Severance: A Mind-Bending Workplace Horror We Can’t Clock Out Of
I had to watch Severance twice to appreciate its brilliance. The first time, I was bored and confused. The second time? I was obsessed. This isn’t just a slow-burn sci-fi—it’s a chilling, cerebral masterpiece about identity, control, and the emotional cost of compartmentalizing your pain. In this review, I break down the themes, characters, standout moments, and why Season 2’s finale changed everything.
They Weren’t Just Characters—They Were Warnings, Mirrors, and Lessons
These aren’t just fictional characters—they’re emotional blueprints. Each one taught me something about survival, power, trauma, or self-worth. In this piece, I break down nine of the most psychologically complex characters I’ve ever connected with—and what they revealed about me.
The Greatest Revenge Story Ever Told: The Count of Monte Cristo
The Count of Monte Cristo isn’t just a classic—it’s the blueprint for every revenge story that came after it. This piece is a full breakdown of betrayal, transformation, and the emotional toll of vengeance. From chapter one to final reckoning, we follow Edmond Dantès as he rises from innocent sailor to merciless mastermind—and eventually, something softer.
The Psychology of Joe Goldberg: Charm, Obsession, and the Dangerous Myth of the ’Misunderstood’ Man
Joe Goldberg is not misunderstood—he’s calculated. This blog dives into the psychological makeup of TV’s most manipulative antihero, exposing the dangerous blend of charm, obsession, and unresolved trauma that drives his violence—and why viewers keep forgiving him.
Holy Hell: Why The Righteous Gemstones Is the Most Chaotic (and Accurate) Satire on TV
Holy Hell: Why The Righteous Gemstones Is the Most Chaotic (and Accurate) Satire on TV” is a deep dive into Danny McBride’s hilarious, unhinged megachurch masterpiece. From shotgun sermons to emotional breakdowns in sequins, this blog explores the Gemstone family’s hypocrisy, dysfunction, and glitter-drenched brilliance—with a few Succession comparisons sprinkled in for good measure.
You: The Evolution of Joe Goldberg — From Delusional Romantic to Delusional Prisoner
Joe Goldberg was never chasing love — he was chasing control. You wasn’t a love story. It was a horror story told from inside the mind of a monster, and by the final season, Joe could no longer outrun the truth he spent years hiding from: himself.
He Couldn’t Forgive Himself, So He Let Go of Everything
It’s been weeks since I finished Dexter—and I’m still angry. Not because it was bad, but because it was tragic in the quietest, most haunting way. Dexter didn’t vanish to protect the people he loved. He vanished because he couldn’t forgive himself. This post dives into the heartbreak of the finale, his relationship with Hannah, and why exile was never survival—it was punishment.