1.08 // 8.16
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from Austria
seen from China

seen from China

seen from Netherlands

seen from France
seen from Mexico
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from France

seen from France
seen from Norway
seen from Bangladesh
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United States
1.08 // 8.16
THE POWER OF CINEMATOGRAPHY
babies 🚨
Buck: oh, here’s my award for the most rules broken.
Hen: that’s not an award.
Eddie: it’s an angry letter from Bobby.
Buck, hanging it on the wall: well, it has the word ‘most’ in it, so I’m calling it an award.
i dont even have words, i-
Husband!Bobby
A/N: I am still not over Bobby’s death. Expect lots of Bobby content in the future to help me heal. Also if you have Bobby requests I’d love them so much.
bobby promised to a dying chimney that he wouldn’t let anything happen to his family. that promise was made because he knew they were both sick, there was only one antidote, and he would never choose to save himself first. bobby promised that nothing would ever happen to chim’s family because he knew he would return him to them.
From a written and cinematic standpoint, Bobby revealing he has CCHF was so well-done because we were Buck in that moment. Buck can be a himbo, but he's never been stupid. And neither are we. We all got the feeling when Bobby hung back that there could only really be one reason he wouldn't leave.
Buck following him with this hopeful "what's up, aren't you coming?" mentality is the same one we had watching this unfold.
Seeing Bobby close the doors with himself inside can only mean one thing -- we know it and Buck knows it. We -- the audience and Buck -- are pleading with Bobby not to remove his gear because doing so exposes him...but simultaneously, we understand that the only reason he'd remove his gear is that he's already been exposed.
The audience and Buck remain in a state of 'there's gotta be some other reason' up until the moment we see the blood dripping out of Bobby's nose.
Bobby telling Buck that he's going to be okay without him and that the 118 needs him all while Buck wordlessly disbelieves this is also what we as an audience are experiencing -- not knowing how to watch this show without Bobby but being encouraged to do so for the other characters and plots.
Regardless of personal feelings on the creative decision to kill off Bobby Nash, and regardless of the personal feelings on the plotline and method of killing him off, mirroring the audience through Buck in this moment was very chef's kiss.