Stars Hollow is asked to host a Festival of Living Art when a neighboring town backs out, inspiring the town regulars pitch in to pull it off in only a week. Lane finds the perfect guitarist... Read allStars Hollow is asked to host a Festival of Living Art when a neighboring town backs out, inspiring the town regulars pitch in to pull it off in only a week. Lane finds the perfect guitarist to replace Dave, but Zach objects because of his age.Stars Hollow is asked to host a Festival of Living Art when a neighboring town backs out, inspiring the town regulars pitch in to pull it off in only a week. Lane finds the perfect guitarist to replace Dave, but Zach objects because of his age.
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- Michel Gerard
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- Paris Geller
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- Emily Gilmore
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- Richard Gilmore
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Featured reviews
First, fictional characters are meant to have opinions, quirks, and flaws that make them human. Lorelai Gilmore disliking the idea of a home birth is just one of countless traits that build her personality. She also hates vegetables, but I don't see anyone accusing Gilmore Girls of being anti-vegetarian propaganda or a manifesto for unhealthy eating. It's called characterization, not indoctrination. Let's all take a deep breath and remember that not every fictional statement is a reflection of the show's agenda-or a personal affront to the viewer's deeply held beliefs.
Second, a little maturity goes a long way. Feeling personally attacked because a fictional character doesn't align with your worldview? That's... not a great look. People-and fictional characters-are allowed to have differing opinions, even ones you strongly disagree with. That's what makes storytelling interesting. Imagine if every character were a bland, universally agreeable avatar of neutrality. Would you even watch that show?
Now, let's address the bigger issue here: it's perfectly valid for real people to hold the opinion that home births can be risky, based on personal experiences or professional expertise. My mother happens to be a gynecologist, and I grew up hearing stories of natural births turning into emergency surgeries due to complications. This isn't "toxic"; it's reality. So, please, enlighten me-are my mother and I toxic for acknowledging the risks that exist? Or does the concept of respecting opposing views only apply when they align with your own?
The world is made up of people with diverse perspectives. That's the beauty of it. The inability to respect differing opinions-or worse, labeling them as "toxic" simply because they challenge your own-that is what's truly toxic.
So, let's leave Lorelai Gilmore and her fear of home births alone, shall we? She's just a fictional character with her own quirks, neuroses, and preferences. If her aversion to home births offends you, perhaps the problem isn't Lorelai-it's the inability to distinguish between narrative characterization and a personal attack.
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Lorelai shares the contents of her baby box with Sookie, she says her Walkman still contains a mix tape she'd made with "99 Luftballoons, some R.E.M., and some Thompson Twins." In fact, in episode 3.13 "Dear Emily and Richard," during a flashback sequence young Lorelai listens to Nena's "99 Luftballoons" on her Walkman while she waits to brought up to a delivery room.
- GoofsWhen Lorelai talks about being the Renoir girl, she mentions several times that she loves the dress. Taylor even asks her if "the Renoir dress still fits [her]." She responds "like a glove". However, once the festival begins, she wears jeans on stage as the Renoir girl.
- Quotes
Lorelai Gilmore: She was the most beautiful pink all over. She even smelled pink. That sounds weird. I can't describe it - that little, pink, baby smell. The first time her eyes focused on me and her little fingers reached out... I was someone new. She had me.
- ConnectionsReferences Sunset Boulevard (1950)
- SoundtracksWhere You Lead
Performed by Carole King and Louise Goffin
Words and Music by Carole King and Toni Stern
Produced by Greg Wells and Carole King
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