I don't particularly enjoy the spy aspect of the Clay / Alex story. Watching some of those early clips posted in the Random Episodes series, I do appreciate some of the character work in the story and find James Horan much more compelling than I originally thought. The whole thing operates on a level of surreality with everyone in Clay's world acepting that this man is in fact their son, father, and ex-husband. In a way, it sorta plays into similar themes of the show's earliest episodes where characters like Curtis and Lorna felt threatened by Jack because he was adopted, and, in their eyes, an outsider. In a grand sense, it is dramatically rich scenario, but it quickly devolves into the Maine mystery involving a bullseye, a corrupt local deputy, and hypnotic mind control.
The Rusty story is equally clunky involving ties across the canvas to Warren (the Nick DInatos role) and Jenny as well as Aja. None of it works well for me because it feels so out of place, but where it doessucceed is towards the end when Rusty attempts to gaslight his daughter-in-law Liza in order to break up Liza and Travis' marriage. Rusty emotionally manipulates everyone involved and Liza is smart enough to see through his act as well as smart enough not to call him out until she has enough evidence to prove Rusty is guilty without a doubt.
The period where Randolph Mantooth is just Clay seems fine enough, but so little of 1986-1987 seems strong, though there is always potential.
I actually don't hate Curtis / Dinahlee / Clay, though I feel it would have been stronger with a different actor in the Curtis role, more involvement from Ava who had connections to all parties involved, and a bitter Trisha around to cluck about it. I also enjoyed Curtis / Dinahlee / Trucker, but didn't love how we had to see the deconstruction of Curtis in order for that to happen. I do think it would have eventually been a Stacey / Curtis / Dinahlee / Trucker quad and I would have enjoyed that.
James Carroll would have worked well as Curtis. I think Ava / Curtis (James Carroll) would have had more legs than Ava / Leo did prior to Shana's arrival in the story.
I was looking at the Ryan's Hope wiki page to see when Joe Hardy left that show, and those dates were also removed by the same poster.
I don't think we have much for definitive facts regarding Addie Walsh and Haidee Granger. Years ago, the Haidee Granger wiki page stated Walsh left the show in an argument with Granger leaving Granger to ghost write the show. A summer 1992 SOD article has Paul Anthony Stewart lamenting that the show has no headwriter that summer. The Cooper sexual abuse story has been more conjecture on my part. In July 1992, there seems to be a major shift across the canvas including the Cooper / Selina story. After spending weeks alluding to Cooper experiencing abuse, it was stated onscreen that Cooper instigated the encounter and we were left to assume this was accurate.
In September 1994, within 2 months of Laurie McCarthy and Addie Walsh taking over, there is a very well done scene between Steffi and Cooper in the Alden barn where Cooper revisits the Selina story, and Steffi outright asks if he was abused and Cooper says he was. It felt very significant to the characters rather than the story as it was righting a wrong.
Nixon's period in the 1990s is definitely complex in terms of story and characters as well as some of the significant shifts. Guza and Taggart's initial months had been very compelling, but starts to unravel by the summer. In some ways, the Tess / Curtis / Buck setup seems reminscent to the story involving Alex and Clay with two men involved in war being involved in a situation involving someone being duped. I didn't hate it by the time Tess / Clay briefly become a thing, but it isn't a super rich story. In addition, I found some of the custody stuff involving Tyler a bit tedious. While I loved the Shana / Leo story involving the loan and the baby, the Ava / Jeremy off shoot was odd. It sorta worked, but it never would have worked long term. I don't know what the long-term plan for Angie and Frankie was, but Frankie was more compelling under Taggart / Guza than under Nixon, in my opinion. Nixon makes some smart story shifts (Tess and Steffi thrive under Nixon), but I also think she made some very foolish moves (I don't like Nixon's watered down Shana / Leo story nor Ally and Casey's lack of story).
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dc11786 ·
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