Obligatory disclaimer that this is not about anybody who regularly likes/rbs my posts but the rest of y'all are making snakes manifest in my house,PLEASE engage with them as the actual characters and dynamics instead of just tropes/norms
first of all the way the interviewers were implying Jenna would someday marry one of her male on-screen “love interests” was out of pocket. secondly, the way Jenna heard that and basically went “anyway I am in love with Emma Myers and have never felt that way for anyone before”
Oh I’m sorry, you’re trying to tell me Wenclair isn’t endgame when ENID is the one who gets the Big Reunion Moment - the very iconic and usually reserved for the love-interest moment after the battle when they are unsure whether or not their partner is still alive, just for the masses to part and for them to be reunited, while the bystanders are visibly excited about this reunion.
Like, damn. They really did that. Wednesday Addams hugged someone - and she did; Enid started the first hug and then Wednesday wraps her arms around Enid and pulls her into the lasting hug. That alone was huge. And it was a very long hug.
But the fact that they chose to cut away during the hug to show us this reaction from the people around them, who were just standing there, watching them hug?
Look me in the eyes and tell me that this is not the quintessential romantic moment reserved for the endgame ship after a great battle.
I may have had the most exhausting week of my life so far, but my bestie just moved to NYC so I'm going to be giving him a rush-order prompt fic soon ish. So look forward to something of varying quality but very wyler smutty!
With the continual predictions on the demise of permanent media I find it reassurring that a number of streaming series (like Loki) are still getting disc release. Although Amazon has the cast list wrong (Alfred Who?), Jenna Ortega's Wednesday - IMO one of the best post-pandemic series and one of the few reimaginings of an old classic to actually work - is getting a DVD and Blu-ray release in North America in late March!
Thanks, Netflix. Now, howzabout getting Jenna Coleman's The Serpent from 2020 on disc while you're at it?