Type keyword s to search. Today's Top Stories. Behold: The Best Shampoos on Amazon. This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below. They do it because their target audience vicariously enjoy the gratuitous nudity, the groping, the harassment and humiliation, the eroticization of dominance.
They do it because they are so sure that any woman who objects will be shouted down by the defenders of the status quo. And a pox on all token female characters. There are no truly strong women in male-dominated media. I wholeheartedly agree. I have never been so affected by a TV series — I guess the objectification is more in your face than most.
The problem is that it teaches men and women, boys and girls, subconsciously to perpetuate the same behaviors in the future. Before I start i will apologies for my bad writing in English. R Martin did only write one episode in season 1 The Pointy End. Weiss and the series have had different Directors. So Gorg R. R Martin have limited saying in the production. The sex is parts of the character, let me take cersei lannister as a example she uses here charm and body to get more power and influence in court.
She is powerful, but is very short sighted in the books. And since Tyrion is smart he knows that nobody will ever love him. And in the books, sex is just a minor motivation for the character several have honor, gold, power and even love as a higher motivation be it male or female.
Honestly, there is a lot of degrading going on in both the books and show. If you took joy for that — or feel that it was written sexually gratifying… well, you can take that up with a psychologist. Honestly, it seems to me that the main issue here is that the author is male.
I wonder if you would have the same level of criticism if the author was female. I mean, True Blood could be criticized for some of the same things… some the attitudes the characters have concerning the opposite sex, and so on — and how some of the female characters are treated by male characters.
Yet you have not criticized it. Is it because the author is female? What is the real issue here? And to some of the other comments that people have left…. Seek help — and ask yourself how you can watch some of these scenes with your children next to you. Take note: I started this series fully expecting to enjoy it, not realizing how bad it was. I agree completely. I started s. And I know they have to put the old ages in perspective, but they could take out the nudity or take out the bad scenes in general.
It drags on. Society is screwed up enough in my opinion, without all this freaking porn on t. Several times I considered stopping watching this series. I admit, the dragons kept me going. Luckily, the show was ridiculed so much for its crappy treatment of women that they do tone it down after a while. Mum you have to remember Sara was made to go to Sunday school for years. Up to the point where Joffrey got the jolly prostitute to violently sexually abuse her chum.
Then I found my inner Sunday school member and popped upstairs to do some embroidery. I felt powerless for the woman on screen and somehow personally invaded.
But it was supposedly okay because she had snappy comebacks. Phyllis Marshall on April 10, at am. LK Rigel on April 10, at am. He waits for the right moment, then works the winch, lowering her quietly and gently down toward the water. Her rowboat touches down with hardly a whisper. She takes up the oars and looks up toward her new best friend. But he's already gone. There's nobody at the railing. Jaime sits in his cell, his head leaning against the stone dungeon wall. A key scrapes in the lock, and the door opens.
Jon enters, eyeing Jaime, saying nothing. He pulls up a small bench and straddles it, leaning forward so that his elbows are resting on his knees. He regards Jaime, letting the silence hang until it's uncomfortable. Will you be taking my head today? Or are you just going to brood at me until I die?
When the fighting in the North is over, someone wins. You understand that, don't you? Jaime narrows his eyes, unsure where Jon is going with this. Then, as Jon continues, Jaime slowly realizes that Jon is quoting Jaime's own words back to him, verbatim.
If the dead win, they march south and kill us all. If the living win, and we've betrayed them, they march south and kill us all. I pledged to ride north. I intend to honor that pledge. That's what you said to Cersei. By the courtyard with the painted floor. Before you left her. Jaime looks completely flattened by his own shock. He gapes at Jon as though he's not sure that he's real.
Jon gazes steadily back at him. Jon stands up and flips him the key to the manacle. It lands in Jaime's lap. He looks Jaime straight in the eye. You'll find a more comfortable room in the Great Keep. You've been riding hard Get a good night's sleep. At first light, we tour the castle together and discuss its defense. Jon crosses to the door and opens it. He turns, framed in the doorway, and looks back at Jaime. He departs, leaving the door open.
Jaime stares down at the manacle key in his lap and picks it up with trembling fingers. He looks up and stares at the open door. Behind him, the door opens. I can see anything. Things happening far away. Things that happened in the past. I've seen your past, Jon. I watched you being born. Jon is rather creeped out by this strange statement, though he suppresses it for Bran's sake. Then a look of realization dawns across his face. Ned Stark was not your father. He was your uncle.
Your mother was my aunt Lyanna Stark. He didn't rape her. They were in love. They ran away together. And then you were born. He stares wide-eyed at Bran without moving, almost without breathing.
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