Honestly with all the terms they are using and such I've had a similar thought in the sense that the ending will be julie telling a bedtime story to their kid about From sort of like the princess bride is this huge story but it's just the grandpa telling the kid the story
The best explanation for "story walking" I've heard is that Julie can't change anything that we (the audience) have seen on screen. If this is true then she should be able to affect things from the past or future that we haven't scene actually playout on screen. I would prefer this too because it could eventually lead to going back to the beginning wich would be crazy! Also I've always taking great notice to everything Ethan says. Ever since BIW "chose" Ethan he has knowledge of the town and the rules of the town.
If Julie manages to change the story from the very beginning, she or her brother Ethan cannot exist as they only exist because of Tabitha and Jim, if she stops the sacrificing of the children then Tabitha’s original soul wouldn’t need to reincarnate and so all those lifetimes eventually becoming Tabitha would need to also disappear. Reincarnation is very specific and very tricky so the writers need to be careful to not write themselves into a mess.
Angkooey what is remember will be tehe word in the whole series, they will have to remember lots of things they did, talking more about JAde, Tabitha and Julie.
Too late, bro. She already changed the story. She saved Boyd. The ink is dry, eh? What ink? Or even, "what verse?" A verse has to be heard or read for anyone to know it's a story. Future Julie knows more than we do, now, by the way. Also, if you didn't like time jumps, theories, and paradoxes, maybe don't watch stuff from og LOSTies. Or, and this part is an easy fix: Study up on time travel theories. It's only not entertaining if you don't understand it. Game of Thrones generic writers, the showrunning fools, D&D, made up that whole "the ink is dry" and "life is like a box of stories" nonsense. Stories aren't sacred. Even when their etched in stone they aren't sacred. Stories are told by humans, and humans are fallible. They err. Sometimes, shows will do this time paradox thing when there are multiple sources for mythology, and they don't match. It's a clever way to cover all the bases. That way, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Homer, Hesiod, Heroditus, Plato, Aristophanes, etc... can all be correct. I thinks it's brilliant. I love to see good writers respecting the source material while telling us another fresh take on Katabasis myths.
Now that we know Julie can go thru time. I want to go back and see if she seemed different (future self) in some of those scenes!
Man they need to just talk to Ethan ! He knows everything …. Story walkers , the fucking monsters, geez just talk to the kid.
Honestly with all the terms they are using and such I've had a similar thought in the sense that the ending will be julie telling a bedtime story to their kid about From sort of like the princess bride is this huge story but it's just the grandpa telling the kid the story
The best explanation for "story walking" I've heard is that Julie can't change anything that we (the audience) have seen on screen. If this is true then she should be able to affect things from the past or future that we haven't scene actually playout on screen. I would prefer this too because it could eventually lead to going back to the beginning wich would be crazy! Also I've always taking great notice to everything Ethan says. Ever since BIW "chose" Ethan he has knowledge of the town and the rules of the town.
I prefer time travel where you can't change the past, and if you tried, you just end up causing the event you're trying to change.
Julie is going to be the one to find out the whereabouts of Eloise....
If Julie manages to change the story from the very beginning, she or her brother Ethan cannot exist as they only exist because of Tabitha and Jim, if she stops the sacrificing of the children then Tabitha’s original soul wouldn’t need to reincarnate and so all those lifetimes eventually becoming Tabitha would need to also disappear. Reincarnation is very specific and very tricky so the writers need to be careful to not write themselves into a mess.
Angkooey what is remember will be tehe word in the whole series, they will have to remember lots of things they did, talking more about JAde, Tabitha and Julie.
Acosta looks like Smiley. Maybe they are related
Julie is a nurse. Donna is a nurse.
,👍😊🐾💜
Too late, bro. She already changed the story. She saved Boyd. The ink is dry, eh? What ink? Or even, "what verse?" A verse has to be heard or read for anyone to know it's a story. Future Julie knows more than we do, now, by the way. Also, if you didn't like time jumps, theories, and paradoxes, maybe don't watch stuff from og LOSTies. Or, and this part is an easy fix: Study up on time travel theories. It's only not entertaining if you don't understand it.
Game of Thrones generic writers, the showrunning fools, D&D, made up that whole "the ink is dry" and "life is like a box of stories" nonsense. Stories aren't sacred. Even when their etched in stone they aren't sacred. Stories are told by humans, and humans are fallible. They err. Sometimes, shows will do this time paradox thing when there are multiple sources for mythology, and they don't match. It's a clever way to cover all the bases. That way, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Homer, Hesiod, Heroditus, Plato, Aristophanes, etc... can all be correct. I thinks it's brilliant. I love to see good writers respecting the source material while telling us another fresh take on Katabasis myths.