The waffle party is Lumon’s approach to dealing with the sexual aspect of life for the innies who never actually “leave” the severed floor. It gives them a powerful incentive to use to motivate the innies to meet their quarterly goals-it gives the innies a designated (and corporate sanctioned) outlet for their sexual urges/tensions. The finale is absolutely incredible. Can’t wait for season 2 a couple of months from now :)
@@PhilipManzanoI don’t see why the outties would know about that more than anything else that goes on down there. As long as there are no lasting physical effects, what could you point to as evidence? Thats what makes the break room so interesting, it’s like the most involved form of torture you could do to someone without them actually being able to know about it.
The breathing tube had the name Charlotte Cobell so I think Mrs Cobell had a daughter or sister. I’ll say more after episode 9 but I think that Cobell’s interest in Mark remembering someone he loved has to do with Charlotte.
So hyped for next week’s finale, the show turned my 8-episode intrigue/mystery watch into full blown anxiety. On a side note, anyone else follow food content? I could be bad with faces, but doesn’t Erika bears a striking resemblance to Kaitlyn from KaitlynEats?
It's funny how 8 episodes in you two still don't seem to fully understand the concept of severance in the show. I mean, I get it, it's weird, but when Miss Casey says she's been alive for 107 hours...that's how much time she's spent at work. Because that's all she knows. Because she's severed. She has no life outside of work.
Not so simple. According to some theories, she lives inside permanently and she's aware of it. She's different: she doesn't have life outside at all, never left the severed area except the testing floor. I think Lumon does some experiments on "missing" people, and because they don't have an outside "outie", Lumon can do with their bodies and lives whatever they want.
Just wait...the next cliffhangers is ever better.
👀
The waffle party is Lumon’s approach to dealing with the sexual aspect of life for the innies who never actually “leave” the severed floor. It gives them a powerful incentive to use to motivate the innies to meet their quarterly goals-it gives the innies a designated (and corporate sanctioned) outlet for their sexual urges/tensions.
The finale is absolutely incredible. Can’t wait for season 2 a couple of months from now :)
So interesting haha. So would outies know something like that happened? I’m assuming it gets physical as well.
@@PhilipManzanoI don’t see why the outties would know about that more than anything else that goes on down there. As long as there are no lasting physical effects, what could you point to as evidence? Thats what makes the break room so interesting, it’s like the most involved form of torture you could do to someone without them actually being able to know about it.
It’s more than sexual, it’s a bunch of things they don’t get to experience as innies - going “home”, having breakfast, laying in a bed
@@PhilipManzano Well that one woman they talked about on the news who got pregnant as her innie might have figured something out...
now I'm wondering if those women were severed (probably, right?) what a nightmare
The breathing tube had the name Charlotte Cobell so I think Mrs Cobell had a daughter or sister.
I’ll say more after episode 9 but I think that Cobell’s interest in Mark remembering someone he loved has to do with Charlotte.
Ouuu, this totally went over my head!!
So hyped for next week’s finale, the show turned my 8-episode intrigue/mystery watch into full blown anxiety. On a side note, anyone else follow food content? I could be bad with faces, but doesn’t Erika bears a striking resemblance to Kaitlyn from KaitlynEats?
Please tell me I don't have to wait a week for the next episode...
🫣
peaky blinders please🇧🇷❤️
👀
It's funny how 8 episodes in you two still don't seem to fully understand the concept of severance in the show. I mean, I get it, it's weird, but when Miss Casey says she's been alive for 107 hours...that's how much time she's spent at work. Because that's all she knows. Because she's severed. She has no life outside of work.
Not so simple. According to some theories, she lives inside permanently and she's aware of it. She's different: she doesn't have life outside at all, never left the severed area except the testing floor. I think Lumon does some experiments on "missing" people, and because they don't have an outside "outie", Lumon can do with their bodies and lives whatever they want.
@@YuraL88 I'm not fully convinced she's actually alive, and the Ms. Casey in the show is actually a clone