Warning: this contains some major GoT spoilers. Enter at your own risk. *GoT theme song plays*
There are a few moments in television history that will never leave me.
Some because they were hilarious, like when Nicole shoved her arm up a cow’s butt in The Simple Life; and others because they scared the living daylights out of me, like Marlene’s demonic possession on Days of Our Lives. I was like ten, okay?
But, like most of us, the television moments that have really stuck are those particularly harrowing plot lines. The ones that shock on such a deep level you cannot help but think: is this allowed on television? And if so…why? For me, and thousands of other viewers, last night’s disturbing episode of Game of Thrones was one of those moments.
Remember this shocking episode? Did last night’s Game Of Thrones throw in a “rape for ratings” scene?
With a smorgasbord of majorly addictive television series on offer (seriously, it’s become like a part time job trying to keep up) it takes a team of particularly talented scriptwriters to maintain your loyalty to a particular show. Because that’s their job, right? Television is entertainment. Television is an escape. Television is fiction. And yet, it is television that in recent days is starting some fairly heated debates that feel more at home in an academic forum – not a plot line that also involves dragons, zombies, and witchcraft.
The internet is ablaze today with uproar and disgust following last night’s gory episode of GOT, in which Stannis Baratheon burns his young daughter at the stake in the hope it will win him an upcoming battle.
Top Comments
Mrs Lovejoy is the Simpsons character who implores others to think of the children, not Maude Flanders (although I am sure she shared the sentiment)
This was my reactiom the whlle sansa rape thing. It was contextual and needed for the storyline. But the internet melted down about it. It's fiction