masoodamirafzali
oct 2024 se unió
Te damos la bienvenida a nuevo perfil
Nuestras actualizaciones aún están en desarrollo. Si bien la versión anterior de el perfil ya no está disponible, estamos trabajando activamente en mejoras, ¡y algunas de las funciones que faltan regresarán pronto! Mantente al tanto para su regreso. Mientras tanto, el análisis de calificaciones sigue disponible en nuestras aplicaciones para iOS y Android, en la página de perfil. Para ver la distribución de tus calificaciones por año y género, consulta nuestra nueva Guía de ayuda.
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Para saber cómo ganar distintivos, ve a página de ayuda de distintivos.
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Clasificación de masoodamirafzali
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Clasificación de masoodamirafzali
I honestly can't remember the last time a single episode made me lose this much respect for a show I previously enjoyed. Episode 5 of The Studio is not just a misstep - it's a full-on betrayal of its characters, its tone, and its audience.
Let's start with Sal - one of the most entertaining, characters in the series. Yes, he's a bit of a douchebag, but that's part of his charm. He's sharp, flawed, but human - the kind of character people root for. So what do the writers do? They suddenly and inexplicably decide to villainize him, with no real justification, and expect us to cheer against him. It's character assassination, plain and simple.
Then we have Quinn, the CE. A character we've seen before, but never deeply explored - until now, when the writers decide to reintroduce her as a narcissistic, selfish, entitled tyrant. Within minutes, she's bullying the parking manager ("You know I'm the CE, right?"), illegally accessing assistant's computer, stealing passwords, deleting meetings, and sabotaging Sal's work.
This is not "boss energy" - this is unhinged, unethical behavior. And instead of presenting her as a flawed antagonist or a cautionary example, the writers clearly want us to root for her. The tone celebrates her manipulation, her entitlement, and her belief that she deserves Sal's position simply because she thinks she's smarter.
But the most insulting moment comes at the end. Quinn decides she's going to report Sal to HR - and only backs off not because he defends himself, or because she realizes she's in the wrong - but because she pities him. Sal, broken and defeated, begs her not to go through with it. And somehow we're supposed to see this moment as a "badass win" for her. The episode even frames her as the triumphant underdog who came out on top.
It's not clever. It's a moral mess. There are no consequences for her actions - despite the fact that she blatantly committed fireable offenses, Instead, the show rewards her, celebrates her, and completely ignores the toxic message it's sending: that bullying, sabotage, and ego-trips are okay, as long as you're confident doing them.
Let's start with Sal - one of the most entertaining, characters in the series. Yes, he's a bit of a douchebag, but that's part of his charm. He's sharp, flawed, but human - the kind of character people root for. So what do the writers do? They suddenly and inexplicably decide to villainize him, with no real justification, and expect us to cheer against him. It's character assassination, plain and simple.
Then we have Quinn, the CE. A character we've seen before, but never deeply explored - until now, when the writers decide to reintroduce her as a narcissistic, selfish, entitled tyrant. Within minutes, she's bullying the parking manager ("You know I'm the CE, right?"), illegally accessing assistant's computer, stealing passwords, deleting meetings, and sabotaging Sal's work.
This is not "boss energy" - this is unhinged, unethical behavior. And instead of presenting her as a flawed antagonist or a cautionary example, the writers clearly want us to root for her. The tone celebrates her manipulation, her entitlement, and her belief that she deserves Sal's position simply because she thinks she's smarter.
But the most insulting moment comes at the end. Quinn decides she's going to report Sal to HR - and only backs off not because he defends himself, or because she realizes she's in the wrong - but because she pities him. Sal, broken and defeated, begs her not to go through with it. And somehow we're supposed to see this moment as a "badass win" for her. The episode even frames her as the triumphant underdog who came out on top.
It's not clever. It's a moral mess. There are no consequences for her actions - despite the fact that she blatantly committed fireable offenses, Instead, the show rewards her, celebrates her, and completely ignores the toxic message it's sending: that bullying, sabotage, and ego-trips are okay, as long as you're confident doing them.