I'm going back and trying to re-find comments I made in the tv_talk community about some shows.
My family watched season one of Fire Country before I had a DW account. This picks up with talking about season two, which was the truncated one affected by the writer+actor strikes.
S2E1Here:
I'm still not a fan of a twist in the S1 finale, but this episode does make it clear that this season won't be focused on slogging through the minutiae of undoing that twist since there are two time jumps. (Angst fuel for anyone who likes filling in time jumps via fanworks, I suppose.)
For anyone who wants less vague-to-avoid-spoilers details: The S1 finale was focused on Bode going before the parole board in an effort to be granted parole and released to his mother and father. Basically corrupt prosecutor stuff happened, and the only way that Freddie [Bode's friend in Camp Three Rock] would get his parole granted would be if Bode took the fall for introducing the drugs to the camp that someone else did. There was this whole thing with doctored urine results, and Bode was really set up to look like he'd relapsed and shot his whole season of any possible growth out of the water. So, S2E1 opened with him still plunged into this angsty, annoying 'I'm now evil incarnate' mindset where everyone would be better off without him. Around S2E4Here:
The narrative is really trying to get two characters back together, but I think I'm at a point of postshipping them. I'm not interested in another 'will A chose B or C' type of plot line; we spent part of season one doing that.
Also: I'm not sure exactly where, but I did comment somewhere before the end [below] that I was thrown off by Sharon basically having an 'everything is fine' depiction of life post-kidney transplant. I didn't want her to face serious complications, but like, she didn't even have a throwaway line about needing to take her anti-rejection meds or something. S2E9Here:
While Fire Country did bring up the sentence shortening credit [for lifesaving acts of heroism] early enough that it doesn't fully feel like some sort of deus ex machina tactic, I can't help but wonder if having this short season for S2 interfered with the writers wanting Bode to finish his sentence at Camp Three Rock a little slower. Him being nominated for this credit really feels like a way to have him suddenly out for the last episode instead of feeling like we really saw this coming. (No one else in camp has been nominated for this credit before, and it wasn't like Bode got nominated a few episodes ago and just found out his case made it through the paperwork and stuff. He found out he was nominated, passed all the way through, and will be released shortly in, like, one sentence.) S2E10Here:
Gabriela married Diego in the season finale, and I really hope the narrative will move on from Bode/Gabriela. It spent, like, nine out of the ten episodes in this short season with some amount of trying to at least nudge (if not push) them back together, and I've reached a point of post-shipping them. I don't care if someone new has to be introduced for Bode, but it feels like there's so much that we could be covering if the narrative would stop focusing on that ship.
While Three Rock turned out to say goodbye to Bode as he was officially released as a parolee, it kind of felt flat when Bode was only ever shown positively interacting with one other inmate there this season. Did he actually have any acquaintances or friends there? [Someone having a sorta friendly conversation in an episode where he gets a terminal diagnosis and panic-runs away from camp isn't what I mean.] I can understand why we're not seeing fully fleshed out stories for all 10-15 other men, but with this season including a brief arc to save Three Rock from being closed, it just seemed like we could've seen more about inmates other than Bode.
Sharon just magically is completely fine in a post-organ transplant life, and while I wouldn't want to see complications just to spice things up, it's like there's absolutely nothing about adjusting to having gotten a transplant. Considering that this season introduced a work injury to Vince [electrocution] that led to heart issues, there could've been something about Sharon understanding why he was clinging to being able to work so much. S1 showed her already being treated for kidney issues, so we didn't really find out if she had a phase of being in denial. I dunno, it just feels like we definitely had a short season that didn't actually address certain things.