention and not what Martin was planning. Maybe what Martin is struggling with in trying to finish his series is exactly this: how do you actually END a story that is about subverting expectations without making the whole thing feel pointless? There's no way to please everyone with that. At this point everyone has a way they THINK the story should go.
The term Mary Sue was trending because many felt what Arya did was unearned.
Anyways, I thought this article was interesting in terms of GOT subverting expectations.
https://www.vox.com/platform/amp/culture/2019/4/29/18522731/game-of-thrones-season-8-episode-3-battle-of-winterfell-not-that-deadly
Anyway, I kind of liked that most of the major players survived this round, because early in the series, as well-done as it was, I had concerns that the whole thing was just a big monument to nihilism: all your heroes die, you're silly to believe in them, etc. That's a kind of limited teenage worldview, to my mind. If they want to say something about real-life history and politics then it's really more of a murky middle ground between good and bad most of the time.
But it seems like the show is finally having to acknowledge the need for positive catharsis for some of the main characters. I'm sure there will be complications from here on out and not everyone will survive the end of the series, but that balance should be there. Even GRRM himself I think said that he planned for the ending to be "bittersweet," not an all-out downer.
She is the only one who has been effective at killing the Starks Enemies - Littlefinger, Frey, the Night King, all the guys she killed along the way. She left the hound alive, but that was on purpose. The rest of the family was bumbling - Rob made plenty of leadership mistakes, got himself and his mother and army murdered, while winning the war. Sansa married two Lannisters and was dreadful early on. Bran was pushed out of windows. Jon was killed at the wall by his own troops.
At the end of the day, she has been my favorite character, and I fully expected her to come through at the end. Frankly, I think she takes the throne. She was a survivor, with a singular focus and a high level of commitment.
Sansa married just one Lannister and one Bolton. Not really sure how they justified the second marriage when she was technically still married, but maybe there's a scroll in Oldtown about it.Oski87 said:Frankly I think Arya has earned most of all the ability to deliver the blow.sycasey said:Ugh, "Mary Sue" is such a dumb description for Arya. They literally showed her going through YEARS OF TRAINING leading up to this moment. She didn't just get her assassin abilities in an instant. It's not a contrivance.okaydo said:sycasey said:Though again: they do this and still have people complaining that it didn't make sense for Arya to be the one to kill the big boss.ducky23 said:
Whereas in the last episode, Melisandre spells everything out. She's basically directly telling the audience "look here, beric was brought back 6 times by the lord of light and he finally just died saving Arya. Arya is special you idiots. Oh and remember when I told Arya about the blue eyes?" Everything is laid out in the dialogue. Rather than having faith the audience could figure it out themselves, they had to make it blatantly obvious what was going on.
I get that different people have different standards for this stuff, but personally I'm at the point where I just find most of the criticism of GoT episodes exhausting. It reminds me of the Itchy & Stratchy kids focus group on The Simpsons:
"So you're saying you want a realistic, down-to-earth show that's completely off the wall and swarming with magic robots?"
If it does the obvious thing, it's too obvious. If it does the unpredictable thing, it doesn't make sense. If it does bad things to the heroes, it's too nihilistic. If the heroes win, then they're playing it too safe. The quiet, character-based setup episodes are too boring. The big action episodes don't have enough character development. And so on.
I can see SOME argument that the writing is not as strong as it was when the show had the Martin books for backbone. But at the same time, I think people are assuming a lot about the stuff they don't like being only the show's invention and not what Martin was planning. Maybe what Martin is struggling with in trying to finish his series is exactly this: how do you actually END a story that is about subverting expectations without making the whole thing feel pointless? There's no way to please everyone with that. At this point everyone has a way they THINK the story should go.
The term Mary Sue was trending because many felt what Arya did was unearned.
Anyways, I thought this article was interesting in terms of GOT subverting expectations.
https://www.vox.com/platform/amp/culture/2019/4/29/18522731/game-of-thrones-season-8-episode-3-battle-of-winterfell-not-that-deadly
Anyway, I kind of liked that most of the major players survived this round, because early in the series, as well-done as it was, I had concerns that the whole thing was just a big monument to nihilism: all your heroes die, you're silly to believe in them, etc. That's a kind of limited teenage worldview, to my mind. If they want to say something about real-life history and politics then it's really more of a murky middle ground between good and bad most of the time.
But it seems like the show is finally having to acknowledge the need for positive catharsis for some of the main characters. I'm sure there will be complications from here on out and not everyone will survive the end of the series, but that balance should be there. Even GRRM himself I think said that he planned for the ending to be "bittersweet," not an all-out downer.
She is the only one who has been effective at killing the Starks Enemies - Littlefinger, Frey, the Night King, all the guys she killed along the way. She left the hound alive, but that was on purpose. The rest of the family was bumbling - Rob made plenty of leadership mistakes, got himself and his mother and army murdered, while winning the war. Sansa married two Lannisters and was dreadful early on. Bran was pushed out of windows. Jon was killed at the wall by his own troops.
At the end of the day, she has been my favorite character, and I fully expected her to come through at the end. Frankly, I think she takes the throne. She was a survivor, with a singular focus and a high level of commitment.