A catch-all conversation covering episodes 7 and 8, with a title that translates to "God's timing is perfect." Sona joins to talk about the show finally narrowing its focus to Anna vs. Max, the best-written scene the series has produced, the funniest one it may not have meant to produce, and a lot of unanswered logistical questions about a cooler. [00:00] Cold open and a missing episode Recapping ep. 8 — and realizing ep. 7 got covered solo, so both are on the table. [00:55] World Cup talk Sona on the final, a divided country enjoying one shared thing, and the drama around the US team. Her son's Spain fandom vs. Messi's last run. [03:20] 42nd Street shutdowns What it's actually like living in a World Cup host neighborhood, including the difficulty of obtaining a pizza. [04:20] Episode 7 grievance: they killed Ray Frustration at underusing a great actor — sidelined since the ep. 1 barbecue, finally given a scene as one of the show's only rational characters, then killed. The theory: the show has no room for rational people. [06:00] Coming around on the show Sona took a break, came back, and made peace with the fact that the show doesn't know what it is. Also: unexpected fondness for Natalie. [07:15] Where episode 8 leaves us The table gets cleared. Amy Adams finally off the leash, Anna and Max head-to-head, and the "original sin" as the thing that has to be settled. Also the complaint: the mysteries have been saved for the very end. [08:45] Best scene of the series Anna and Natalie, drinking and laying their cards on the table. Two strong performances, sharp writing — the version of the show they'd like to be watching. [09:35] Funniest scene of the series Natalie gets the gun. "Shoot me here — no, right here." Then Anna comes running out and gets the line reading of the season: "I missed." [10:40] McGruff the Crime Dog The grandfather is asked to break in and plant drugs. His betrayal, whether he earned any sympathy, and the fact that the show never bothers to explain their history. [11:20] Surveillance as the show's spine Crystal's photos, the iCloud reveal, the kiss coming back around — and why the grandfather being caught on camera would have made more sense. [12:40] Ray's head in the pool When exactly did Max have time to dismember a person? Trunk vs. cooler debate, buoyancy problems, and the staging choice of "your parents dismembered him and put him in the pool." [14:40] Nobody is watching these children Natalie repeatedly surprising her parents by being home, while they think she's out of state. [15:15] Doing the math on the kids House bought 16 years ago, seven (or eight) months pregnant, learner's permits in Georgia at 15 — so how old is Zach supposed to be, and how old was he during the sexting incident? A 23-year-old actor is not selling 13. [18:20] Natalie visits Nevaeh in juvie Nevaeh has never looked better. No more crawling in walls, no more bad bar lighting — prison is thriving for her. Plus the show's best intentionally funny line: "Did I get you pregnant?" [20:00] What's Max's assignment for Nevaeh? Speculation from the next-episode description, and whether Max's revenge requires one of Anna's kids to die. [20:40] "I'll take the fall" Anna offers herself up; Max isn't interested. He wants her to suffer the way he suffered. One of the genuinely good scenes. [21:20] The physics of a staged shooting Max picks a through-and-through spot, a panicked teenager hits it exactly, and he's back to decorating the restaurant. What Natalie should have done instead. [22:30] Legal aside: charging a minor Juvenile detention until 18, transfer after, and being charged as an adult — with the usual "this isn't my area" disclaimer. [22:50] Zach in therapy The involuntary hold, the hallucinated AI version of Angel from the ep. 2 video, and "which one is that?" A rough stretch of performance with rough material. [24:15] Why the drugging explanation makes the parents look worse If Nevaeh was dosing and conditioning him for months, how did nobody notice? He ate his own toe and they didn't take a day off. [25:45] Someone was living in the walls The possum explanation, the draft from the renovation, and the show's recurring theme of parental disengagement. [26:20] Tom swaps the gun Noticing the discharge, the spare with the bad firing pin, and why the casting ages undercut the material. Comparison to Juliette Lewis in the 1991 film — the retainer did a lot of work. [28:20] Role reversal complete Tom in a cell doing pushups, echoing Max's prison scenes. Everyone ends up jailed, which is exactly what Max wanted. [28:45] The photograph and the confrontation Tom turns on Anna. Both sides are legible — but her non-answer to "did you sleep with him" is not helping. [29:45] Why Anna can't answer The shame of not knowing what happened: drugged, blacked out, or something else. A pattern of not confessing that runs through the whole family and keeps making everything worse. [31:20] Campy vs. subtle The thriller this could have been — a slow bureaucratic railroading where the wronged party looks guilty — versus how overt the show plays everything. [32:30] Occam's razor Ex-con moves in across the street, his daughter lives inside your walls drugging your son, body parts turn up in your pool — and Max isn't a suspect? Credit to Anna's boss for admitting she was wrong. [33:40] Where were the news vans two days ago? A media encampment between the two houses that somehow missed a 200-pound cooler crossing the street, and missed Natalie walking over with a gun. [34:40] The shape of a season Two episodes left and the show still hasn't narrowed. Max playing to the cameras, directing the cameraman, then going back to picking out paintings for the restaurant. [36:30] Ep. 7 oddities The boy with the dogs — "can I not kiss you?" — plus Max's parents, the mother calling Natalie "Anna," and the backhand. New drama introduced with two episodes to go. [38:00] Crystal's endgame No Juliette Lewis in either episode, but the houseboat and the photographs are hers. Predictions: ep. 9 goes to Crystal and Anna, the finale brings the storm and the confrontation. [39:20] Why is this ten episodes? Fifteen side roads to get to a place six or eight episodes could have reached. [40:20] The twist that would have worked A dysfunctional family blames a man for their own collapse and turns him into the monster they accused him of being — versus the twists still available now that Max has murdered someone on screen. [41:20] The bodies nobody has found Nevaeh's mother, the mother and son, and the fact that Ray is the first killing actually shown. [41:40] "You're my son now" Max flipping instantly to "he's just a boy" for the cameras. [42:40] Where is the police cruiser? Two households at each other's throats daily, guns and bodies in play, and no one is stationed outside. Also: someone should have stopped Natalie from getting in that car. [43:40] Zach's descent Stabbing Tom with the shears, the possible incepted fishing-trip memory, and Anna's poor phone snooping. [46:00] Dropped threads: the cloned phone Texting Angel X — while she is physically inside the walls and could just wait until nightfall. The least convenient possible communication method. [47:30] The color reversal shot The cinematography flourish returns for Ray's head surfacing. They were saving it. [48:20] The logistics of dismemberment Max is a chef; this looks like axe work. A waterside theory, the lack of blood, and the acceptance that these missing scenes will never be filled in. [49:20] The masked figure and the cameras Someone knew about the second camera and cut both. Height disparity between Patrick Wilson and Javier Bardem as evidence the cops decline to consider. [50:20] Tom's arsenal Is this many guns normal? Military background, the South, and a career's worth of people who might hold a grudge — or is it just reverse-engineered from the plot? [52:30] What they want from the final two Answers about Anna and Max, the real story behind the deal that sent him to prison, Anna and her father — plus a storm and some over-the-top chase cinematography. [54:40] Centering Amy Adams The case for making Anna the driver of the ending, and the original sin coming home to roost. [55:50] "Are you sorry you're watching this?" Feeling a little trapped, whether the audience loves it or hate-watches it, and the fact that there's nothing else on right now. [56:40] Wrap-up Two episodes to go, and the next show gets announced next week. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. 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