deuce-ish
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    One thing my wife and I disagreed on (sp) Archived Message

    Posted by Sydney Carton on February 22, 2017, 15:43:37, in reply to "Agreed: the Dar thing... (sp)"

    When they guy across the street found Quinn looking at the mail, she thought the guy acted like he recognized Quinn, as if from when Quinn was in the CIA. I didn't think he acted that way at all, and even if he had, he'd been surveiling the house and might have seen him there.

    I also feel like we need some more characters. More than just the one guy on the transition team. Members of the current administration. And all we've gotten is one low level FBI guy and one low level NSA guy.
    Previous Message


    ... has to be misdirection - both because it's too convenient (and, therefore, would be disrespectful of the audience), and because the character would never do such a thing.

    Still, as far as misdirections go, I like this one. It plays really well into the conflict between Carrie and the CIA, broadly - and Carrie and Dar/Saul, particularly.

    One thing we know is that whoever's responsible has also been surveilling Carrie. That suggests Carrie's CIA background and/or connections (like to the President-elect) are relevant somehow to the perpetrators. Seems to me, that rules out actual terrorists (e.g., buds of Sekou); I just can't imagine fairly unsophisticated terrorists concerning themselves with a CIA has-been.

    Right now, I'd say the Israelis are the most likely suspects... which is pretty chilling. The angle here would be that the Israelis are fearful over the direction of policy under the President-elect; they're aware of Carrie's involvement with the incoming Administration, thus the surveillance; and Sekou's connection to Carrie presents a "too-good-to-be-true" opportunity to discredit her and shift the new President's policy even before it begins... even if that means conducting a false-flag operation in NYC.

    If that's how things actually play out, it's going to be fascinating - and on more than one level. Obviously, there's the relationship between the U.S. and Israel (and CIA and Mossad) in the fictional world of "Homeland" that's at stake. But there's also the real-life relationship between the two countries, and I have to think such a storyline would deeply offend real-world Israelis. (And the fact that the show is an adaptation of an Israeli series only complicates things further...)


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