This episode was wild! Bastille Day threw us into a hostage situation that wasn't about weapons or control, but ideals. I wasn't ready for how much it would make me question my own moral compass.
Zarek is someone that forces you to sit uncomfortably with your own values. He's not just a villain or a rebel. He's a large voice of dissent with just enough truth in his words to make you second-guess it all. And that is dangerous. He challenges the idea that survival alone is enough. He wants the fleet to mean something, and even if I don't trust his methods, I can't ignore the questions he's asking.
Watching Apollo navigate that moral minefield was honestly the heart of this episode for me. He stood there, caught between his father's military expectations and Roslin's political pragmatism, and still chose what he thought was right. It wasn't flashy or loud. But super calculated and principled. And I admire the heck out of him for that.
I kept thinking if I would have made the same call in his position. If I would risk structure and stability for the promise of freedom?
This show really isn't pulling punches anymore and I love that. Every episode has me wrestling with bigger questions. It's not just about survival anymore. It's about what kind of people they're becoming as they survive. Can't wait to see what happens next!
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Relax and enjoy 🍿🌿
LINK: https://youtu.be/TaFppu97WSo
I watched this on Amazon Prime
Phil Stubblefield
2025-05-17 08:06:47 +0000 UTCGray Gass
2025-05-17 04:58:25 +0000 UTC