I love this blog. So why did Jack really want Kate to watch his surgery on the Island?
E: That’s so sweet! Thank you love! We’re gonna put out another commentary soon.
Jack wanted Kate there with him if those moments were his last on Earth. He knew there was a chance of things going south (his wanting to be awake during the surgery, low sanitation/sterilization, etc), and if he were to die, he wanted to die with Kate holding his hand. That’s the epitome of love and Kate finally understood her importance to him in that moment, and ultimately, her love for him as well. It's everlasting and the threat of losing him was the scariest thing she faced.
Jack and Kate have been my /otp/ numero uno for a long time and I've always thought those things but could never put them into words and you guys have managed to do it so eloquently haha, it just makes me happy! Also it makes me happy that there are people who love them just as much as I do haha
E: Thank you so much babe! We really appreciate the message and the support. Jack and Kate are just timeless in that it’s been years and we can still talk about them and love them. This blog is for fans like you, so again, we really appreciate it!
obamameansfamily replied to your photoset: “12/74 Favorite Jack and Kate Moments | Episode Analysis ...”
Love your blog but please for all that’s good add a “Read More” break to this.
E: For all that's good, WE DID. For the main text, we did as it shows on your DASHBOARD, not when you REBLOG it. We did not for the caption, simply because we don't want to. All of our posts are set up the same way. Maybe you should adjust something on your end, because we know we're long-winded, and that's the point of the blog.
12/74 Favorite Jack and Kate Moments | Episode Analysis
"I can't leave without you!" | I Do
Requested by: Anonymous
E: Man oh man, I knew this episode was coming. GOD IS GOOD. People who think that this is Skate's golden egg, need to keep searching, because this episode, with all its tripping over itself to make Kate and Sawyer seem plausible and even transformative, was very rooted in Jack and Kate's connection surviving through ANYTHING (even a barrel pointed at Sawyer's head as it were, LOL).
Okay, babe, I am up for the first question this time. I'll try to go easy on ya, LOL. Here we go. What do you think of the glass wall scene? From top to bottom, what do you think it served for Jack and Kate in this episode? This is their first interaction since being captured. What do you think was communicated there, on all cylinders?
M: Go easy on me? With that?? LOL. Alrighty. Well, two things, I suppose:
First off, I LOVE LOVE this scene. I think this was the first true moment where I actively started shipping Jack and Kate. I've always liked them from the get-go, but always believed that they were the IT couple, you know? The couple that would eventually get together and have pretty island babies and have hot, sweaty island sex and all that. Then I Do happened. This scene, girl...tugged at my heart strings hard, and then when the LOLCage Sex went down, I was kinda stunned? Like, wait a minute...how could she? How DARE SHE? So, yeah, the rest is history, I got involved in the ship war, we met, and it's been a helluva ride since then. I REGRET NOTHING.
As for what it served Jack and Kate, aside from firming up their OTP status, is that their relationship and bond is complicated and layered, and I think they themselves realized that here. Up until this point, yes there have been threats to their very lives, but none in such a way that tested their loyalty, their bond and their trust in each other. Here, the threads of that fabric, the fabric of how they regarded each other and their connection, was threatening to come undone. And you can see how this unraveling scares them. Jack can't quite believe what he's hearing, and Kate falls apart at being dismissed by a man that she thought would listen to her, remain on her side, and it's clear that they're affected by the other's behavior as much as what's happening around them. I mean, this whole episode turned into a tragedy of mutual cause-and-effect, and it all started here with them before Jack decided to take the reins and make the ultimate sacrifice. And that was all he could do.
So, I think this episode served as the major wrench in their bond, and they had to work to claw their way back into each other's trust again. But like any situation where two people are tested like this, if enough is there between them, then it can only be a good thing in the end - that they'd overcome and prevailed to become even closer/better as a result. So, notch one for true love, you know?
You're up, babe! Was Kate ever conflicted in her romantic feelings for Jack or Sawyer? If she wasn't conflicted, then what led her to sleep with Sawyer? Why not just have a heart-to-heart, or even just kiss him? Why SKEX?
E:Awesome answer, and you know I agree with ALL of it, especially this:
"I mean, this whole episode turned into a tragedy of mutual cause-and-effect, and it all started here with them before Jack decided to take the reins and make the ultimate sacrifice."
ABSOLUTELY. The glass wall scene is like this catalyst, that puts everything else into motion, leading to the very tip of the episode, to that awesome, "Kate dammit, run!"-then-fade-to-back for three months. I swear these new fans of LOST have it so fucking easy. The age of Netflix is a blessing with this show.
This episode was so stagnant (even the flashbacks did nothing, I was so distracted by Kate's, erm, Monica's terrible wig) until Jack and Kate were face-to-face to again, and because of their misunderstanding and the unraveling of the tethers that made them inseparable, things really started moving, in the wrong direction with the cage sex, but moving, none-the-less. Kate and Sawyer didn't get to shagging all on their own. NEVER FORGET. ;)
To answer your first question, was Kate ever truly conflicted about romantic her feelings? I'd say no. I don't think she was ever in a situation where Jack and Sawyer were on equal footing where her romantic feelings were concerned. I'm glad that you specified 'romantic', because there were some other feelings going on there for Kate.
One of which was familiarity. Sawyer was familiar. I can go bit-by-bit into just why, but you would already know what I mean by that. There were about twenty other Sawyer-types in Kate's repertoire, so he was someone she already knew how to handle. There's comfort in that. She felt sorry for him at first, for being such a douche, but then it turned into sympathy after reading his letter, and then genuine care when she got to know him better, the real him. Sawyer wore a mask just like she did, and again, there's comfort in knowing that someone can understand THAT part of you that felt it necessary to do so.
Maybe Kate thought that she did at one point have romantic feelings for Sawyer, but it always seemed like whatever that was for her, it just wasn't enough.
Jack was on a whole other level with Kate. Not familiar at all, but she too had examples of men moderately similar to Jack in her past life. Tom, Kevin, even her father Sam, had a kind of likeness to Jack. These are all the men that Kate WANTED to be with, but her having been fathered by and killing Wayne screwed it all up, and left her feeling tainted. She came back to her home town to see and rekindle something with Tom, she married Kevin, and she was sick with the desire to be Sam Austen's biological daughter.
The other emotion Kate carried in was self-loathing. This is what really put her at odds with her feelings for Jack. She simply didn't feel worthy of him, and he made it very clear from the start that her line of play, with the lies and deception would never play out like she's so used to. She had no arsenal for handling a guy like Jack, who was as understanding as he was '100% done' when she would revert. Kate stepped all over Tom, was a different person entirely with Kevin (Kate can't make a taco to save her life, LOL). None of that was permitted with Jack, which makes it more interesting for that dynamic, and the conflicts, both personal and at-large (for example, the group's safety, the right course of action against a threat, etc.), that would arise between them. Again, diametrically opposed. It's worked with the best OTPs out there.
With all of that being said, I think that Kate knew very early on that her feelings for Jack were bigger, and more gravitating. Again, I won't inundate you with the specifics, because there's just too many of them. Sawyer was someone she cared for deeply, and I'd say, "THANK YA LAWD" for the fact that their friendship was reinstated in Seasons 5 and 6, but Jack, she had it BAYD for that one from the jump, and down the road, that led her to making some pretty big, and crazy ass decisions (going back to the Island, blowing the bomb, killing MiB, begging on her knees that he give up on the Island and come home) that really spoke to how much she really does love him. Kate is cray by nature, that gurl makes 'wild child' look tame and shrew, but when Jack was involved, the game got that much more drastic for her. Sawyer? Not so much.
In terms of 'I Do', it's very clear at that point in the mini-arc that Kate is not where she wants to be, more saliently, with whom she wants to be. She has no idea where Jack is and kind of won't shut up about the guy. LOL. Sawyer's placement in the cage next to her is circumstantial, they are, literally trapped together. It's all very clear that the circus has a main act, and it's Kate and Sawyer SANS Jack, which is important to mention, because it's really the only way that things could play out how the writers NEEDED them to.
If she wasn't conflicted, then what led her to sleep with Sawyer? Why not just have a heart-to-heart, or even just kiss him? Why SKEX?
To be honest, the writers just needed to get Sawyer boning Kate out of the way, LOL. I am being so real right now. They needed it DONE. Sawyer flirted with Kate, in physical terms since Season 1, and it was time for her to finally act like it was wearing her down. It was that blunt and obvious.
I read this quote months ago and I had to share it for this commentary:
"Chemistry isn't about sex, it’s about impact."
THAT SAYS IT ALL. The glass wall scene puts Jack and Kate's chemistry on blast, sets fire to the damn rain, because it's not playing the safe and sure-bet TV ploy of throwing two people into each other's pants to show them off. Jack and Kate's glass wall scene imparts a blast that has you reeling. It's IMPACTFUL, with how it goes from them drowning in the first look of the other, to it culminating into Jack telling Kate to leave, yelling at her. What went wrong? Does Kate really understand what's going on? How is Jack going to handle this? Again, IMPACT.
The writers felt it best, as always, to play up Kate and Sawyer's chemistry by using Old Yeller's sure-fire dog-trick: physicality. It's nothing interesting. It FINALLY happens. That's about all we can get from it. Not impact, but just that the time has come. It's only contribution to the plot is Jack's reaction to it on the monitors, and how that spurns on his decision to "help" Ben. That little micro-world of Kate and Sawyer's was never going to last, because the circumstances were temporary, and well, the real story was not how the act affected them, but Jack and Kate. Sex in a cage is fucked up on its own, but it's really screwed up when it's not really about the two people partaking in it.
There's no other reason for Kate to devalue her flower by giving it up to Sawyer in broad daylight if it wasn't for the concoction of Random Other #1 wanting him dead because his wife was shot, and get this, by somebody else. LOL. That plot-line just dripped with the potential of Kate crying all over Sawyer and heightening her emotions in a false, circumstantial sense, and that's exactly what happened.
Kate and Sawyer? A heart-to-heart? Was never their style, and they just didn't stir the majority that the execs needed to watch in that regard. A kiss? Didn't he already objectify her before by dragging her into his esophagus just to get a rise out of the guards who told him not to touch her? So that had already been checked off the list. The only thing left was for Kate to give it up. I cringe, because they hadn't bathed in days, but were suddenly feeling GQ-SEXY. LMAO. OKAY WRITERS.
But yes, ultimately, it was just to get Kate and Sawyer to their crescendo, their mountain-top so that they could start falling down from it, which took no time at all. I mean, I've had farts that lasted longer than their afterglow. Also, lets not forget how much Damon and Carlton took on the roles of Pimp Daddies for ratings. LOST wasn't doing so hot at this point. Darlton even admitted to 'being in cages' creatively, so they rolled out the sex wagon in hopes of getting the ratings back on top. Kate deserved better.
Okay, my next question: The final scene, Kate staring at Sawyer all apologetically while asking Jack to tell her where the hell he's at, do you think that there was a blatant romantic choice being made with her, "I can't leave without you!", or was that Kate just trying to save every-damn-body?
M: GURL. Your explication of Kate's feelings...UNFF. I have to agree - and also wonder if, aside from thinking that night would be Sawyer's last, whether she also felt that gettin' dirty would be, like, no big deal to him, knowing what you've said above - that she knows his "type", that the divide between sex and love isn't so large to have made a huge emotional impact on him (nor her), and that he's someone that would understand that. I think it probably took her a bit by surprise (given her non-answer to the ILY) that he'd been more impacted, and as she didn't want to spoil their post-coitus moment, but her "non-answer" said it all.
To answer your question, no...not every-damn-body. That isn't to say she cares about people, we know she does, but the way she says it as well as her choice of words there:
"I can't leave without you."
It's not "I won't" or "I'm not going to..."; it's "I CAN'T..." like as if being physically ripped apart from her tall drink of water will leave her out in a desert to perish. It's a refusal of the highest order.
I mean, one can certainly argue that she'd do the same for anybody, but just the combination of her words, her anguish and steadfastness lends itself to something more. I think it kills her that the idea of leaving him behind, possibly to die, is behind her refusal to accept that she's leaving without him, that she CAN'T leave without him.
Last question: What could Kate have done in her situation - she had to do what the Others were asking her to do, which was to ask Jack to do the surgery to save Sawyer. Why do you think Jack saw that as a transgression, i.e. that he didn't believe the Others would actually kill Sawyer?
E: Hmm, interesting question! Kate had no choice in anything. I mean, she's not even in her own clothing for crying out loud. The woman had no say in anything, no control, and she didn't want Sawyer to die, but that is not a love declaration. I feel like Kate would step in if someone was trying to put down Vincent for God's sake. LMAO.
I think that Jack, as soon as Ben started waving medical history, scans and shit in his face, he knew that the man needed him to sign on for surgery. I think that Jack had this suspicion from the start. I mean, why have Michael lead them into a trap? Why drag Kate and Sawyer along too? Ben needed Jack to perform the surgery, knew he would tell him to kiss his ass, but Ben, the man never without a plan, had the strings (Kate) that would make Jack move.
I mean, I look at Jack's face when Juliet brings Kate into where they're holding him. Kate is like this precious parcel, that they're finally letting Jack see and talk to. BEN SAW HIS FACE. He saw how Jack reacted to seeing Kate again. They starved Jack and Kate out when it came to each other, which made Jack desperate to change the circumstances, and ultimately, this was what Ben was hoping would change Jack's mind. They turned Kate into this weak, limp leaf, to be honest. She would have been right there with Jack, spitting in Ben's face, instead of caving, if the cage situation wasn't so damn savage.
"Isn't he tired of being trapped? WIthout a choice? Without Kate? He'll cave. He'll agree to the surgery." This is what Ben is asking, saying in his head about Jack when he places Kate on his doorstep. He has cornered Jack and teases the one person that has the power to change his mind. He's so confidence that Jack will just fold in to Kate's pleas. What Ben didn't study well enough when was over in their camp asking for milk, was that Jack is one stubborn son of a bitch. He will wait you out FOREVER. LOL.
Jack knew that Ben wouldn't kill Sawyer, because if he had, he really wasn't getting rid of that tumor then. "And you believe them?" Jack asks, and Kate's "I have to", KILLS HIM. She does not have to, she chose to. Jack wasn't making that choice. So, he risked it. "Get out of here." That about says it all. Ben and Kate can get the hell out of his face. BOSS.
Basically, Jack saw the cameras, and knew Ben was watching, and out of pride and just his unwillingness to be controlled and manipulated, shooed her away. Jack didn't want Ben to know that he could get the best of him. Now, we all know Ben is never without a Plan B, and that was Kate and Sawyer's cuddling in the cage, for Jack to see, which was the only purpose of their lying there like idiots. Hello, Kate and Sawyer, you're surrounded by people who want you dead, now is really not the time to lie there completely exposed, LOL. WTF? Either way, it was there for Jack to see, and again, did nothing for the two people cuddled up, but make them look even dumber (sorry, Kate, but you looked soooo foolish, the entire episode, even in the flashbacks, not your best centric episode, hun).
M: EEP! Brilliant answer, hon. I also think Jack played right into Ben's hands regarding him seeing Kate/Sawyer cage sex (the open door, the room with the guns) and knew that would motivate Jack to do the surgery because then he had nothing to lose from NOT doing it at all ("Plan B - being sent home"), but Ben didn't anticipate Jack ultimately sacrificing himself for K/S, which goes to show how BOSS Jack truly is.
JACK DOING THINGS, WINNING ALL THE AWARDS ALONG THE WAY. I mean, how can you NOT love this character?
E: Jack's sacrifice. I mean, Sawyer can be the damn Iron Chef in the sack and he can't beat that. I mean, he gave it his best shot when he jumped out of the chopper, but Jack was ready to DIE to keep Kate safe. Sawyer just went for a swim back to the beach. LOL. We appreciate it, Sawyer, but yeah....Jack was surrounded by vultures ready to leap as soon as he saved Ben. He would have been expendable if not for his impeccable surgical skills. Sawyer was just...expendable the whole time, really. No hate, just truth.
Anyways, Jack's sacrifice does an awesome job getting us right back up that Jate mountain in the final scene of that episode.
thank you thank you thank you for this blog! I'm in the process of watching this show for the first time and this was what really cemented my belief in Jate. I love that I can come here after I watch a scene and process my thoughts through your wonderful and insightful analysis. This has made my lost experience that much greater :)
E: Hey you! Thank YOU for your support and love of the blog. Mia and I really appreciate it. We’re also so happy to be your “Jate Guru” in a sense. They are so complicated and nuanced, that it’s sometimes hard to really get an understanding of them, unless you’re willing to work for it. ;) Wow, this message is really one of the best we’ve ever gotten. THANK YOU. So happy we’re here to help and so sorry for the delay in my reply. You’re wonderful!
E: YAY! So glad you liked it! Mia and I appreciate that you took the time to listen to it. We are never short of songs for Jack and Kate. Again, thank you for your support and so sorry this is so late!
Hi! I finally got around reading the proposal meta and OMG THANK YOU IT WAS PERFECT. *-* I just love them so much. *-*
E: YOU ARE SO WELCOME! We’re so sorry that we were so late with getting it up for you, but I’m ecstatic to hear that you did indeed read it and loved it. You’re the best. Absolute best.
Your blog is my favorite ever, I love you guys. I always get so excited when you post something new :) By the way, do you like my url? ;)
E: Well thank you so much! We love you too. WE LOVE YOUR URL. (And me, personally, I kind of like to think that Kate had her last name changed to Shephard after she left the Island…but sssshhhhh, don’t tell anyone ;) )
GAH! You guys are the BEST. I love this site and your comments are always spot on. Like seriously, when fans ask Darlton about Jack and Kate they should just refer them to you for answers. oxoxoxoxo
E: The highest of compliments, Monica! Thank you so much, babe. That’s so sweet of you to say! Wow. We know Jate better than Darlton? That’s the ultimate accolade. You’re so awesome, love. Thank you for supporting the blog and always being a constant sea of positive energy. We reaaaaaally appreciate it more than you can possibly know.
I love the scene in Season 3 Episode 13 when Jack tells Kate he'll come back for her. There's just something about that scene that makes me emotional idk
E: YAAAAAAAAAAS. You have to be talking about my pride and joy, the gameroom scene of “The Man from Tallahassee”. How can you not get emotional about how Kate is literally demolished about Jack leaving and is faltering with the possibility of being without him, if only until he comes back with rescue? It’s everything.
“But I will come back here for you…" The way Jack whispers that in her ear, how close he is, how absolutely serious he is about it, the ‘FOR YOU’ of it all…#HELP
WOW. THANK YOU GUYS FOR STICKING WITH US. Like, what? I swear, M and I believe that we shouldn't even have HALF as many followers as we do. You guys are amazing. We hope you like the resurgence the blog has had in the past week, with the new commentaries and the fanmix.
We're gonna work hard to keep that momentum going. Stay tuned for more requests and just more JATE.
E: “The Moth” is one of those Jate staples. Literally. If you can’t walk away from that episode convinced that Kate was in love with Jack after like fifteen minutes of knowing him, and that everyone else knew that they were kind of “together” in some sense, then I’d say that the noggin’ needs a serious scan.
This episode chronicles a lot of Kate’s already strong attachment to Jack. This was also evident in the previous episode, “House of the Rising Sun” when she showed devastation that he might be mad at her for her decision to stay on the beach instead of following him and a great majority to the caves. Now, mind you, their spat in that moment, before Jack takes off for the caves, for good, was the last time they spoke to each other before the cave-in, so the tension is already there between them, but Jack being in danger makes Kate completely forget about who lives where during their trial separation.
Now, the sling scene, y’all! Kate is so damn proud of her piece of cloth with the knot up top and the hole at the bottom. The way she says, “Made you something” is the cutest thing I have ever seen. I mean, hasn't the woman done enough? She ran back from how many miles out once she found out that Jack was caught under a few million rocks, dug until her back was ready to crack to save him and now, she’s still tending to him, caring for him. Wifey stamps are peppered all over this. She overextended herself for him and, at the end of the day, she still wasn't done, still had more to give. LOVE.
Jack’s smile when she wraps her creation around his neck. Beautiful. He hasn't even seen her face yet, she hasn't said a word, but he knows it’s her, and it’s evident. Jack’s shoulder has to hurt like hell, and even in that pain, this woman can make him smile. As frustrating and mysterious as she is, she makes him happy. “Ah, my very first sling.” Adorable. That’s not the only first Kate has given him or will give him, for sure. The way she gingerly helps his arm through the hole, such a small detail, but GAH. She was in love with him, even this early in the show. You can contest it, but this episode, again, is one big testimonial to it. This evidence is absolutely admissible.
After the initial cuteness, Kate gets her gloat on, ribbing Jack about his “safe and secure” caves. Jack is not easily swayed from making the place his home for the time being though, making sure this fluke is the only one he has to deal with. Then, BAM. We’re back at the crux of their present conflict with one question: “So, you’re heading back to the beach, huh?” There is no more eye contact, as they both stare into the fire ahead, that wall magically re-erected between them. The way Jack asks it, he’s already upset, because he knows her answer, and nods consciously when she goes on about Sayid and his plan to narrow down the signal. A big part of him was hoping that she changed her mind, but no such luck, never such luck with these two.
More interestingly about how Jack asks that question, it’s obvious that he already misses her. Kate looks sad for not having given him the answer he was looking for, sad that there’s been no advancement, that he hasn't changed his mind, and that he’s determined to make the caves work. It’s a bit harder for them now to let go, because they both realize that anything can happen. Jack can make a wrong step and die. Kate can make a wrong turn and die. Is it really worth it to be apart? You can see in their sad expressions that it might not be, but neither of them is willing to gamble on it.....just yet.
“Thanks for the sling, Kate.” Jack forces that out a bit, because while he is so grateful for it, for her, it’s essentially yet another goodbye. He doesn't like it, but he’s swallowing it as best he can. “You’re welcome”….ugh, the way she stares at him and how her face turns with this fascination with his face, illuminated by the firelight. M, our little orange babies! LOL.
M: Damn this dark and very orange scene...I had a hell of a time GIF'ing this. Anyway, babe, I don't know if I have anything to add or COULD say anything that you haven't already beautifully said. There's such a sweet tenderness between them here, and it's clear that the little seed of angst we saw near the end of HOTRS is already starting to bloom here between them. It's like that low rumble of an ache, and, like, they're both afraid to tread too boldly with each other lest they scare the other person off or something. Seriously, this scene is giving me a damn toothache.
One thing I want to mention is Kate's look at the end there after Jack talks about getting off the island; I kinda also feel like there's an acknowledgement to her impending fate, that they both know, once rescued, that she'd be heading for the slammer, and it's something neither want to say out loud or address head-on, but they KNOW know, and it's that cruel twist of fate kinda thing. You meet someone (amidst the hoariest situation to boot), you have that rare, amazing connection and, well, said person is just UNAVAILABLE in some way and then you're like, WHY CRUEL WORLD WHY.
And the awkwardness at the end there...it's almost like there's nothing TO say but talk about some BS about rescue cos that's what they're SUPPOSED to talk about cos it's safe and non-threatening. Except we all know what they'd like to say to each other...amiright? HAH.
Watching episode "Some like it hoth", Roger wants to report Kate then concerned Jack: "I know that woman, Kate, she would never do anything to hurt your son". We've come such a long way since the heartbreaking: "I don't know what you're capable of, Kate " of season 1, haven't we
E: YES WE HAVE. You know what? Thank you for bringing up that moment with Jack and Roger, because it’s so damn perfect. Jack and Kate are in such a precarious place, but when Jack sees someone trying to intimidate Kate or think the worst of her intentions, it is NOT a problem to put that person in check. At all. *loves*
Also, I love that Jack was aware of Kate’s sensitivity towards children at this point, because of Aaron. He was the only one who really understood why she had reacted the way she had. Then, the angst starts later on when he refuses to save Ben at Kate’s urging. THAT was a decision Jack made with plenty of good reason, but again, Kate reacted emotionally, sensitively to a child in danger, even if that child grew up to torment her.
“I don’t know what you’re capable of, Kate." GUH. I love how direct and honest that line is. Most people see that line as Jack putting Kate down or making her feel bad (WHATEVER!), but honestly, he truly had NO CLUE what she was capable of doing to get what she wanted, which in that moment, was a spot on that raft. As it turns out, he was right, because no one, but Jack mind you, suspected Kate of poisoning Michael. Granted, Sun asked her to poison Jin, but she was still capable of being sneaky enough to get the water in the vicinity of the raft so that Jin could potentially drink it and fall ill. Everyone else was blindsided by it, except Jack.
That’s not to say that Jack didn’t believe the best of Kate, but come on, after what he learned about her and the Marshall, and how she tried to play him with the Halliburton case, he’s not about to be some idiot either.
But YES, progress is success when it comes to those two.
OMG YOU GUYS THE FANMIX IT MAGNIFICENT!! ABSOLUTELY MAGNIFICENT! HOWWWWWW?? WHYYYYYY????
E: THIS MAKES ME SO HAPPY YAS! So glad you like the fanmix. M and I worked hard on it and we hope that our followers enjoy the song choices. I’m overjoyed that YOU like the mix. You know you’re my favorite. ;)
For our 100th post, we're back with another fanmix as a New Years' treat to our FANTASTIC followers for their never-ending support and otherworldly patience. We love you guys, and we hope you enjoy!