Gotta respect the actress who played leebeebee in murderbot it's like they gave her the single instruction "harsh the vibe" and set her loose

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Gotta respect the actress who played leebeebee in murderbot it's like they gave her the single instruction "harsh the vibe" and set her loose
i don't know if this was the show's express intent, but murderbot's sex repulsion in the show in tandem with how much its traits have been compared to those of a Sex/ComfortBot and how Leebeebee was constantly sexualizing it and talking about forcing it to have sexual organs for her to find attractive and then kissed it against its will — all of that feels so very reminiscent of my own experiences as an asexual person and it is making me sooooooooo
The idea that even well meaning people keep comparing you to 'more available' versions of yourself. The idea that your body is most relevant to others when pleasure can be sought from it. Not wanting to be looked at, if the only way people look at you is with lust, with misunderstanding.
Obviously murderbot isn't a show primarily about this, but I don't feel like I've ever seen sexual violence against asexuals represented in a media like this, if at all. It's a horrible fact about our demographic, but it is true that we face drastic levels of abuse, conversion therapy, corrective assault, and more. To see a window into the trauma of asexuality taken seriously and handled with even a little compassion truly means a LOT to me.
One of the things that is so interesting and ironic about Gurathin is that he's a suspicious dick, but he's a suspicious dick who is actually right a lot of the time - he's just so spectacularly wrong that ditching SecUnit will give them better odds of survival.
But like...
He was suspicious Murderbot would listen in on them if they weren't in the Hopper...and he was right! It DID do that during all their other conversations!
He was suspicious that something was seriously off about Murderbot's programming...and something IS seriously off about Murderbot's programming! (It's just that, you know, that's a GOOD thing - both ethically and, very directly in the book, for PresAux's survival)
He was suspicious Murderbot would kill them....and though book Murderbot would Never, show Murderbot seems to have actually considered killing them, if briefly
He was suspicious that Murderbot might kill them, the people it's supposed to protect....and Murderbot HAS killed a bunch of people it was supposed to protect
He was the only human on the team who refused to give Leebeebee information (presumably at least in part because he is suspicious of outsiders in general, and at least in part because he knew Leebeebee was from the Corporation Rim, though yeah that was also probably just him being a dick also). And as we learn, HE WAS RIGHT NOT TO DO IT
He suspects that someone is trying to kill them the minute something goes wrong...and someone is, in fact, trying to kill them! like, as we know from the books, the reason they didn't know about the giant predator worms WAS because someone was trying to kill them
He suspects the corporation is spying on them....and the corporation HAS installed spycams everywhere! And in the books, this is for the express purpose of data mining! (maybe in the show, too? I'd need to rewatch the episode)
He and Murderbot are the only ones in the PresAux camp who have any concept of opsec (in the show). this is part of why they hate each other
Really, Gurathin's suspicious nature would be actually very useful..........if only it wasn't pointed so thoroughly in the wrong direction
Alexander Skarsgård, Akshay Khanna, David Dasmalchian, Sabrina Wu, Anna Konkle - Murderbot Promo (x) - Murderbot, Ratthi, Gurathin, Pin-Lee, Leebeebee
What LeeBeeBee does for the Story of ‘Murderbot’
So we’ve finally met Blonde Lady in the series (her name is LeeBeeBee), and I think she’s filling a really interesting and important role plot-wise and worldbuilding-wise, and doing so in unexpected ways that are surprising even book-readers. She’s wholly original to the show, so no one knows what precisely the writers have planned for her.
But I certainly have thoughts and predictions.
I figured I’d break my thoughts on her up into two sections. The first section is for all the folks who are show-only, and I’ll only be examining her role in S1E5, without any additional speculation pulling from book knowledge and what I think the writers are doing with her in the longer term. The second part will speculate on the upcoming episode, and how I think it could play out. No idea if I’m right about everything (or anything!), but it’s always fun to speculate!
FUNCTION IN S1E5 (SPOILERS FOR E1-5)
Let’s kick it off by talking about LeeBeeBee in isolation in this episode, what her function in this particular episode was, what she does for the plot, the larger world, and what she does for the storytelling format.
Let’s start with her plot function, the most obvious part of her role in this episode. She appears at the beginning as the sole survivor of DeltFall, makeup smeared and uniform dirty. This immediately sets her apart from the PresAux gang. She’s apparently the indentured cleaner that DeltFall rented for the hab along with the SecUnits, and this cleaner is wearing makeup despite having a physically laborious job in a field unit on a mostly-uninhabited planet.
This small bit of visual storytelling sets DeltFall up as a very different society to PresAux. PresAux deliberately only took one (cheap) SecUnit, which is understandable given their objections to using constructs as slave labor. None of them wear makeup in the field, and they certainly don’t have a cleaner.
But DeltFall not only had multiple constructs, but also an indentured servant to do housekeeping, and there is either an expectation or a cultural norm that she be made up while she do her indentured job. They feel, from this introduction, very Corporation Rim.
LeeBeeBee herself acts as a personification of the Corporation Rim on a level we haven’t been able to dig into with the limited screentime of the Company Tech Bro sales reps. From her first scene on the hopper, she feels like she’s from a completely different world to the empathetic and sweet Preservationers. She almost immediately objectifies SecUnit in a way that is openly offputting to both the audience and clearly to the Preservation crew, who likely don’t say anything both out of shock and out of some belief that this woman has to have some sort of brain damage to say something like that.
But this level of objectification, I think, lies at the heart of the Corporation Rim. It’s not that constructs are objects, but their workers are valued. LeeBeeBee is an indentured servant. She has no more free will than SecUnit. She objectifies it because she sees herself as a step above a construct, and in the CR hierarchy, you’re likely encouraged to objectify anyone beneath you. And that comes around to something equally uncomfortable when she finds out it’s got a hacked governor module and is a rogue. She views it as a person now, but what does that mean?
She objectifies herself for it.
And doesn’t that make the worst sort of sense on a survival level for a person in her position? She’s fully adapted to doing what she has to do to survive. She views sex in an incredibly transactional and exploitative way. When she thinks SecUnit is an object, she has the power and she immediately speculates about using it as a sex toy. When she shifts into thinking of it as a person, she also knows how dangerous it is, and reverses their power dynamic, offering sex as a transactional way to protect herself.
It’s awful, deliberately so. But I think it’s a great and visceral way to get into the Corporation Rim mindset: constructs aren’t special; everyone who isn’t wealthy or powerful is an object. You don’t get to be a person with fully autonomous choices until you’re one of the elite. Until then, sex is just another way of trying to get a slight advantage in an endless rat race.
Having LeeBeeBee represent this deeply uncomfortable aspect of an end-stage capitalist hellscape like the CR also does something on a storytelling level. This addition of an outsider character fully shifts the POV in the show. Up until her introduction, the PresAux crew felt like the strange outsiders that MB was judging, but by introducing the worst possible representation of the CR, our alignment completely shifts. We are not only on Preservation’s side, but we are insiders with them. They now feel normal and lived in, and she feels like the outsider. And this reflects the shift going on in Murderbot. Even before it’s willing to acknowledge it, through the framing of LeeBeeBee we subconsciously know it has realigned itself with the PresAux crew.
So that’s why I think she was an effective addition in this episode. If you’re interested in some book spoilers and speculation for the next episode, jump below the cut.
Haven't seen this one in the tag, so here you go
Has anyone done this yet?