Team AYO represent!!!
LET'S GOOOOOOO!!!!
Sade Olutola
hello vonnie

tannertan36
Sweet Seals For You, Always
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Cosmic Funnies
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
$LAYYYTER

#extradirty
One Nice Bug Per Day

Kaledo Art
wallacepolsom
Xuebing Du
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

Andulka

shark vs the universe
occasionally subtle
trying on a metaphor
Show & Tell
we're not kids anymore.
seen from Brazil
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@theladylibre
Team AYO represent!!!
LET'S GOOOOOOO!!!!
Taylorswift: Honestly can’t think of a better way to celebrate my (almost) birthday than to relive the Eras Tour with you! This time we’re going backstage. "The End of an Era", a 6-episode behind-the-scenes docuseries, streams on Disney Plus beginning Dec 12 🫶
(November 13, 2025)
SQUEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!
Travis Kelce on Taylor Swift appearing on New Heights:
“She came off just as genuine as she really is, and I think it was really cool to see the world react to it knowing that they hadn't seen her in that kinda light before. That's why I love her.”
(August 27, 2025 | via New Heights)
🧡🧡🧡
you don’t understand i’ve watched this woman get burned repeatedly and stretch herself thin to be the girl all those shitty men wanted her to be and settle for less than she deserved and now she’s finally with someone she can be 100% herself around who celebrates every aspect of her being and wants to be with her for the rest of their lives 🥹 someone pinch me rn
SQUEEEEEE!!!
The Dangerous Myth of Redemption: June’s Forgiveness of Serena
In The Handmaid’s Tale, one of the most troubling narrative choices of the final seasons is the framing of June’s apparent forgiveness of Serena Joy. Serena, June’s abuser and rapist, a central architect of Gilead’s terror, receives not accountability but empathy — an empathy the show encourages viewers to share. This choice does not merely distort character arcs; it sends a dangerous message about abuse, complicity, and the nature of forgiveness in the face of oppression.
Serena is not just another woman surviving within a patriarchal regime. She is one of Gilead’s foundational architects — a woman who advocated for the removal of women’s rights in a book entitled A Woman’s Place, while never living by the doctrine she helped create. She was not a passive wife but an active political operative: writing policy, speaking publicly, and even participating in the planning of violent attacks that led to Gilead’s formation — including assaults on the Capitol, the White House, and the Supreme Court. She is portrayed as believing wholeheartedly in Gilead’s ideology, continuing to support it well into later seasons. In every instance where she could have escaped or defected, she instead chose to stay — or, when temporarily exiled, to return.
The fact that she is ultimately trapped within the world she built should not compel viewer sympathy. Her rare and self-serving attempts to change aspects of the regime are always motivated by personal stakes — not empathy or principle. Even after Noah is born, she shows no interest in full-time motherhood, entrusting his care to Marthas while seeking status and influence. Her arc is not one of awakening, but of strategic adaptation. The show’s portrayal of her as a tragic mother or fallen believer whitewashes the very system she created — and the cost of that narrative leniency is paid by characters like June.
A Mother First, a Monster Second: Serena’s Self-Justification
Since Season 1, Serena has been portrayed as both victim and perpetrator, but crucially, she remains ideologically aligned with Gilead’s core principles. Though she occasionally expresses personal regret about how she treated June — moments that the show highlights as supposed growth — Serena never truly repents for building the regime or enabling its horrors. Her emotional center remains tied to her own desires: power, recognition, and above all, motherhood. Even Yvonne Strahovski, who portrays Serena, has expressed skepticism about her character’s redemptive potential, stating in an interview: “I mean, it would take a lot to make her redeemable ... maybe she should become a nun or something. … It’s all for her own sake.” She elaborates further, acknowledging that while Serena may be aware of her wrongdoings, “she justifies them constantly because of her own personal circumstances… It’s a selfish survival mode, it’s not for the greater good of others.” (AwardsRadar, 2021). This actor’s insight aligns with the show’s textual portrayal: Serena’s choices are never truly altruistic, only strategic, and motivated by self-interest
Serena’s justification for Gilead’s terror crystallizes in her belief that “maybe it was all worth it.” This chilling admission reveals that, for Serena, the suffering of others — including June — was a price she was willing to pay to achieve her goal. Gilead, in her eyes, made her a mother, and that personal fulfillment absolves the system’s crimes.
She may have deeply wanted to become a mother, but she never showed any desire to be a full-time caregiver; her priority was always power and influence. Serena only pursued surrogacy via Handmaids after "window shopping" for kidnapped children — a chilling flashback in Season 5 shows her and Naomi evaluating children as if they were accessories. When her first Handmaid dies by suicide, Serena doesn’t mourn her — she’s angry that her reproductive plans have been disrupted. And even after Noah’s birth, Serena hands off most caregiving duties to household staff, contradicting her supposed maternal ideal.
As feminist theorists like bell hooks have noted, the tendency to excuse women’s complicity in patriarchal systems by framing them as victims of their own circumstances is deeply problematic. It shifts the lens from responsibility to sympathy, allowing women like Serena — women with power and agency — to hide behind sentimentality and strategic tears.
When Forgiveness Becomes Betrayal: June’s Survivor Story Undermined
June is often portrayed as a deeply Christian and forgiving woman — a trait the show emphasizes throughout the series. And yet, this identity is at odds with some of her most reckless decisions, many of which have led to unnecessary deaths in the name of her personal mission. That contradiction becomes especially glaring in her selective forgiveness. She extends empathy and grace to Serena, her abuser and rapist, but withholds it from Nick — the father of her child, the love of her life, and the man who risked his life repeatedly to help and protect her.
Nick’s so-called betrayal, which June condemns without hesitation, involved him revealing vague information about the Mayday plan under extreme duress. He never exposed names or concrete details. In fact, according to Max Minghella’s interview and the subtext of the scene, Nick assumed Wharton already knew about the plan and was merely testing him. It wasn’t betrayal — it was survival. Had Nick refused to speak, he likely would have ended up on the Wall. The choice was no choice at all. And yet, June’s response is not understanding, but condemnation.
This double standard reaches its peak when June lets Nick board a plane she knows has been planted with explosives — an attack orchestrated via Lawrence. Meanwhile, she embraces Joseph Lawrence, who refused to help her find Hannah, stood by as commanders plotted to kill her, and was complicit in shooting down the planes that were meant to raid Hannah’s school and rescue the children. She also grows closer to Aunt Lydia, who tortured her and her friends, mutilated Janine, and remained loyal to Gilead’s ideology for years.
This selective moral logic undermines June’s arc. It asks the audience to accept a distorted sense of justice where charismatic abusers are forgiven, while allies who falter under impossible conditions are discarded. It’s not only unrealistic — it’s narratively irresponsible.
When evaluating Serena’s role in June’s brutal rape, carried out at nine months pregnant, the show’s creators themselves emphasize that there is no ambiguity in Serena’s culpability. In an interview, writer Yahlin Chang makes clear that Serena actively “helped Fred rape June to make the baby come faster,” saying the brutality reflects Gilead’s normalization of assault:
“They don’t see any problem with that… I wanted to get it to the truth of sexual assault.” (The Washington Post, 2018)
This branding of the act as political realism underscores Serena’s moral agency: she does not hesitate to weaponize June’s body to satisfy her own longing for a child — even as June nears full term. That level of direct orchestration leaves no room for the sentimental forgiveness the narrative later grants her.
Serena’s cruelty is not limited to a single episode. She has a long record of physical, psychological, and sexual abuse toward June. After suspecting that June was pregnant — and then discovering she wasn’t — Serena punished her by confining her to her room for two weeks. She slapped, pushed, and physically assaulted her repeatedly — once smashing her head into a doorframe. She drove her fingernails into June’s hands during the Ceremony. She arranged Nick’s forced marriage to Eden and showed excitement at a wedding where visibly underage girls — no older than 13 or 14 — were married off. She paraded Hannah in front of June like a hostage and repeatedly used the child as a threat. Her cruelty was not incidental or coerced; it was sustained, intentional, and fueled by possessiveness and rage.
Despite Serena’s unrepentant stance, the show increasingly positions June as a figure of compassion toward her. The narrative aesthetic — soft music, tender close-ups, Serena’s tears — encourages viewers to see Serena primarily through the lens of her maternal suffering rather than her role as an oppressor. June’s gestures of empathy, from aiding Serena in childbirth to comforting her in moments of vulnerability, are framed as signs of June’s strength and healing. But this depiction misrepresents the realities of trauma and recovery.
As trauma theorists have argued, genuine healing does not depend on — and is often undermined by — offering forgiveness to an unrepentant abuser. On the contrary, forgiveness that is premature or demanded by social or narrative pressures can retraumatize the survivor, deepening the harm. The Handmaid’s Tale, however, seems to valorize June’s capacity to empathize with Serena as though it is a necessary step toward her own liberation — sidelining the need for justice and accountability.
The Perils of Sympathizing with the Oppressor
By romanticizing June’s forgiveness of Serena, The Handmaid’s Tale undermines its own feminist foundation. The series was initially celebrated for exposing patriarchal violence with stark clarity, offering little comfort to those complicit in oppression. Yet in its later seasons, that clarity erodes. The moral weight of the story shifts from the survivors of Gilead’s cruelty to the emotional struggles of its enforcers.
Elisabeth Moss herself describes the June-Serena dynamic in strikingly intimate terms, calling it “the centerpiece of the show. It is the love story of the show. They’re the heroes and the villains of the show, and they often trade places in those roles.” (Vanity Fair, 2025) This framing lays bare the series’ approach: Serena and June are positioned as moral equals whose bond transcends their history of violence and abuse.
But this interpretation is deeply troubling. By romanticizing a relationship born of exploitation and cruelty, the show risks blurring essential moral lines. What began as a tale of survival and resistance against oppression transforms into a narrative where the abuser and the victim are cast as co-protagonists in a mutual drama — their power dynamics softened, their crimes reframed as mere chapters in a complicated love story. In doing so, the series undermines its own critique of patriarchy, offering redemption where none was earned and asking viewers to invest in an emotional arc that obscures the need for accountability.
Serena’s redemption arc is not earned through transformation or accountability, but through the emotional labor of her victim — a dynamic that feminist philosophers like Kate Manne have identified as central to the maintenance of misogynistic systems. The cultural narrative that emerges suggests that women’s participation in oppressive regimes is forgivable, even understandable, so long as they conform to familiar roles of suffering or maternal devotion. This is a dangerous message, as it not only distorts the ethics of the story’s world but also risks normalizing similar patterns in the real world, where abusers are often shielded by sentimentality and the myth of personal redemption without accountability.
In the end, June’s forgiveness of Serena is framed as a triumph of compassion over hatred, but in truth, it represents a failure to honor the survivor’s story. It offers a fantasy of absolution for the unrepentant — a dangerous myth that serves neither justice nor healing.
The implication is chilling: redemption is not about moral reckoning or change, but about who the narrative chooses to protect. Charisma, motherhood, and suffering become shields for cruelty — even as quiet, loyal resistance, like Nick’s, is punished or forgotten.
Beauty, Youth, and Sympathy: How the Show Shapes Our View of Serena
Another subtle yet significant way The Handmaid’s Tale distorts the moral clarity of Serena’s character lies in its casting and characterization choices. In Margaret Atwood’s original novel, Serena is an older woman, her power diminished not only by Gilead’s patriarchal structures but also by the way those structures devalue women past their reproductive prime. The novel’s Serena embodies the consequences of a system that punishes all women, even those who helped build it — a bitter, discarded architect of her own cage.
The show, however, deliberately alters this dynamic. By casting a younger, strikingly beautiful actress as Serena — and by crafting the character to be closer in age and life stage to June — the series invites a different kind of viewer response. The age gap that symbolized Serena’s loss of status in the book is erased; instead, Serena becomes a figure of misplaced potential, a woman viewers are encouraged to see as still vibrant, desirable, and emotionally complex. This is compounded by the charisma and vulnerability that Yvonne Strahovski brings to the role — traits that, while a testament to the actress’s skill, contribute to the moral confusion surrounding Serena’s actions.
This choice taps into a well-documented cultural bias: audiences are more inclined to empathize with attractive characters, particularly when their suffering is framed in familiar, humanizing ways. As feminist thinkers such as Naomi Wolf have argued, beauty functions as a kind of currency within patriarchy — one that can grant power, obscure culpability, and manipulate perception. In The Beauty Myth, Wolf describes how cultural narratives often conflate a woman’s value with her appearance, conditioning audiences to see beauty as a proxy for virtue or worth. Similarly, Laura Mulvey’s critique of visual culture notes how cinema trains viewers to find pleasure — and thus sympathy — in looking at beautiful women, even when their actions warrant moral scrutiny.
By making Serena younger, more beautiful, and emotionally layered through casting and scripting choices, the series not only departs from Atwood’s sharp commentary on the cost of complicity but also reinforces antifeminist tropes. It suggests, however unintentionally, that oppressive women are more forgivable — or at least more worthy of our sympathy — if they are attractive and charismatic. As Susan Bordo has pointed out, this dynamic reflects a deeper cultural logic that binds women’s moral and social value to their bodies, inviting audiences to forgive or excuse when those bodies conform to certain ideals.
The result is a narrative that prioritizes Serena’s humanity over the dehumanization she inflicted on others — and ultimately, over the humanity of those who were never granted the same narrative grace. This is especially striking when contrasted with the show’s treatment of Nick — a character who, despite his emotional restraint and consistent moral compass, is given significantly less screen time and far fewer opportunities for emotional framing. His sacrifice is quiet, his pain internal, and his love expressed in subtle, selfless gestures. His stoicism may be misread by some as detachment, but to viewers with literary, psychological, or visual literacy — or simply higher emotional intelligence — it’s clear that Nick is one of the most tender, brave, and quietly heroic characters in the series. Serena, on the other hand, remains emotionally volatile and fundamentally self-serving. Apart from Fred — already dead by the final season — she is perhaps the coldest main character, yet her beauty and vulnerability ensure that she is constantly rehumanized by the narrative. In the end, the show teaches us that redemption is not earned — it is framed.
Rather than exposing how systems like Gilead exploit and discard women, The Handmaid’s Tale risks reinforcing the very ideologies it set out to critique: that a woman’s worth, even as a villain, remains tied to her appearance and ability to evoke desire or pity.
Conclusion: The Price of Selective Forgiveness
The Handmaid’s Tale has always been a story about moral ambiguity — about the impossible choices people make to survive within a system designed to strip them of power, agency, and integrity. Its early power came from its unflinching portrayal of these complexities: how even small acts of defiance carried enormous risk, and how survival often required compromises that blurred the line between victim and collaborator.
Yet in its later seasons, the show loses sight of that moral subtlety, offering a fractured vision of justice that undermines the complexity it once honored. June’s journey — once defined by the brutal reality of navigating power under tyranny — becomes clouded by selective forgiveness that follows no ethical logic, only narrative convenience and emotional manipulation.
Elisabeth Moss framed June’s forgiveness not as something she offers to Serena, but as something she does “for Noah“.
„June knows that Serena does need that forgiveness, and June is big enough to give it. She’s a pretty great person.” (Vanity Fair, 2025) This framing highlights the show’s attempt to portray June’s forgiveness as noble — but it sidesteps the question of whether such forgiveness is just. The moral weight shifts from Serena’s accountability to June’s capacity for empathy, erasing the need for genuine atonement.
We see June extend compassion and even trust to characters whose hands are stained with the very crimes she fought to survive. Commander Lawrence, the architect of Gilead and the inventor of the Colonies, orchestrated the bombing that killed innocents in Chicago, ordered planes to be shot down as they attempted to raid Hannah’s school, and stood by silently as Gilead’s leadership plotted June’s death. Aunt Lydia oversaw torture, mutilation, and humiliation of handmaids for years, burning hands, gouging out eyes, and enforcing the regime’s ideology with zeal. Serena subjected June to relentless cruelty: physical violence, orchestrated rape, psychological torment, and the exploitation of June’s own daughter as a weapon. And yet, June forgives them. She comforts Serena, allies herself with Lawrence, and accepts Lydia’s supposed change of heart — without any of these figures ever fully reckoning with their actions.
By contrast, Nick — who repeatedly risked his life to protect June and Nicole, who worked quietly against Gilead, who fathered June’s child without ever asserting ownership or control — is cast out. His loyalty is questioned, his presence is rejected, and no forgiveness is offered. The show frames him as somehow tainted — not by his actions, but simply by the uniform he wears, or the role he plays within Gilead’s ranks, despite his resistance from within.
Bruce Miller acknowledges this tension, admitting, “Serena’s done unforgivable things. I don’t think there’s any forgiving her as a human being. But can June forgive her? Redemption just doesn’t seem like something that exists in the world. It’s a nice idea in a fictional story, but if our story is going to help the audience navigate the world, it can’t be that picture.” (Vulture, 2025) Yet, despite this, the narrative does seem to present a picture of redemption — or at least of softened judgment — for Serena, using motherhood and vulnerability as shields. This contradiction mirrors the show’s broader inconsistency: it claims to eschew simplistic redemption arcs, yet writes them into its fabric through emotional manipulation.
This inconsistency reflects, and reinforces, a dangerous cultural message. As feminist thinkers such as Kate Manne, Naomi Wolf, and Susan Bordo have shown, societies are conditioned to excuse harm when it comes wrapped in beauty, maternal longing, or charm. The Handmaid’s Tale — perhaps unwittingly — participates in this dynamic. The beauty, charisma, or proximity to parenthood of Serena, Lydia, and Lawrence becomes a shield that softens our view of their crimes. Serena’s biological motherhood, Lydia’s self-fashioned maternal role toward Janine, and Lawrence’s growing bond with Charlotte each provide a veneer of humanity that the show uses to invite sympathy — even in the absence of true atonement. Meanwhile, Nick — who longs to be present for his daughter but is denied that opportunity — is left without such narrative protection, his loyalty overlooked and his isolation reinforced.
What’s most troubling is not that June’s feelings are complicated — true complexity would enrich the narrative. It is that the show offers no coherent moral framework for forgiveness or condemnation. It invites us to sympathize with unrepentant abusers, while isolating those who resisted. In doing so, The Handmaid’s Tale ceases to critique the dynamics of power; instead, it becomes complicit in the very patterns of selective empathy it once sought to expose. A show that began as a searing portrait of resistance ends by asking its heroine — and its audience — to do the emotional labor of forgiving the unforgivable. That is not catharsis. That is capitulation.
🟦🟩 Mobilize Monday 🟥
“There’s a very strong Team Luke contingent, but it’s my understanding that Team Nick is definitely very strong as well. And that’s because an unrequited love story is the best one. That’s way more interesting than the solid marriage. But we knew that we had to take an entire faction of people and convince them that she should not be with this person.”
They don’t want us. So why be loyal to them?
Let’s call this what it was:
A deliberate campaign to undermine, alienate, and erase.
They didn’t just betray a character.
They waged a psychological war on the fanbase that loved him.
They gaslit us.
They belittled our investment.
They rewrote history — and dared us to forget what we saw with our own eyes.
Nick Blaine wasn’t just a character —
He was the heart of a resistance arc we tracked, analyzed, and preserved.
Nick and June wasn’t just a romance —
It was the emotional backbone of the series, tied to survival, rebellion, and reclaiming stolen autonomy.
But they decided we were a threat to their new narrative.
So they tried to dismantle what we built.
Here’s what they didn’t count on:
We’re not passive.
We’re not confused.
We’re organized.
🟢 We archived the receipts.
🔵 We documented the inconsistencies.
🟥 And we built a campaign — not to beg for scraps, but to take our power back.
This isn’t about bitterness.
It’s about truth-telling.
They want to profit off the legacy we helped build while treating us like we never mattered.
Well, we do matter.
🗣️ Join the movement.
Because loyalty without respect is exploitation — and we’re done being exploited.
🙏🙏🙏
They didn’t just rewrite the ending. They rewrote the story. Then called us crazy for remembering how it began.
They mocked the people who carried this show. Weaponized June’s arc against the fans who understood her. And tried to reframe our clarity as delusion.
We read the book. We watched every episode. We understood the story they were telling.
It wasn’t unrequited. It was a retcon. And we’re not pretending otherwise.
Quick tips for writing found family vibes
☽ character A* saying “ugh you’re so annoying” while giving B* their last piece of food without hesitation
☽ one of them keeps a tally of who saved whose life. it’s always mostly a joke. mostly.
☽ someone quietly patching up another’s wounds and neither of them talks about it
☽ a big fight. like, yelling, rage, “fine then LEAVE” — but they don’t leave. they sleep five feet apart. still grumpy. still ride or die.
☽ A* carrying B* on their back and B* being like “put me down I’m fine” while actively bleeding out
☽ weird inside jokes that no one else gets. like everyone around them is like “is this a code???” no. it’s just dumb.
☽ one of them has a Bad Day and the others just know. they don’t talk about it, they just pull them into a couch pile and put on a movie
☽ dumb arguments like “you cannot name the dog Knife” followed immediately by “...fine. but I get to name the next one”
☽ someone saying “I don’t need help” and getting helped anyway
☽ they threaten to kill each other like every other hour, but the second someone else threatens one of them? suddenly it’s murder o’clock.
☽ found family member B* never had a birthday party before and now they get one every year and it’s a disaster and they love it
☽ car singalongs. chaotic energy. someone takes the harmony too seriously. someone else is off-key on purpose. someone films it. blackmail for later.
☽ someone says “no one’s ever done that for me before” and the other characters all go “????” because it was a tiny thing
☽ shared chores, shared grief, shared joy, shared toothbrush (gross), shared everything.
☽ someone forgets they’re allowed to ask for help now. someone else reminds them.
☽ someone new joins the group and asks “so who’s in charge?” and everyone points at someone different. or they just laugh. because no one is. or they all are.
Character Legacy Spotlight: Nick Blaine — “You’re Just Like Them”? Not According to the Source Material.
In Season 6, Episode 7, June turns to Nick and says:
“You’re just like them.”
But we’re here to remind you — and the showrunners — that this was not only out of character.
It was a retcon. A betrayal of both the source material and the series’ own narrative foundation.
Let’s break it down.
🟩 Margaret Atwood’s Nick Was Never One of Them
In the historical notes of The Handmaid’s Tale, Atwood makes it clear:
“More likely it was ‘Nick,’ who, by the evidence of the very existence of the tapes, must have helped ‘Offred’ to escape. The way in which he was able to do this marks him as a member of the shadowy Mayday underground…”
Nick was not only helping June — he was embedded in Gilead’s power structure to undermine it.
He was Eyes and Mayday. A double agent. A risk-taker. A man walking a knife’s edge to protect the woman he loved.
In The Testaments, Atwood goes further:
“So my father’s one of those?” I said. “A Commander?”
“Luckily not,” said Elijah.
Nick is not lumped in with the Commanders. Not morally. Not spiritually. Not ideologically.
He is other. A survivor — not an oppressor.
🟩 The Show Agreed — Until Season 6
For five seasons, The Handmaid’s Tale portrayed Nick as emotionally reserved but morally grounded.
They showed us:
• A man who wept for a nameless Handmaid who died from Gilead’s cruelty
• A lover who risked everything to help June escape
• A protector who used his network of Friendlies to get information on Hannah
• A man who married for survival but never stopped choosing June
• A Commander without the star on his jacket — deliberately designed by Ane Crabtree to show he was not like the others
• A leader Moira called “a good man in Gilead”
• A father Tuello described as honorable when Nick traded intel for June and Nichole’s safety
Even in Season 1, Episode 10 — when Nick whispers “Go with them. Trust me” — the show aligned him with resistance. It was personal. It was love. It was rebellion.
🟩 Season 6: The Betrayal of Narrative Memory
Enter Yahlin Chang. In an interview post–Season 6, she said:
“It was convenient to forget… that Nick is a Commander in Gilead… to become a Commander, he’s done some bad things… there is no such thing as a good Gilead Commander.”
Let’s be clear:
This wasn’t a revelation. It was an excuse.
A way to justify erasing six years of character development with one heavy-handed pivot.
Chang admitted the show chose not to show Nick committing atrocities — and then blamed the audience for caring, calling it “convenient.”
That’s not subversion. That’s narrative gaslighting.
🟩 Nick Blaine = Resistance and Survival
Bruce Miller once said:
“Nick’s motivation is survival — his own, June’s, the life of his child.”
Survival isn’t complicity. It’s strategy.
Nick’s stillness? A cover.
His restraint? A weapon.
His love for June? The deepest form of rebellion in a regime that outlawed love itself.
Nick and June’s relationship was never just romance.
It was defiant. Forbidden. Unshakable.
Every act of tenderness — every risk taken — was a blow to the system.
As Mike Barker once said about their intimacy in Season 1:
“A glimmer of hope and humanity.”
A reclaiming of autonomy. A moment of personal resistance.
🟩 Our Verdict? They Strayed — And We Remember
They asked us to believe that Nick Blaine was a cold, calculating, power-hungry villain hiding in plain sight.
But if that was true, they should have written it.
It’s not ambiguity — it’s revisionism.
And they underestimated the audience that studied this story like scripture.
So no — Nick Blaine was not “just like them.”
He was:
✅ A resistor
✅ A survivor
✅ A protector
✅ A man who dared to love in a loveless world
And his legacy deserves better.
We’re not silly little fan girls with a crush. We’re informed. We’re organized.
And we’re not going to let them rewrite the past to justify lazy storytelling in the end.
Thanks for the trust issues, HMT.
STILL not over it yet.
Julie Plec on Kat’s costars asking to be paired up with Bonnie.
All these conversations about Bonnie’s ships brings me back to this funny little TikTok. Julie Plec and Caroline Dries were furious Kat was well liked by her costars and had amazing chemistry with them. They hated the idea of her being desirable by anyone. It’s rather ridiculous.
Bonnie deserved better.
Blessed be the ending because THANK GOD that's over.
My comment on the Osblaine compilation THT just posted on IG.
Max Minghella as Nick Blaine in The Handmaid's Tale (2017-2025)
Thank you Max for bringing to life the morally complex Nick Blaine for the past 6 years with such thoughtfulness.
THANK YOU, MAX. We know who Nick was, who they told and showed us he was for the majority of this series, and we will NOT forget. We will never let them rewrite what you did, negate who Nick was, and erase what we felt. THANK YOU.
My exact feelings and thoughts about Nick and June (s6's version) right now:
Precisely.
The last thing he did was ask if she was okay… while she was letting him die.
THIS. Even on his way to death, he was still putting her first. UGH, he deserved so much better.
Today’s thoughts on Nick (Ep 9 spoilers)
1. Love the interview in Elle. Max Minghella is gracious and positive and grateful for this role. When he says that Nick got on the plane “like he was trying on a suit” and “it doesn’t really fit” and that he doesn’t know if that’s the path he would have continued on but “we’ll never fucking know.” Oops, let that slip and I love it. He just seems like a class act and I guess I need to watch 3 seasons of Industry to be ready to support him there.
2. I think what pisses me off most (and there are lots of choices ffs) is that the relationship that was cultivated and promoted between June and Nick for 5.5 seasons was not given an ending, no closure.
How do we have their last conversation be accusatory and desperate when they loved each other so much for so long?
He felt her presence at the wedding, she wanted to make herself known to him. Her actions put Rose in the hospital, she almost gets hung. All this since they last spoke.
And they don’t get even a moment of eye contact to connect or assure one another that their history matters, that they both love Holly, that they helped each other survive up until now. This is just sloppy lazy writing.
I could have accepted his death better if they had some moment of understanding or closure. Instead, he says two of the most bizarre things Nick has ever said, and then dies thinking she hates him.
Absolutely tragic.
#max minghella is a class act #nick blaine was a great character
THANK YOU, MAX.
The most painful thing is:
— Love was always the heart of the show. June constantly said she survived for love.
— Nick embodied that love. The kind that is quiet but acts. That rescues, accepts and waits. That never demands. He was her freedom, in a world where everyone else wanted to control her.
— But in the end, they leave her with Luke, a man who pressures, controls, and manipulates through guilt. Not a partner, not love, just someone who looks “right” on the outside but is empty inside.
— And Nick isn’t even given a chance to fight. No inner strength, no honest resolution, no scene where he speaks his truth. They just cast him into silence and death, as if the love he lived by meant nothing.
This isn’t just a plot twist. It feels like the show betrayed its own message. That it’s not ideology that saves, but love. That even in darkness, you can choose light, if someone truly sees you. But in the end she didn’t see him. And now they’re telling us he never deserved to be seen. Sad
Not the uplifting message