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mangora Ā· 3 hours
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yaoi ships come n go but yuri is forever
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mangora Ā· 19 hours
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Millie got way too much hate for being one of the best developed characters
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mangora Ā· 1 day
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ponntail jo,, pony
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mangora Ā· 1 day
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In honor of lesbian visibility week, I present a full list of female characters from Total Drama who have canonically shown no attraction to men! (as far as I'm aware)
Staci - Only present for one episode and only spoke for one episode, having no lines in the finale. None of these lines hint at Staci displaying any interest in men.
Dawn - The closest thing I could find was the "I didn't know you were a beetle whisperer!" scene, but even then, that could easily be read as platonic. Svetlana - Similar case to Staci in that her lines are pretty limited due to being actively suppressed by Mike or Mal. However she has not, in fact, said anything that hints at her liking men in those few lines.
Sammy & Amy - Other than that one "Topher thinks you're fat" line of dialogue (which could easily be played off as Amy trying to mess with her), neither of them have shown any on-screen interest in men.
Scarlett - The only extensive interaction she has with men are Max, whom she DESPISES, and their alliance is only romantically framed for the sake of a gag.
Sugar - Nothing in canon hints at her liking men. She admires Leonard, but this is most likely due to his perceived magical abilities rather than any sort of attraction as she displays a similar interest in Max later on.
Tammy - Similar case to Staci, she only had a very brief speaking role in episode 1 and never in these lines was it implied she was attracted to men.
Mary & Ellody - Only here for a short time (with Mary only having dialogue in the episode she was eliminated in rip), but neither of them express interest in guys.
Laurie & Miles - Same deal as Mary and Ellody, they go pretty early overall but haven't been shown to like men.
Jen - You'd expect someone of her character archetype to mention looking for 'cute guys' or something similar, but surprisingly no? The closest thing she has would be her friendship with Tom, which is treated as 100% platonic by the show even if you don't take into account the fact that Tom is gay.
Taylor - Another surprising one imo, it's never stated or implied that she likes guys in the show, not even a passing mention from what I've seen which I could've sworn happened on first watch. Mandela effect I guess šŸ¤·
Josee - Similar deal to Jen as far as I'm aware, being that her closest relationship to a guy is with a gay man and treated as platonic throughout the race.
Sanders - Pretty clear-cut, no scenes of her expressing interest in men or romance in general.
MacArthur - "What about Brody?" The only time she's shown to return his affection is during the finale and she's actively trying to throw him off his game by using his crush against him. She only asks Brody to call her in the Surfers ending, which she doesn't do at all in the Cadets ending implying that she's most likely only in it for the money.
Scary Girl/Lauren - While she does hold an interest in Damien, nothing in canon says she's attracted to him, only to the sound of his screams.
Nichelle - Too busy having no lines to talk about boys. seethingwithrage
Millie - Zero attraction to men in canon, the most interactions she has are with and about Priya. She's sorta friendly with Damien, but it doesn't rise anywhere above platonic (probably because she shoved him into a meat grinder but who knows) and actively seems to be disgusted by or otherwise pretty averse to most of the male cast.
MK - Has never been shown to be interested in guys or even romance in general. In fact, she actively seems to dislike it as seen in the episode where Caleb and Priya kiss where she goes ā€œYeah, that was sweet, but itā€™s also how you get monoā€ (this is ace mk propaganda btw). There was also Nichelle's intro in season 1 when she was looking at her starry-eyed, clearly a joke but yk still noteworthy.
Julia - My favorite lesbian <3 zero attraction or hints at attraction to men in canon + listen... we all watched season 2 you know what I'm talking about don't lie. The closest things she has to romantic interactions with men in canon are at most one-sided and always with her actively disliking said man on the other side (Wayne + maybe Ripper in season 1).
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mangora Ā· 6 days
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Not super involved in the alenoah community anymore but I do see your personality swap AUs and raise to you: expand them and go hog wild. Owen and Izzy? Swap, + Izzyjandro best friends. Left Bridgette stuck to a pole, robbed Leshawna of her fabulous soul, made even Courtney lose control? Wrong, thatā€™s Geoff, Harold, and Duncan now, the three of them are in the trenches, you win with your gay stuff. Aleheather dynamic? Yeah ermmm thatā€™s the Noah and Gwen dynamic now. Love triangle with Duncan Courtney and Heather now. Now Lindsay wants to see her mom and DJ is girlbossing through the game. Codierra is backwards and itā€™s also completely different because I cannot do the stalking plot. Tyler and Zeke are swapped around and Zeke and Noah are like yaoing around or something. Oppa yaoi style. Iā€™m a Victorian boy with typhoid fever and this is the last post I will ever type goodby,
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mangora Ā· 7 days
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Transfem Brick Revolution Now
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mangora Ā· 8 days
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Canā€™t freaking stand this guy
[Alt versions under the cut:]
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mangora Ā· 8 days
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Bullying people for being obviously insecure still isnā€™t cool, you guys just hate people with social anxiety
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mangora Ā· 11 days
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Respectfully. Respectfully. Iā€™ve just decided DCAS is no longer canon to me because it is ruining the perfect images I had in my head of the season one cast and itā€™s upsetting me. Like their progression makes sense I just Donā€™t Like It. DCS1 forever
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mangora Ā· 11 days
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HEARTBREAKING: character actually mildly interesting to think about but I Dont like their fans
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mangora Ā· 11 days
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FETCH ME NEIL
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mangora Ā· 12 days
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So I havenā€™t been fulfilling my obligations as resident Scike enjoyer recently and I finally have a night with no coursework due, so hereā€™s a meta analysis post about my interpretations of Scott and Mikeā€™s characters, primarily as told through their relationship with one another. This isnā€™t necessarily accurate, some of these are definitely reaches or headcanons with little basis in reality, itā€™s not like a serious essay; this is just for fun since I find their relationship (or I guess, my idea of their relationship) fascinating šŸ‘
So, naturally we start with episode one, where weā€™re introduced to Scott and Mike as well as the other generation two characters. Scott, off the bat, is unfriendly and untrusting; even before Jo says anything, he eyes her with malcontent. Scott looks at Mike with a seemingly annoyed expression when heā€™s introduced next. Mike, in contrast to Scott, is smiling and taking in the view. Scott notices immediately when Zoey nudges him and stares at her arm; I donā€™t think this demonstrates any sort of feelings for Mike on Scottā€™s part, yet at least, but rather it seems to display his social awareness. Heā€™s already trying to gauge both Mike and Zoeyā€™s personalities and dynamicā€” he could also be judging them, or a mix of that and the aforementioned gauging. Regardless, Scottā€™s already shown to be suspicious of others.
Meanwhile, Mikeā€™s shown to form an attachment right away, specifically to Zoey. Their very minor interaction causes him to smile and espouse that the view is beautiful, though heā€™s obviously regarding her. This causes him to let his guard down, along with Zoey, which leaves both susceptible to being shoved out of the way by Lightning. Take note of this, as Mikeā€™s desire to form stable relationships becomes a hallmark of his character. The dichotomy between Scott being untrusting when he should be and Mike being trusting when he shouldnā€™t be will become a running theme as well.
The next time we see them both is after the intro, when Scott refuses to help Cameron and calls him a ā€œspazā€. This is contrasted with Mike being too kind with Zoey when they should be helping Staci out of the water, which causes him to be pulled underwater by her and could have led to them both drowning. This not only aligns with our theme of trust vs lack thereof, but also Mikeā€™s goodwill vs Scottā€™s lack thereof again. It seems that what Scott needs, Mike supplies to a harmful excess; however, as we will touch on later, both of these incidents with Mike only occurred when there was another person there (Zoey) who he sought to impress or bond with. Right now all of these exist in an unjoined microcosm, but once again, scenes like this repeat throughout the season.Ā 
Another scene worth noting is Mikeā€™s confessional directly after. Mikeā€™s already attached himself to Zoey, admiring her kindness and immediately jumping to the idea of a relationship with her. Weā€™ve already established that Mike wants human connection, but here we also see the added element of insecurity; he already fears rejection for his ā€œquirkā€, which we will later discover is his DID (called ā€œMultiple Personality Disorderā€ in the show; I am not fucking calling it that). He doesnā€™t state it to the audience yet, showing that maybe heā€™s not as trusting with people who he canā€™t directly connect with; even though he probably knows that he will inevitably be outed to them, for lack of a better term. Since heā€™s insecure about this, and because he says he hopes his ā€œcondition doesnā€™t ruin anything for [him] againā€, we can draw the reasonable conclusion that Mikeā€™s probably been rejected for his DID before, whether by potential romantic interests or by his peers more generally (with the added context of season five this could also be referring to how Mal got the system sent to jail, but honestly Iā€™m not sure if the writers planned that far in advance so weā€™re not really gonna talk about it). It could also be possible that one of Mikeā€™s motives for joining the show, besides the money, was to make friends or find a partner in a new group of people who didnā€™t know this detail of his life, and to do that by hiding his DID. Once again, this will seem like less of a reach as we continue to see this pattern unfold; itā€™s good to establish now the idea that Mike is heavily concerned with interpersonal relationships and self-image so we can continue compounding on that thesis as we go on.Ā 
Next time we see either Mike or Scott is on the beach. Staci is talking about her family and Mike is obviously ignoring her in favor of looking at Zoey. This shows that while Mike is nice, he might not view everyone as an equal opportunity for human connection; he gets attached to Zoey instantly and regards her above everyone else, quick to establish a clear-cut and intense relationship in his mind with someone he barely knows. When Zoey even implies that they could become friends, he appears overjoyed. Heā€™s so excited, and for what? Put a pin in this.Ā 
Our focus shifts back to Scott briefly in the team formation scene before the first challenge. Scott and Lightning smile at each other (or maybe generally? Itā€™s unclear if Scottā€™s looking at him) as theyā€™re put on the same team. His smile fades when Brick shouts ā€œSir, yes sir!ā€, but rather than looking maybe annoyed or angry, he looks uncharacteristically concerned. His smile returns when B shoves Brick, then changes to annoyance when Bā€™s put on his team. There are two major explanations for this. The first and most likely is that Scottā€™s scoping out his teammates and competition; heā€™s happy that Lightningā€™s on his team because heā€™s not very smart, then concerned and happy again when Brickā€™s put on the other team because heā€™s loyal and physically capable, and then heā€™s upset that Bā€™s on his team because Bā€™s intelligent and looks (is?) strong/fast. However, on the other hand, Scottā€™s expressions seem oddly earnest, especially considering how he behaves throughout the rest of the series. Maybe heā€™s secretly glad that Lightningā€™s here because he enjoys his company. Something that really caught my eye was Scottā€™s concern for Brick. Brickā€™s obviously military (likely due to family circumstances), and in season five, we learn that Scottā€™s dad is ex-military. Scott might be slightly worried because he knows what the military is like, or what military parents are like. Weā€™ll talk more about Scottā€™s potential home situation later, but I dunno, something about him in this scene seems weirdly tame considering how he is normally; he seems oddly worried and not about the right people, like all things considered it would be best for his plan if his team was weak but he seems constantly annoyed by the additions of people like Dakota and Sam.Ā 
Skipping over more of Scott being annoyed at people and Mike being anxious, when the teams get their names, Mike is the first to ask about the references to chemical waste. Though heā€™s very likely one of many to notice this, the fact he asked first and without hesitation shows that heā€™s both worried and quick to observe things. He continues to appear concerned by the growling of the ā€œmonsterā€, but seems to hold back from showing this, staying still with a worried expression. He might be trying to keep it cool to protect his image; or, maybe heā€™s trying to keep others from worrying as well, considering that Cameronā€™s already freaking out. When it gets closer, he holds Zoey in his arms. He has an urge to protect those he cares about, even if he has little reason to care about them yet.Ā 
Later, during the actual challenge, while Jo and Anne Maria are outwardly annoyed by Brick, Mike tries to politely state that this isnā€™t working. This is the point at which Chester fronts; we learn later that Chester most commonly fronts to deal with frustrating situations. Mike himself cannot express frustration for whatever reason, likely because heā€™s afraid to. Meanwhile, Scott does his first confessional, where he states that he has a plan thatā€™s sure to take down B (and implied to take down everyone else as well). Scottā€™s overly confident and expresses frustration with the gleeful notion that all will be handled eventually. Shortly after, Scott smiles as he and the other Toxic Rats overtake the Mutant Maggots; this is odd, as we will later find out that Scott wants his team to lose. This could be an example of him trying not to play his cards too early, but later it becomes apparent that Scottā€™s quick to snap when heā€™s upset. Was he perhaps earnestly excited to win as a team and had trouble masking that as well? Perchance (I can just say perchance, because itā€™s my meta post, and I do what I want).Ā 
Itā€™s worth mentioning now that weā€™ve covered episode one that Mike and Scott have somewhat inconsistent characterizations; as the series goes on, Mike is more prone to show annoyance or outbursts of fear, while Scott rarely shows genuine happiness when his plans arenā€™t working out. This could be a result of changing writers, a lack of ideas for one or both of them, or simply them changing and adapting to the game. Make of that what you will; Iā€™ll try to explain things to the best of my ability and puzzle them together in a cohesive analysis, but shitā€™s a bit wonky.Ā 
In episode two, we finally hear Scottā€™s plan: heā€™s intent on making his team lose the challenges to ā€œlull the other team into a false sense of security, then pick them off one by oneā€. This is an interesting concept, considering how fucking stupid it is: if Scott loses most or all of his team and the Maggots continue working together, that security will become real, they will dominate him and any allies he might form (which he does not seem intent to do), and he will lose near immediately unless heā€™s already planning on how to split them up, assuming any of them would fall for his tricks. However, Scott himself is a little dumb, so this is fitting. Heā€™s so unwilling to work with other people that he seems to have tricked himself into thinking that he can do anything by himself and manipulate people with no outside help. This is unrealistic, and gives the viewer a perfect insight into Scottā€™s antisocial and bleak worldview. Heā€™s so unwilling to trust people that he hasnā€™t even figured out how to fake a relationship with any of them for his own benefit.Ā 
In the scene where the teams are walking to the Bay of Dismay, Zoey and Mike have their first proper conversation, and it is approximately thirteen seconds long. Zoey brings up Total Warriors Two, and Mike is pleased that she knows about it. He states that if she likes kickboxing as well, he might have to marry her. First of all, film-enjoyer and kickboxer Mike real as fuck; but more importantly, this is another example of Mike attaching himself to Zoey incredibly quickly and incredibly closely. Heā€™s desperate to be liked by her, desperate to be inseparable from her even. Unlike Scott whoā€™s pushing everyone away without a plan, heā€™s seemingly nudging closer to someone without a plan or a concern for her actual, well, personality. I donā€™t think this is manipulative or weird at all, to be clear; and Zoey was likely trying to relate to him because he also clearly enjoys his company. Itā€™s just endlessly intriguing how heā€™s already endeared herself to her.Ā 
Once the game actually begins and the Maggots are asked which one of them wet their pants, Mikeā€™s the one to pipe up with surprise, almost making fun of the person in question. Knowing that Mikeā€™s afraid of his own secrets being revealed in this challenge, this clues us in that, while Mike might not have bad intentions, he does partake in judging (and depending on how you interpret his words, shaming) people for their own secrets. He might, to a degree, lack social knowledge (ā€œthis might make the person uncomfortableā€ etc.), empathy, or both. In this right, heā€™s somewhat selfish. Throughout the season, actually, he continues to show inklings of selfishness, even if they arenā€™t born out of malice.Ā 
After this, the Rats are dunked into the water. Scottā€™s bitten and dragged out of the stands by Fang, and his team does nothing to rescue him. This upsets Scott, who then refuses to do the rest of the challenge. While this might be part of his plan to lose, it seems that Scott was genuinely upset and offended; he expected his team to help him when he would never do the same for them. More selfishness. Anne Maria seconds Scott, and Mikeā€™s quick to join her since heā€™s worried about his own secrets being discoveredā€” something that he insists to them isnā€™t true. I donā€™t have to explain this, I donā€™t think; Mike and Scott are alike in their selfish desires for preservation. The thing is that Mike backs down after Jo becomes upset with him, while Scott carries on. So Mike does care about avoiding conflict and being invulnerable to his whole team, but with Zoey specifically, he needs to be liked; not just regarded with neutrality, which appears to be his goal with other people; and he is afraid of being judged, or seen in a negative light.
During the challenge, Scott attempts sabotage for the first time, which fails. He tries to keep the rat from B, and is outwardly antagonistic towards him, which could have easily been used against him. This is another action that Scott seems to take strategically, but barely considers the consequences of. He just needs to be mean, apparently; he canā€™t control the urge to sabotage or insult, even when it would hurt him.
In the same challenge, Cameron catches Svetlana fronting, and asks Mike about it, which he denies entirely. The Maggots win, which Scott, again, seems genuinely upset about. This is where Iā€™m laying out my theory officially that Scott takes these losses personally but is convincing himself that theyā€™re sacrifices, rather than him genuinely not caring because itā€™s part of his plan. Maybe he knows that he could be on the chopping block every time and is bracing himself; maybe he enjoys winning each individual challenge for a sense of glory but wonā€™t admit it to himself because it doesnā€™t work with this bullshit Lone Wolf plan he has. Either way, this brings us to episode three.
In episode three, Sam flings his breakfast into Scottā€™s face. Instead of pretending itā€™s okay, Scott throws a spoon at Sam. He then calls him a wimp for complaining about his food. Aside from this being another example of Scott being unable to mask his feelings for the greater good, this leads into the point of Scottā€™s home life. Total Drama as a series is full of bits that are normal in its cartoon universe, but are disturbing or terrifying taken in a real-world context; look no further than the seasonā€™s baseline concept of ā€œwe put teenagers on a nuclear islandā€. Scott living on a dirt farm is one of these things; having to eat dirt is bad in a literal context, and worse when adding the idea of it being a metaphor for not having food to eat. Scott is, quite literally, dirt poor; weā€™ll talk more about his audition tape later, but in it, we also see that Scottā€™s house is infested with rats and in a state of complete disarray. In season five, we learn that his father is ex-military and his motherā€™s a waitress; and since they own a farm, they did or do have two jobs. Scottā€™s also generally a country boy stereotype, and country folk arenā€™t exactly known for being well-off. We can almost guarantee that he grew up in a rough economic situation, and has ways of coping with or appreciating it while still working fervently to escape it. Take that for what you will.
Following this scene, Mike admits to the audience that he has DID with a shameful tone. He rushes to explain that he tries to control his alters, as if he needs to or should, but that they donā€™t listen to him. Mike not only lacks control, but is also attempting to control genuine other people, all for them inconveniencing him and making him worry about being judged. This is another point at which we must acknowledge that Mike is selfish, but also selfish with a sympathetic purpose; he doesnā€™t want to be judged, and doesnā€™t want to be alone. When confronted by Jo about Svetlana, he lies and says sheā€™s a character, but fails to actually mimic Svetlana. Heā€™s either a bad actor, doesnā€™t know Svetlana that well, or both.Ā 
During the first half of the challenge, Scott shouts at Lightning to shut his mouth, once again showing how hard it is for him to hide his true feelings. Meanwhile, Mike helps Zoey up a ledge instead of helping himself, showing that he knows when to actually be selfless as long as it benefits someone he cares about. Once again, we go back to Scott as the Rats win the challenge; and Scott is visibly and audibly upset. He doesnā€™t bother hiding it now, so why would he before? Another point for the ā€œScott is genuinely excited to win/mad about losingā€ theory. When his team is mad at him for picking the bad snow fort, Scott acknowledges that this is bad, but rationalizes that itā€™s part of the plan. Dude, he has no fucking idea how this plan is going to work, does he?
Now we get to the point where Mike finally acknowledges Scott, and tells Zoey to watch out because Mike thinks heā€™s ā€œpsychoā€. Mike is the first person to bring up how Scottā€™s acting irrationally or untrustworthy verbally; and considering they arenā€™t on the same team, that means Mike must have been, at some point, watching him. As we mentioned earlier, heā€™s observant, and will bring something up either if he feels itā€™ll be uncontroversial or if heā€™s very concerned. Before Scottā€™s other team caught onto him, Mike did, and before they became cautious or seriously concerned, Mike did. Why? Does Mike have experience picking out these types of people? Was Mike, for some reason, interested in Scott either out of fear or admiration, and therefore paid closer attention to him than anybody else? Mikeā€™s not a very strategic person in the game, but he is a bit strategic and wary socially, especially if heā€™s afraid of the other person not liking him. Did Mike view Scott as a threat? Maybe something more? Why? Did he recognize Scottā€™s selfish or secretive behaviors, maybe in himself? These are all, certainly, questions. Perchance.Ā 
In his scene with Dawn in the snow fort, Scott argues with her about how heā€™s not going to listen to the snowball, and says heā€™s full of negative energy; this causes a snowball to explode in his face. Scottā€™s unwilling to listen to others, even if it spells his own downfall. After this, Dawn claims that Scott wasnā€™t held enough as a child, which he stops to think about and is shown to be greatly uncomfortable with in the confessional. Dawn has previously been accurate about the home lives of other players (Zoey and Dakota), so we can assume sheā€™s right. In which case, this is ā€œScott has a bad home life: part twoā€. Scottā€™s parents, at some point, did not meet his emotional needs; whether this was just in early childhood or whether it stayed consistent is unclear, but itā€™s likely that some of his behavioral issues would have been addressed earlier if his parents were attentive following his most formative years. Because his parents didnā€™t show him enough affection, he likely turned to either methods of garnering attention elsewhere or through other means, diverted that attention towards desiring victory and/or control for his own self satisfaction divorced from the opinions of other people, and/or a mix of both. We can also reasonably assume that Scottā€™s poor home life could go beyond simply emotional unfulfillment, since Scott seems worried at the notion of her knowing that, and likely wouldnā€™t be as concerned if he had nothing else to hide.Ā 
Dawn later seems to compliment Scott, calling him a ā€œbeetle whispererā€. He turns up his nose and leaves. This could be because he finds the notion of beetle whispering ridiculous, but I just like to think that Scottā€™s not used to getting compliments and doesnā€™t know how to react. Just because thatā€™s kinda more wholesome and Dottā€™s kinda baller.Ā 
At this point, B melts the Maggotsā€™ fort, and Jo asks Mike to do the ā€œSvetlana thingā€. Under pressure, Mike begins to panic a bit, unsure of how to escape the lie heā€™s found himself in, almost confessing; Cameron helps Svetlana front, saving him from this situation, and Jo regards Svetlana positively. This is just important to me divorced from Scike because not enough of you talk about Jolana. Moving on, Scott notices B melting the Maggotsā€™ fort and momentarily panics, before melting the Ratsā€™ fort instead and blaming B; while Scott has committed sabotage and swayed the team vote before, this is the first time his sabotage has actively caused the team to lose. Youā€™d figure heā€™d be celebrating, but we donā€™t see that. After the loss, Mike goes to the confessional and worries about Vito showing up; we can assume that Vito is the hardest to control and/or would lend the most to affecting Mikeā€™s social life, hence why he states that the situation has gotten worse and seems so on-edge. Scottā€™s finally gaining control in the game, while Mike appears to be losing it. Scott convinces his team to vote for B, and lies without a problem; Scott, it seems, is good at lying through his words, but has a hard time controlling how he emotes physically. Mike is the same; when he lies or hides information, his voice and face/actions donā€™t seem to mirror the stories he puts together on the fly. Mikeā€™s not a malicious liar, he in fact has every reason to lie about his condition, if you consider lies of omission to be lies at all; but if you do, he is, in fact, a liar, and it takes one to know one. My Mutual Understanding clownery is all coming together.Ā 
In episode four, we mostly see extra examples of previous behavior from Scott: annoyance at his teammates (mainly Sam), selfishness and a lack of consideration for others (not helping Sam up and not caring when his teammates go missing), and being oddly happy over success when he shouldnā€™t be (excited to find the key). At this point, I began considering the possibility that Scott only likes losing when heā€™s in control of the loss. To fail when heā€™s trying to succeed obviously frustrates him, but to fail when heā€™s trying to fail is a success at failing. In less words, it's the need for power and control, again. Maybe he likes to win sometimes for entertainment, or a sense of accomplishment; he might just do it because he can sometimes. In which case, Scottā€™s a bit more unpredictable than first thought; he does things largely with one goal in mind, but can push that goal off or come up with other shorter term objectives whenever he feels like it. Heā€™s consistently driven, but the thing heā€™s driving towards is subject to fluctuate when he gets bored or competitive or wants to feel in control.
On the Maggot side, Mike and company are obviously unhappy with and wary of Jo, but none of them say anything. Mike does, however, tell Cameron that he did a good job. Itā€™s possible that after the last episode, when the two worked together along with Zoey to get up the hill, Mike has started seeing Cameron as another potential friend, as he rarely interacted with Cameron before, and we know they will continue to interact more in future episodes. Zoey says heā€™s ā€œalways encouraging Cameronā€, implying that he does this off-screen as well, since (correct me if Iā€™m wrong) this is the first time Mike has directly encouraged Cameron specifically. Mike says that Zoeyā€™s all he thinks about when heā€™s in control, then laughs nervously, as if heā€™s afraid this joke is too personal or unrelatable or odd. When Zoey goes missing, Mike notices immediately, and begins to panic; the person heā€™s most attached to here, his only real friend right now, has just left him alone, and the anxiety is all-consuming. Heā€™s worried about her, and probably also scared of being left alone with the rest of the team, who heā€™s not as close to. Iā€™m going to draw the line here and say that I think Mike might have social anxiety, just in my personal opinion as someone who also has social anxiety. Heā€™s hyper-aware, afraid of what others think of him, and heavily attached with one or two people. Heā€™s also, apparently, very loyal and protective. He abandons the rest of the group to find Zoey despite the challenge, and is relentless when looking for her in a way that no one else in the challenge has been or will be later.
When Brick goes missing, Mike is concerned for him, as are Cameron and Anne Maria; itā€™s unclear whether this is because they care for him, theyā€™re scared of missing as well, or a mixture of the two. When Anne Maria stands up to Jo for having a bad attitude, Mike also finds the courage to join her. Having someone whoā€™ll agree with him or make the first move once again gives him a sense of confidence to voice his opinion and, assuming he had Brick in mind like Anne Maria, defend the people he (possibly) cares about without as much fear. Shortly after, he injures himself looking for Zoey; once again, he puts those he cares about above himself, but himself over the layman.Ā 
After Vito fronts for a while, Mike suddenly takes over when he hears Zoey cry out for help and attempts to save her instead of winning. His care for others (Zoey specifically but he could generally be concerned for everyone considering the state of affairs [big spider]) triumphs his need for victory, which again lends credence to the theory that heā€™s on Total Drama for social reasons more so than monetary ones. In the meantime, Scottā€™s unabashedly upset about winning the challenge, but again, appears concerned for Brick when he begins crying. When Brickā€™s switched to the Toxic Rats, Mike, Cameron, and Anne Maria are visibly shocked and upset, showing that they probably did genuinely care for him, making it more possible that loyalty to Brick factored into him standing up to Jo earlier.
In episode five, we start with Scott having a nightmare about a shark (Fang). Heā€™s soon woken up by Brickā€™s alarm clock, though heā€™s not grateful for this; in fact, he begins punching the alarm clock as a demonstration of what heā€™s going to do to Brick later. Is it possible, then, that Scott would rather live in a nightmare, a place of strife and fear, than in a reality where heā€™s experienced a harmless transgression? Per freaking chance. Shortly after, Scott begins stealing from other players to frame Brick. Itā€™s unclear whether this is because heā€™s mad at Brick for the alarm clock incident, or whether he recognizes Brick as a weak link on the team. Either way, this is probably the most premeditation weā€™ve seen from Scott, as his plan continues to develop throughout the episode, versus how he normally takes an action right after coming up with it to immediate success or failure.Ā 
During the challenge, Scott tells Brick to prove his loyalty to the team. There are many reasons he might have done this. One is because itā€™s simply fun to him; he might like seeing Brick squirm. Another is to gauge his actual loyalty and scope out his strengths/weaknesses to exploit them later. Once again, this could be a combination of the two; Scott doesnā€™t think highly of Brick, but he seems amused by him being a ā€œdoofusā€. And after this, we see another instance of Scott ragging on someone (Sam) for being bad at the game despite that working to his advantage. Itā€™s probably another instance of hubris: something along the lines of ā€œI could do better than that; I wonā€™t, but I couldā€.Ā 
Back to Mike, we see an example of him outright lying. Once again, I donā€™t blame him or necessarily think this makes him a bad person, but he is outwardly dishonest with Zoey when he claims that he just ā€œgets so deep into character that he [doesnā€™t] know what [heā€™s doing]ā€. He promises to stop playing characters if Zoey wants him to, even though he canā€™t do that, and tells her sheā€™s the most amazing girl in the world. His love for Zoey triumphs over his logic and planning for the future. Heā€™s so desperate to be loved by her that he doesnā€™t even consider how to make that happen. This is similar to how Scottā€™s hatred for people or situations trumps his ability to consider consequences, as seen in episode three especially but also throughout the series. Both of them, despite trying to remain calculated and in control, are often so blinded by their emotions that they act or speak on a whim.Ā 
Itā€™s at this point that I must inform you that I forgot that Scott accused Brick of stealing while he was underwater, making that his motivation for sending Brick down there. However, I do stand by the point that Scottā€™s also a bit of a sadistic little freak and just likes being mean, because he is. Sailing along, I also find it interesting how Scott has to whittle when he starts getting bored; another addition to the point that heā€™s impulsive at times. And returning to Mike, Dawn claims that Mike ā€œlikes her a lotā€ and ā€œitā€™s all over his auraā€. And now itā€™s at this point that I am becoming increasingly aware that Mikeā€™s kind of just Zoeyā€™s plus-one in terms of characterization and this post is pointless in that right, but Iā€™ll be damned if I donā€™t stretch his actions thin enough to give him an actual personality, and then do the same for Scott, and then make them yaoi out. Mikeā€™s a person that cares so deeply for people that it permeates his aura, the very essence of his being; his priority is to love people (Zoey) and be loved by people (Zoey).Ā 
When Scott finds out that his team got the better boat, despite wanting to lose, he doesnā€™t miss the opportunity to call them ā€œsuckersā€. Once again, Scottā€™s goal is glossed over in favor of being a huge bitch to others. This reminded me of how, similar to how Mikeā€™s a lover and wants to be loved, Scottā€™s a hater, and I think he might want to be hated. When you think about it, Scott hasnā€™t done a single kind thing to anyone on the island. Heā€™s never upset when people dislike him, and takes every opportunity to be mean or sarcastic. When he does display a positive emotion, he never tells anyone or joins them in expressing it. Scott seemingly detests having positive relationships, perhaps because heā€™s simply annoyed and inconvenienced by them, but also perhaps because heā€™s afraid of losing them or feeling like heā€™s at the whims of another personā€™s emotions and wills. And in the end, as we know, Scottā€™s negative relationships will be his downfall, just like how Mikeā€™s unwillingness to break his positive relationships will be his (as well as, yā€™know, Scott meddling). While itā€™s probably unintentional, theyā€™re pretty decent foils for one another.Ā 
We get another Scott lore drop when he says that heā€™s been shooting kitchen rats with his Pappy since he was six. Iā€™m not sure what to make of this really, I just think itā€™s kind of fucked up to have your kid shoot rats but like I also didnā€™t grow up in a hunting area so maybe thatā€™s normal and not psychologically damaging. Later, Dawn tells Scott not to fire anymore goals, and he does anyways, to her annoyance. Scott has to know Dawn is suspicious of him, but he canā€™t resist pissing her off. See, he needs to make people mad; maybe he does this often, maybe he just wants to be on someoneā€™s mind even if it's negative. He eventually tries to get smart about it and he does get her voted off later, but like, hello. This fucking guy. Even though Scott dislikes Dawn, however, he stops Jo and Anne Maria from hurting her after he frames her for stealing. Either he revels in her misery, or he secretly cares about her a bit; this is supported by the fact that she was the only person he didnā€™t talk about voting off his team in episode four. Anyways, back to Scott being stupid, he openly brags about his knock-off idols as well, when thatā€™s super suspicious; like he really needed to rub salt in the wound that badly. Dawn even refers to him as soulless and sociopathic, and sheā€™s not wrong. Heā€™s so unconcerned with the wellbeing of others, as well as himself. It seems that nothing truly matters to him in the long term, so long as he continues meeting his short term victories in pursuit of what I believe to be an excuse rather than an actual reason. I think that rather than calculating his actions beforehand, Scott acts and creates a justification later, or a justification he can routinely add to. It seems that Scott mightā€™ve picked the Rats because they were close and therefore easy targets. It would make more sense than his actual ā€œplanā€. He hurts people and tries to convince himself that he knows why when he probably doesnā€™t, which is awful but also somewhat tragic. He might not have a real sense of priorities or identity, but tricks himself into thinking otherwise to, once again, give himself more control. Does this make sense? Whatever, weā€™re like 5763 words in, it doesn't matter anymore.Ā 
Back to party sciking, in episode six, we see the formation of Team Men with Scott, Brick, and Lightning (and later, Sam). Scottā€™s finally making allies, and he doesnā€™t seem too upset about it. I think this might clue us into the idea that Scott does want positive relationships, but maybe doesnā€™t consciously understand that. He doesnā€™t fight Brick or Lightning on this when he normally would. Later, before the challenge, Mike tries to compliment Zoey, and in the confessional, she tells him to pick a side. And I feel like if you twist that enough we can get into bisexual territory, but I digress. Mikeā€™s upset at his alters for ruining his relationship with Zoey, and while thatā€™s true, he totally forgets to take into account that his alters are also people who also deserve access to the body. Itā€™s more important to Mike that he gets what he wants rather than his alters get what they want, and above all, it's important that he maintains a firm grasp on his life with little to no interference. But he doesnā€™t seem aware of the fact that his alters are people. Itā€™s almost like the personhood of someone can be diminished in service of his goals, and that he can cognitively distance himself from his actions if they become too (for lack of a better word) scary for him. This might sound familiar because itā€™s kind of what Scott does as well. They both hurt people in order to get what they want, itā€™s just that Mikeā€™s unaware that he hurts people but aware of what he wants while Scottā€™s aware that he hurts people but unaware of exactly what he wants.Ā 
Zoey talks to Mike again, excited to dress a model, and despite the fact that heā€™s never shown an interest in fashion, Mike smiles. This is because Zoeyā€™s giving him positive attention again. Mf is a bit of a lapdog to be honest. Scott would probably like someone like that, whoā€™s loyal to a fault. The vision is visioning. Anyways, Mike catches a frog, not much to add but he does do that. Fang tries to catch Scott, and Scott notices and catches him with his own trap. Heā€™s observant. Like Mike. They observe each other. Gay style. Scott also grins when Brick proposes a plan and creates an explosive. While Scottā€™s probably excited to see it blow up in his face, I like to think Scott also admires him a bit, adding to the idea that he secretly likes some aspects of his peers and just wonā€™t express it. Mike tells Anne Maria that the maggot looks bad, which is slightly uncharacteristic of him but okay. He and Anne Maria were friendly before; maybe heā€™s trying to pull back in service of making Zoey feel better. Heā€™s kind of destroying this sort-of friendship because he likes Zoey so much. Adding to this, he appears excited when Zoey says she wants to dress the maggot. He appears nervous when Jo argues with Anne Maria as well; whether this is because he still cares about Anne Maria despite everything or because heā€™s afraid of conflict/Jo is unclear.Ā 
Itā€™s at this point that Scott begins manipulating Zoey. Just put a pin in that. Scott and Mike stand next to each other, if thatā€™s anything? They also move similarly, like theyā€™re subconsciously mimicking each other. Do you understand how difficult it is to write about Scike when it's episode six and the most theyā€™ve actually interacted is standing near each other and looking in the same direction? Scottā€™s impressed by Sam, which is nice; he actually admires something about someone. I think being around people who he subconsciously wants to be friends with is making him slightly more willing to play the game and be nice to people in his own way. He even looks concerned when the yeti throws Sam, and again when the Maggots lose, like he doesnā€™t want to vote anyone out.Ā 
ITā€™S FREAKING TEAM SWAP TIME BABY THEYā€™RE ON THE SAME TEAM WAHOO!! Mike is immediately concerned, the most concerned out of the maggots. This is in part due to him approaching Zoey, but donā€™t forget, Mike thinks Scottā€™s off, he notices the things that he does and the way he behaves. Oh BABY he needs to save his friends from this guy, I smell a hero complex brewing.Ā 
In episode seven, the teams go into the mines. About eight minutes in, Mike finds a hat and excitedly explains that heā€™s always wanted one, to which Scott makes fun of him for being a ā€œhat loving loserā€. This is an uncharacteristically lame insult, which makes me think that Scott already has a distaste for Mike and is looking for any reason to insult him; this is probably because he knows that Mikeā€™s onto him, and he doesnā€™t enjoy the mortifying ideal of being known. And itā€™ll ruin his plan or whatever. Later in the challenge, when Manitoba and Cameron are separated from Anne Maria, Zoey, and Scott, Scott tries to pin the split on Mike to get him booted. We can assume that Scott sees Mike as the biggest threat on his new team.Ā 
Later, Mike carries Cameron on his back to safety, and says that he hopes Zoeyā€™s okay, despite him also being exposed to radiation. He thanks Cameron for coming back from him and calls him a friend. Heā€™s just, so loyal to them, I donā€™t think I can say that enough. His friends mean so much to him. And I think Scott could see that and relate to it a bit, because instead of continuing to badger him, he suggests they lose the packs and find Anne Maria. The two of them, along with Zoey and Cameron, all look annoyed at Chris for not helping them, and Scott follows Mike as he leads the team to Anne Maria. I think itā€™s interesting that Scott stays with them even as the situation becomes life-threatening, and he even shares their surprise when the other team grabs their statue. The two of them run together to grab the statue and they both look happy to find it, even though Scott supposedly wants to lose. Maybe in this life threatening situation, they found an odd sort of comfort in and appreciation for one another, just for a brief moment. And despite knowing what Scottā€™s like, Mike trusts him with the statue as he runs off to save Zoey and Cameron, putting his own life in danger. This was obviously a mistake, as Scott throws it out, but for a second, it seemed like Scott was happy for him, when it was just him and Mike.Ā 
So Mike starts literally fucking dying defending his friends. Away from Scike, back to Mike prime, heā€™s about to be killed by the moles, has every chance to run for himself, and his radiation poisoning is getting worse by the second. But he still stayed behind to defend them. The situation got so dangerous that he even tried to tell Zoey about his DID, before Brick saved them. And thatā€™s just??? SO fucking bananas holy shit. He cares about them so much, I dunno what to say. Thatā€™s his defining character trait and his fatal flaw, defending others; and it works even better juxtaposed with Scott, whoā€™s defining trait and fatal flaw is only caring about himself. Foaming at the freaking MOUTH dude. Heā€™s got issues, sure, but man heā€™s so sweet, love him. After this heā€™s the first person to confront Chris about this not being about the statues, but rather the mine; heā€™s more than likely upset that Chris put his friends in danger, especially for these ulterior motives. Heā€™s so upset on their behalf, not even his own, that he stands up to the man who almost got him killed.
After this ordeal, Cameron confronts Mike about having DID. In his fear, Mikeā€™s quick to ask who told him that. Heā€™s afraid, first and foremost, that other people know and are talking about him; afraid that this has made him somehow unlikable or unlovable. At the mention of being able to control it, heā€™s overjoyed, and immediately agrees to help get rid of Scott. Scottā€™s the first person outside of Mikeā€™s system who heā€™s been willing to genuinely disadvantage for his own goals. So Mike does not like Scott. But I feel like itā€™s an oddly intimate dislike. He dislikes him so personally, understands him so thoroughly with such disdain, for such little personal transgressions, that heā€™s willing to throw him under the bus to regain control over his situation. Thatā€™s special in a way, Scottā€™s the only person Mike would do that to. And considering how Scott treats everyone with hate as a way to cover his actual wants for human connection, and he hates Mike more than anyone else on the team, I feel like itā€™s safe to say they have strong mutual negative feelings in a way neither of them have experienced before. In a weird way, right now, with Mike having a sway over the team, heā€™s kind of more in control than heā€™s ever been. I canā€™t explain it, but the way they hurt each other goes beyond average contempt to me. In real life, yes, you shouldnā€™t hate someone that you have romantic feelings for; but I think something like this in fiction blurs the lines with intensity in regard for one another. Itā€™s a blending of concepts. Lois it insists upon itself, but in a fun and intriguing way. I love when characters hate each other with the intensity and obsession that other characters love each other with.Ā 
Itā€™s 2:40 AM and I just hit my pen so I could really lock in for these last two episodes before Mikeā€™s eliminated but idk if itā€™s going to work.Ā 
In episode eight, we start off with the teams on the rafts. Scott comes up looking anxious about getting eaten by a shark, and Mike returns the expression, and says that the shark will never find them. This could be Mike comforting himself or comforting Zoey and Cameron, but do you know what it could also be? Comforting Scott. The person heā€™s responding to. Mike and Scott donā€™t like each other, but Scott still came to Mike first, and Mike still had it in him not to shame or ignore him. Am I making a big deal out of nothing? Absolutely.Ā 
At this point, Cameron explains to the audience what causes each of Mikeā€™s alters to front: Vito fronts when the body is shirtless, Svetlana fronts when thereā€™s a physical challenge, Chester fronts when frustrated, and Manitoba fronts when the bodyā€™s wearing a hat. Iā€™m not sure what to make of Manitobaā€™s trigger(?), but the others make it apparent that Mike isnā€™t able to handle or is rarely able to handle physical challenges, frustration, or being shirtless by himself. And this is where I should talk about Mikeā€™s trauma, probably. Iā€™m not going to get too into things here because Iā€™m not an expert on DID and also it could be mildly upsetting, but DID develops due to repeated early childhood trauma and different alters may be better equipped to handle certain feelings, tasks, relationships, or memories than others. Mike had to have experienced this repeated trauma and it likely had some sort of physical component, considering Vitoā€™s triggered by the removal of the shirt and he mentions in his character bio that he doesnā€™t have any good childhood memories besides maybe riding his bike. This, as well as the rejection we discussed earlier, explains a lot about Mikeā€™s personality unfortunately. Heā€™s used to being hurt, and seeks control, stability, and love for that reason. Heā€™s loyal and quick to form attachments because he probably didnā€™t/doesnā€™t have any at home. And heā€™s self-preserving and protective and aware of his surroundings because of this as well, because he has to be. We donā€™t know exactly what happened in Mikeā€™s life, though there is an ā€œUncle Vinnyā€ in his character bio (mentioned by Vito) and it is possible that Chester is an introject of an older relative. Regardless, it doesnā€™t matter. I would like to return to Scott for a moment, and renew the topic of his home life. Weā€™ve discussed how Scottā€™s family probably isnā€™t well off, doesnā€™t show him enough affection, and likely never disciplined him in a way that stuck considering how he behaves. And his father encouraging him to kill rats for him doesnā€™t sound great either. Like Mike, it would make sense for Scott to have an unstable/unhealthy home life, and for that to translate in his characters. He also needs power over other people, he pushes away people and refuses to make friends, he has patterns of violence, and heā€™s fast to learn what makes people tick.Ā 
Back to the scene, Zoey starts by complimenting Mike, which heā€™s excited about (need for approval, ok). However, he becomes nervous when she says it feels like heā€™s hiding from her. Then when Dakota starts mutating, Mike is the first to diffuse the situation by stating that her hair is growing back. He also leads the charge in pulling the sign out of the raft. After Dakota throws out the sign, Mike also says that they have to get in the water instead. When Scott reminds him about the shark and tries to refuse, Mike shoves him into the water, annoyed. Itā€™s sort of fascinating how much more dominating Mike is in this episode compared to others. Maybe almost dying (or rather, almost losing his friends) in the mine changed him. Or maybe he has more confidence now that heā€™s the strongest person in his friend group and he doesnā€™t care what Scott thinks of him, evident by him forcing Scott into the water when he never wouldā€™ve done that to someone else. Mike, again, tells the team to stay quiet to avoid provoking the kraken. Man is going off this episode. Heā€™s instantly annoyed when Scott starts freaking out over the shark, heā€™s so done dealing with this man that he canā€™t handle it and Chester takes over. Dude theyā€™re soooo in hate. <3 After this, Scott is irate over his team winning, more than heā€™s ever been before. His feelings are so strong that heā€™s focusing extra hard on this faux-goal to destroy his own team. Mikeā€™s also upset because the challenge is dangerous, ā€œeven by [Chrisā€™] standardsā€, probably because the last challenge was also ridiculously dangerous and heā€™s worried about a repeat.
While Mike and Cameron go ahead to win the challenge at Mikeā€™s behest, Scott talks to Zoey. He knows that Mike has a secret just by watching them, and lets Zoey in on this to manipulate her. After this, Mike and Cameron tell Zoey that Scottā€™s bad news in return, and she claims that he still has a heart. Mike is saddened by the fact that Zoey trusts Scott more than him, and I just think thatā€™s such aā€¦thing to happen. In trying to keep Zoey close by hiding his DID, he just pushed her away more, towards someone whoā€™s so similar to him yet so different as well. We find out from Cameron that Mike fronts when Zoeyā€™s in danger, because he cares about her that much. Scott also steals the teamā€™s compass from Mike and frames him for losing it, blaming him if they come in last, but he fails when Dakota clears the forest of thorns. Scott keeps losing to someone who should be so easy to beat and who represents everything that he hates: kindness, loyalty, and people who stand up to him. Meanwhile, Mikeā€™s alters are becoming increasingly hard to control, and heā€™s still unwilling to admit to having DID, afraid this will dissolve the relationship thatā€™s already crumbling due to him not revealing it; heā€™s stuck in an Ouroboros of fear. Scott, immediately after this, seems to be mocking Mike, loudly saying to Zoey, ā€œWould I lie to you?ā€ Scott just knows how to push this guyā€™s buttons in the perfect way to piss him off.Ā 
When Scott loses the challenge for them, Mikeā€™s probably the most upset weā€™ve ever heard him, at least in my opinion. He doesnā€™t hesitate to let Scott know that he fucked up and that Mike thinks heā€™s full of shit. Mike tries to get Zoey to vote for Scott, done with this charade; Scott feels the same about playing around like this, and gets Cameron to admit that Mike has DIDā€” but he doesnā€™t want Mike out yet, he wants to toy with him some more. You can see the horror in his face when Scott pulls out the idol. In order for Dakota to go home, it couldnā€™t have just been Zoey to vote for her, and Mike and Cameron voted for Scott, and Dakota probably didnā€™t vote for herself. Scott had to have either voted with her, or voted for himself for fun; but irregardless, he didnā€™t vote for Mike, even though heā€™s clearly Scottā€™s biggest target. He doesnā€™t just want Mike out, but wants to use him first, something we havenā€™t seen before. And yes, this is because Scottā€™s a bad person, and taking advantage of his weaknesses; but having his weaknesses known and used by someone would be a sort of ideal scenario for Mike, despite also being his literal nightmare. He doesnā€™t have to hide from Scott at all, Scottā€™s probably the only person that Mike can fully be mad at and confront about that anger. Which is very fucked up, but also oddly close, I guess. Itā€™s a unique relationship, itā€™s interesting to me. The mortifying yet somewhat comforting ideal of being known going both ways. Toxic yaoi. Hate as an allegory for love. Yā€™know, the usual.Ā 
The toxic yaoi continues in episode nine baby, we freaking made it. The first line that catches my eye (or ear I guess) is ā€œMultiple Mike thinks heā€™s a ladies man, what a loserā€. First of all, reeks of gay thoughts and unaware jealousy; but second of all, notice how Scott and Mike continuously get more and more openly aggressive with one another. Theyā€™re falling into a routine with it, almost.Ā 
This is where Scott introduces the dealā€” AKA, starts blackmailing Mike to help him win the challenge. Mikeā€™s incredibly upset, and even considers telling Zoey about his DID, but is ultimately still too afraid. Heā€™d rather be used than be abandoned. During the challenge, Mike tries to quip back at Scott for telling him to look in the broom closet, but retracts it when Scott threatens to tell Zoey. He tries to look tough to Scott, but fails. And when Zoeyā€™s in trouble, Scott refuses to let him help her, in favor of making him go through the trash. Like with everyone, Scott likes to see Mike squirm, but I think heā€™s best at it with Mike, and the most enthusiastic about it too.Ā 
Iā€™d also like to mention here that Mike just kind of gives up and lets Scott pick him up and carry him. Just saying idk you know when you just pick up some guy who you hate instead of making him actually fight for you or run in front of you or whatever. Mike also snarks Scott when his car doesnā€™t work, which, ok, go off King. Mike finally stands up for himself to help Zoey, the desire to protect her stronger than his fear, but Scott remembers how to trigger Vito to front and uses this to his advantage.Ā 
So, at this point, Vito gets clobbered and Mike has the fight with his alters, and itā€™s soooo bad, itā€™s so bad dude. Theyā€™re all fighting for control as if the moral isnā€™t that they should work together, itā€™s ridiculous, but I guess it also makes sense for Mike to be pushed to this considering everything? Glossing over this, anyways, Mike finally comes clean to Zoey and explains that he didnā€™t want Zoey to think badly of him. And I know everyone hates this scene, I hate this scene, ā€œmultiples just means thereā€™s more Mike toā€†ā€”ā€ yeah yeah yeah yeah fuck off idc thatā€™s not how it works. But at least I think it does help draw a final parallel between Mikeā€™s relationships with Zoey and Scott along with Scott eliminating him. Mikeā€™s able to pursue his loving relationship with Zoey through her finding out about his closest secret, and Mike and Scott similarly are able to freely insult each other and develop this toxic almost-codependent-but-Scottā€™s-way-worse relationship because they also know each other, they know theyā€™re hiding something and theyā€™re familiar with each otherā€™s personalities because hate drives them to look so deeply into each other. Mike gains Zoey and loses his dynamic with Scott, and vice versa, back and forth. These relationships canā€™t coexist, both because theyā€™re so polarizing but also so similar in their intensity.Ā 
I didnā€™t watch the entirety of episodes ten through thirteen because itā€™s 4 AM and this is a Scike post, a 9274 word Scike post. But I did scrub through them and I would like to throw out there the Icarus imagery in episode ten when Zoey burns Scott for what he did to Mike, like Scott got too close to the sun or too in over his head, and Mike was his ultimate downfall. Iā€™m also just going to skitter on past the ā€œMike makes fun of Scott while heā€™s in the trauma chairā€ because what the fuck. What was that.
The relationship between Mike and Scott in canon is, admittedly, less significant in canon than it is in my head, and less well-written and intriguing than I pretend it is, and itā€™s not healthy, and no matter how I spin it they never actually made up or understood each other in a major tangible way. But I think they should have. I think having them be characters who begrudgingly understand each other and care for each other in a way they donā€™t acknowledge or even recognize would give them some much-needed depth and maybe consistency. Scott in canon has no close relationships, and the two that Mike has werenā€™t necessarily great throughout the season even though I like to think that they are. It would be good for them. Adding a few more layers to each of them would explain a lot about their goals, their mannerisms, the contradictions in their personalities; it would make them both more sympathetic and relatable, into some maladjusted teenagers looking for an outlet rather than just a good guy and a bad guy who hate each other.Ā 
In conclusion, this post didnā€™t make much sense, and it was kind of a waste of time. But it was fun to think about these guys, and I could fix them, and also theyā€™re more toxic in canon than first thought but Iā€™m not necessarily complaining, because whatā€™s a character without conflict and whatā€™s a story without a theme? I didnā€™t edit or organize it, this was more or less my notes from rewatching the first nine episodes of ROTI. Iā€™m aware it was super repetitive and rambly but I donā€™t have the time or energy to clean it up so, make of them what you will. Maybe this gave you a new perspective on Mike and Scott, maybe it didnā€™t, I dunno, Iā€™m indifferent now, perchance. Like and subscribe for more Party Sciking. I need them to hold hands and wear the get along shirt and go to therapy. This ended up being more or less 9,738 words. Hope everythingā€™s right in this, let me know your thoughts but please donā€™t tell me if you hate it. Goodnight Miami.Ā 
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mangora Ā· 13 days
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Happy 24th birthday to the earliest known use of UwU
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mangora Ā· 14 days
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mangora Ā· 14 days
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hes soooo tired šŸ˜­
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mangora Ā· 14 days
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Another AO3 thing Iā€™m curious about, how do yall decide if something is good enough to read? Usually I follow a rule of 1 kudos for every 10 hits. One because itā€™s easy math and two itā€™s yet to fail me. Thoughts? Do you just go for it and pray itā€™s good?
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mangora Ā· 14 days
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Sorry for being flaky and inconsistent do you still want to talk about Tortal Darma Islanj with me
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