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  1. Deborah
    07/29/2022 @ 9:21 PM

    I’m literally watching this episode for the first time, and have not got to the scene yet, so I’m glad to have this perspective before I see it.

    No matter what, this show is about an awful lot of compassion, and the idea that she could not have compassion for her own predecessor is contrary to the concept of the show. Instead of fighting, and overcoming essentially her own grandmother, she should be making peace with her and giving her the connection that she lacked in life. Becoming one with her essence and stronger as a result rather than fighting, or at least coming to a peace to prepare for what will happen in the episode where all the potential slayers gain power.

    The demon that was used to create the first Slayer is actually in Buffy, so they are not quite two separate people; they should be almost telepathic. It shouldn’t require having someone translate when they share the same demon.

    Watching it now, I have to ask what’s with the guy with the cheese, but also, the first Slayer should be stronger than Buffy. At the moment they are rolling together, they should become one person; since Buffy is fighting on her own, she should have lost.

    They used Tara as her voice because she was available. What this brings to light is less the fact that they chose a white woman, but that they had no choice other than to use a white woman, or a werewolf, a vampire or a soldier, all white, because the only person not white was third hand, not Buffy’s boyfriend but a friend of her boyfriend, and already out of the story arc. There were no other options because the show is white. That is more wrong, not the choice but the fact that there were no better choices.

    And having someone talk calmly for someone who is animalistic is simply stupid, taken separately from everything else. It looks like the writer was more interested in drama than logic, on top of everything else.

    Looking at Angel, and Oz, and Willow and Tara, and Buffy, and Xander, an effort is made against prejudice, telling us not be prejudice is against vampires and werewolves and witches and lesbians, and people who are strange, and boys who are awkward; a worthwhile metaphor but without the reality it should be embodying, because all of these characters are white. When the original Star Trek came on in the ’60s, Uhura and Checkov and Sulu stood to prove that the metaphor of understanding and accepting aliens should also apply to humans. That’s what’s missing here; and in the 60s this was a big hot button. By the time Buffy was filmed, they wouldn’t have to fight over having people of color in the show. Nevertheless they didn’t, and therefore they only had white options.

    Their choice of Tara as the spirit guide nearly highlighted a more systemic problem.