[S1E8] Maybe I Should Start From The End
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Hope awakens in a field, Fort Valley, Georgia, along with Alaric and Landon. It is revealed to be a flash-forward, and Hope narrates that she will start from the beginning and narrate to the event. At the Salvatore School, Hope prepares to leave following a distress call from Landon, however she is stopped by Alaric, who questions where she is going without telling him. Hope reveals the distress signal following a threat that Alaric will expel her. He agrees that the two of them can go, as long as he drives.
Landon finally locates his mother, who goes by the name Seylah Chelon. Seylah initially assumes that Landon is working for her former employer but later realizes that he really is her son. Hope and Alaric track them down after Landon triggers the magical alarm. Seylah reveals that she used to work for a secret government agency that hunts down monsters and drops them into Malivore, erasing them from existence. When she started asking questions, her employers dropped her into Malivore. She somehow came out of it years later, with no one remembering her and pregnant with Landon. Meanwhile, a merman is chasing Seylah and Landon, trying to obtain the second Malivore key. Seylah breaks into the facility and jumps into Malivore in order to keep Landon safe. Hope is the only one who remembers her and tells the truth to Alaric, who doesn't remember what happened but trusts her word. They resolve to keep the second key, an Egyptian urn, safe.
Fatal Family Photo: Sort of. Seylah takes one last look at the photo of her holding baby Landon before jumping into Malivore. Unfortunately, the photo ends up being found by a government agent. Fish People: A merman goes after Seylah and Landon, trying to obtain the second Malivore key. It can move through the sewers and squeeze through any pipe. Crosses with Humanoid Abomination, since it can also move by dislocating its limbs at unnatural angles. Gas Leak Cover-Up: When Hope and Alaric arrive to Seylah's home, they are stopped by a construction worker, who tells them about a supposed gas leak. Alaric, having been involved in cover-ups before, knows something is up and quickly leaves the scene. The \"construction worker\" is later revealed to be working for the same agency that hunts monsters. He Knows Too Much: A government agent pushes a technician into Malivore after finding the photo of Seylah holding baby Landon. Since Malivore Ret Gones anyone dropped into it, he will likely avoid punishment for this. This is also why Seylah was dropped into Malivore the first time. She was asking too many questions.How We Got Here: Hope's narration of the episodes events when it starts with everyone but her losing their memories. Hunter of Monsters: Seylah used to hunt supernatural creatures for the government. Land Mine Goes \"Click!\": The merman ends up stepping on a mine when approaching the secret government facility and is blown into smithereens. The urn survives unscathed. Landon, Hope, and Alaric are far enough away to only be knocked out by the blast. Meet the In-Laws: Hope meets Landon's mom. Seylah immediately likes Hope's strong will and devotion to Landon. Mystical Pregnancy: Seylah reveals to Alaric that she came out of Malivore already pregnant. When Landon asks about his father, she lies that she had lots of casual sex in those days, so it could be anyone. No OSHA Compliance: Malivore is just a puddle of black goo in the middle of a large room. There isn't so much as a fence around it to keep people from accidentally falling in and being Ret-Gone. Also no cameras to watch what's happening. Ret-Gone: Anyone dropped into Malivore is wiped from the public consciousness, although physical proof of their existence remains. At the end of the episode, Landon's mom voluntarily jumps into Malivore in order to keep her former employers from getting to Landon. The Reveal: Apparently, the reason no one remembers the existence of monsters is because of a secret government agency that has been hunting monsters and dropping them into Malivore, which Ret Gones them.
The other big positive from the trip was that it allowed Alaric and Hope to hash out their differences. They shouldn't have been on opposing sides, to begin with, but sometimes things don't work out the way you think they will.
I started Wherever I Look back in 2011 and have aimed to be that friend who loves watching various forms of media and talking about it. So, from bias, strong opinions, and a perspective you may not have thought about, you'll find that in our reviews.
KEVIN: Sure. What we're hoping to see from a supply chain perspective, I mean, the challenges that we have are around adding capacity to vaccine production. And we're starting to see that. There's more and more facilities that are coming online and vaccine production is starting to ramp up. And we want to, hopefully, get quality control issues under control. So make sure that's added.
DARRELL: Okay. Are there things that maybe we should look for We talked a little bit about the MBA program being developed, being launched. What else may be sort of on the horizon, or at least in your ideal sense, what are some other areas where we may see Wayne State moving towards
Malbonte and Shepha battle darkness against light. You convince Malbonte to remember his mother and how she saw the good inside him, and the darkness starts to release its grip from him. Shepha feels guilty, agrees with a truce, and heals Malbonte; and he makes a new treaty with all the points you discussed.
We then get a brief interlude wherein the practiced familial politesse seems to drop, and starts to shade into something more real. Actual laughter, and the ease of familiarity. People who truly know and appreciate each other. For a fleeting moment, we get glimpse of what House of the Dragon would look like if these characters actually loved each other like a family should. It's warm. It's pleasant. It's endearing.
Viserys dies in House of the Dragon season 1, episode 8's ending, but not before departing with some significant final words. What comes first is Viserys talking to Alicent about Aegon's dream and The Prince That Was Promised, resulting in a misunderstanding from which Alicent believes their son, Aegon, should be on the Iron Throne, and ultimately to the Dance of the Dragons. After that, the episode closes out with a final shot of Viserys before fading to black. As he touches the ring that once belonged to his first wife, Aemma, Viserys' last words are \"my love.\" It's a touching moment, and a sign that he had now found peace and been reunited with his true love.
James is Screen Rant's Deputy Features Lead Editor, having started out as a writer for the site back in 2019. A Sports Journalism graduate, James quickly realized that supporting Sunderland AFC was painful enough without writing about it, and so decided to talk a load of rubbish about movies and TV instead. Formerly the TV editor at WhatCulture, he has a particular love of Star Wars (The Last Jedi was great), Game of Thrones (season 8 was good), and Harry Potter (J.K. Rowling...never mind) - y'know, all that really niche, nerdy stuff. Spending most of his days editing articles about or writing on movies and shows, James likes to really get away from work and unwind by, er, watching movies and shows. He's fuelled by pint-sized cups of tea, peanut butter, more tea, and a quiet, constant anger (like the Hulk, only not green, or strong, or big).
The competitive scenario is where you have different pizza restaurants with their own deck of orders (that maybe the facilitator can prepare in the same way), starting together, same pace, same ending and at the end of the day we can compare final result (value, orders, pizzas, rounds, metrics, ....). This is the scenario that players normally prefer.
Sure,short term you are fine as long as you dont march straight into the dead center of the crater.But the biggest problem with radioactive fallout is that it quickly gets into the food cycle,where it devastates all of the organisms.People wont start falling over dead,thats true,but for centuries afterwards they will be much higher cancer and birth defect rates.Heck,even using depleted uranium shells was enough to noticeably increase cancer rates in my country,and those arent nearly as bad as fallout from actual nukes.
GLORIA: When I started the program in 2012, we had like three clients the first year. And because I wasn't accredited yet, we had an attorney that helped us. So we couldn't take too many cases. But once I became accredited, then I think the first year we had like 14 cases, and then we had 28. Right now we take about 70 new cases a year seven zero cases a year and in about 130 common total, like not everybody that come can get services because they either don't qualify, or there's really nothing we can do. But cases that we go from beginning to end about 70. We have about, I would say 300 open case load. So these are clients that have cases pending, I don't know if you're aware but cases in immigration take Forever, ever. So yeah, so if we have these cases open, and yes, we file them, we put them away and we're just waiting, but these are clients I call every three months. I think about their cases or they need assistance with something else or they need to, you know, reach out to the housing the Prime Minister, we're always engaged with his clients and I mean, our our hours, our numbers are ridiculous. Because of that reason, we keep taking these new cases, but these cases don't close for four or five I have six, seven years. So right now we're handling cases that were filed in 2016. And they're still pending. So they're really never gone until like they become US citizens, basically.
04:48 Cindy Moehring: Yeah. So, that's where technology can really be your friend and actually making sure that you've got very detailed processes and procedures for making sure that you're not doing business with somebody who's been sanctioned by the US government or a company that's been sanctioned by the US government. So technology and actually walking through where, who are the parties in the contract, what are they selling to you, who are the beneficial parties, there's lots of detail involved in that. And procurement departments in particular, have to really manage that. But it's also where you could say a supply chain, blockchain, in terms of managing a supply chain, where technology can really help you because it can give you visibility all the way back. I think what some people don't understand at a very basic level is there may be 10 steps between a Tesla, or maybe 20, who knows Lots of steps between that mineral, cobalt, and the end product. And it's just one component of how many go into a car, right So when you talk about the supply chain that you're managing is actually quite complex, and I do think it is one of the areas where, for example, you can have clear policies and procedures. But without that, you really are gonna have to go further and have some technology to help you manage that, hopefully get visibility from not just one step back, your own supplier, but all of the different suppliers all the way back. 59ce067264
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