Oh dear.

I've turned into a h8er.

So I watch Being Human, because Aidan Turner is hot and I'm shallow like that, but every. Single. Time. Annie appears on screen, I want to shove her face down the toilet.

Seriously. She's got to be the most annoying character since Molly Weasley.

I can't even bring myself to be coherent enough to analyse the character and my negative feelings towards her. All I can do is froth at the mouth.

This also prevents me from making a foray into the Being Human fandom, because everyone there seems to love and adore Annie in all her sweet glory (blerch), and so my all-consuming h8 for her would make me a social outcast.

Ah well. What is that character about? Let's see:

- Annie is introduced as a ghost who can only be seen by supernatural beings, which means that she needs the other characters (a werewolf and a vampire), because otherwise she would fade away.

- She is still totally hung up on her fiancé (who's alive and can't see her).

- She makes tea all the time and makes breakfast for the resident Creepy Guy, because Annie needs to be needed. Creepy Guy assaults her, Annie, despite being a ghost and hence not corporeal and unable to feel anything, freaks out and hides behind a Strong Male.

- Turns out her fiancé has killed her and she had suppressed that memory. Her journey as a character in series one is completed when, empowered through the realisation, she breaks free from her fiancé and gains superpowers (temporarily, it would seem).

- Instead of letting her complete her journey with dignity, the writers make her stick around for another season, in which she has nothing much to do but be "caring" and "ditzy".

- This time round, she does not contribute anything much during the climax but is dragged away kicking and screaming.

- And has to be rescued by a Strong Male.

From that point on, all she does is be vomit-inducingly sweet, bubbly and chipper, alternating with wide-eyed shock and incomprehension. Seriously, every scene with Annie makes me physically cringe. She doesn't contribute anything; all she does is care for Mitchell by making him tea and breakfast and try to be his "guardian angel" (actual Annie quote). Her attempts at "constructive advice" make me doubt her mental faculties. How old is the character supposed to be? In her early 20s? I could possibly buy her if she were a teenager. A retarded teenager.

Actually, strike that. Annie is seven years old. She has no idea whatsoever how adult interactions and conversations work, she tries to have sex with a man by making a list ("First item: heavy petting."), and she has tea with the resident Creepy Guy, because she is organically incapable of judging a person's character. Or, y'know, judging her best friend's and alleged boyfriend's reaction to that character (which is not positive).

Speaking of her boyfriend: hooking up with a 117-years-old mass murderer is not a good idea (teh sparkly has a lot to answer for). However, if you decide to give him a chance and if said mass murderer tells you he has "done bad things" that "you need to know", you might want to actually listen to him so that you know what he is capable of. Telling him it doesn't matter and he's "all that you've ever wanted" and "it's destiny" is not an immensely intelligent thing to do.

And then - and I think I did throw up at that point - after Mitchell and Annie finally admit to themselves that they cannot have sex, because it is physically impossible, he tells her that it's better that way, because for him sex has always been a weapon. And that with her, he has something much purer.

They actually invoked the Purity trope. I don't even... The Good Woman, who is Pure and Caring and can help the Troubled Man to overcome the Darkness Within.

I am tentatively hoping that what the writers are actually doing here is deconstruct the romantic notion of vampire boyfriends and that all will not end well. But I'm not holding my breath.

I can't even hope for the chacters to get killed off, because Annie is already dead and she almost-finally died at the end of every season.

I'll still watch all of season 3, but I watch it resentfully.
I should be writing my HP Beholder fic, but the muses aren’t cooperating (someone poke me with a pointy stick), and so I decided to make a picspam instead that is most relevant to my interests.

So. This picspam is brought to you by the fact that I watched Being Human last week and then checked out Desperate Romantics and, despite not being sold on either, I am so sold on Aidan Turner. He is much better than the shows he appears in. (A trait that he shares with Richard Armitage, who has the most lamentable taste in scripts. Oh, the crap I’ve waded through to catch a glimpse of teh Armitage’s bare abs!) But he is young and there’s still hope.

Moreover, [livejournal.com profile] suzanne_taylor and I reminisced about our television viewing habits in the 1980s/1990s, and the name “Remington Steele” might just have been mentioned. Come to think of it, the mentioning might have been done by me.

Anyway. There is a strong theme there that is worth being illustrated: throughout the ages, I have always shown a strong preference for tall, dark-haired, skinny men (and women, too), and this is what this picspam is all about.

Let’s start with Remington Steele.

Remington Steele )

Agent Cooper )

Would you believe that I’ve never seen Twin Peaks? When it was running back then, in the 90s, I didn’t realise until the third or fourth week that it was worth watching, and then it was too late to join in, because I had missed the beginning. I wanted to watch it entirely unspoiled, starting with the first episode. I’ve had it on DVD for ages now, but, somehow, other, ah, interests always get in the way.

Lara Flynn Boyle )

Linda Fiorentino )

Michelle Gomez )

Johnny Depp )

Keanu Reeves )

Okay, fast-forward a decade or so. Suddenly, there was David Tennant.

David Tennant )

Then there’s Richard Armitage. I’m very conflicted.

Richard Armitage )

Let’s talk about Jane Austen for a moment here. Her heroes don’t really do it for me, but her villains do. And I can’t forgive the BBC for the horrible casting of Mr Wickham in the otherwise excellent miniseries.

Tom Riley )

Ben Barnes )

Rick Mora )

And finally, the man who inspired this whole post.

Aidan Turner )

Next time, I might talk about my love for red hair and freckles. Pictorial evidence including Ewan McGregor and Julianne Moore.

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September 2014

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