magibrain: "Did they have morality majors at your school?" "No." (Don't ask me; I was not a morality major)
magibrain ([personal profile] magibrain) wrote2013-11-14 09:47 pm

In which poor judgment is catching?

...okay, so, in episode 3, a girl gets fired because she happened to be exploited as part of a con. In episode four, Peter decides that it's be perfectly acceptable to con a new employee at a place whose boss seems to be... extremely unforgiving. Because expediency is king, I guess?

In episode 4, Neal shows up at the Burkes' house drugged out of his head on an experimental mind-altering substance that Mozzie handed him. (Peter does not think that decision was wise.) In episode 5, Peter seems to have no problems downing some kind of experimental alternative pharmaceutical that Mozzie hands to him.

I... these are not narrative or practical decisions I would have made. Though I eagerly await next week to see if there's a pattern.

In other news, I keep typoing "Peter" as "Pater", which seems apt.
aelfgyfu_mead: Aelfgyfu as a South Park-style cartoon (Default)

[personal profile] aelfgyfu_mead 2013-12-13 07:17 pm (UTC)(link)
I've been very frustrated with it lately: as you say, questionably moral activities are fine if the writers are aware that they're questionable. I haven't been enjoying WC very much lately because I feel as if we're just supposed to cheer for whatever the Boys do.