Is it me? Or can you see Ted process what Rebecca is telling him, you see him get angry, and different emotions across his face as she keeps speaking.And when she says "all you good people", the anger drops away. He's still hurt, but he decides he can move past it.
The show demonstrates what goes into both a proper apology and a proper forgiving. Rebecca owns up to everything, why she did it, why it was wrong, and accepts whatever Ted's reaction will be. Ted, clearly heartbroken and insulted by this revelation, chooses to release his feelings of anger towards her because he can sense the hurt she's going through. This shows struck such a chord when it first released because it depicted adults acting like, well, adults
One of my favourite BTS moments abt this episode happens in the scene where Rupert tells Rebecca he's having a child with Bex. During filming, actors will often do the lines repeatedly, for different camera angles, wide shots, coverage, etc, and it's very common for "reaction shots" to be filmed without the other actors in the scene, either because the camera is placed where the other character would be, or in this case, because Rupert walks away and Rebecca turns (at 06:03) and decides to go down and come clean to Ted. This means an actor will sometimes have to do dialogue with a random crew member off-camera, or in Hannah's case, will have to act like she just heard smt devastating even though they ran those lines hours ago. Anthony Head, the actor who plays Rupert, stayed behind after he was done for the day to support Hannah Waddingham. Right before cameras rolled on her closeup, he would repeat the lines Rebecca would've heard moments ago to get her in the emotional space required. This likely meant Anthony stayed for hours after he could've left, just to make sure Hannah gave the best performance she could. I love that the cast was filled with such outstanding performers, even when they're playing awful ppl.
Loving your guys reaction to Ted Lasso. I prefer watching reactions rather than just straight rewatching the show and so well done Jessica for the excellent edit that loses nothing from the heart of the show
Anthony Head is such a great actor. From playing the lovable, funny Rupert Giles on Buffy, to playing the toxic,cruel Rupert Mannion. The smug bright-eyed smile on his face has he trggrz his ex-wife is horrific but fun to watch an actor so good.
Giles was funny, a fuddy duddy; that is until he needed to go into the "I will destroy anyone who hurts Buffy" Giles, or the serious teacher Giles, or the serious father figure Giles. But he was always just Giles! And we love him for it. Anthony Head is a really fine actor and he plays a bad guy so well.
@@JoshuaMartian-go3tmHe's certainly come a long way. Before Buffy his most famous role was on Nescafe Gold Blend adverts which went for years and years where he played a handsome man who lent his attractive female neighbor some coffee and it became like a mini soap opera every time a new one would come out. He probably made enough from those ads to retire if he'd wanted to There's a little video about how popular they were in Britain in the 80's and 90's here as I was only a kid then but as boys we would tease our mums as you could tell they all fancied Anthony 😂 ua-cam.com/video/jLRJu-dS704/v-deo.htmlsi=P6EVL8VdEYEQdWlr
Man I could watch Roy talk about football and his upbringing in football for hours, it’s perfect. It’s such an amazingly realistic portrayal of an aging footballer. It must be so hard to have to let go of something you’ve been the best in the room at for 20 years.
Beard is right. A relegation means a massive revenue loss which means job losses and a smaller budget for transfers which means a loss in quality and a harder time going back up.
One of this show's incredible uses of foreshadowing: in E104 "For the Children", Rebecca jokes in her speech that she's "not much of a hugger" but when Ted offers a handshake in a show of courtesy and professionalism, she abandons any pretense of self-protection and allows herself to be truly vulnerable to him. I think the hug is so cathartic because we could always sense that Rebecca wasn't irredeemable, she's a deeply hurt and confused woman who is just trying to find happiness again and that involves her confiding in someone rather than shutting the world out. The first season is very much her character arc, not Ted's
Another lovely reaction! One of the things I love about Keeley is her very sweet sarcasm. It’s so sweet that sometimes you don’t know what she’s really saying to you.
This season is filled with great episodes, but this one is what proved its a show for the ages. And pretty much delivered an Emmy into Hannah Waddingham's hands.
Before the baby news reveal, Sudeikis told Tony Head to be as cruel and evil as he could possibly be to Hannah and to make her cry. But he didn't tell Hannah that he had given him that direction. What we see is Hannah's raw reaction on Rebecca's behalf.
In football, 32 counts as old. You have to have special techniques or be fast or be so fit & athletic to still get playtime from your team. Also, a lot of players don't play the full 90 minutes in the game
5:46 That's the moment Rebecca realizes there's no way she can possibly hurt Rupert more than he can hurt her. Confessing to Ted is easy after that. She didn't care that she was becoming as bad as Rupert; but that's the moment she realizes she just doesn't have it in her to be *that* cruel.
Rupert wasting Rebecca's prime years while also making a younger woman forever tied to him is nasty work. He's essentially doing the same thing to someone else but in a different way.
Thought this episode was an over edit. Cut a few items out that your reactions would of been nice to see. I know ow you want to push your patreon, just remember not all of your fans are on patreon. Don't be the ones who only care or respond to those who give you money, those are called politicians. Be a Tedd Lasso! Great watching you both. Keep at it!
Ted Lasso is the hardest show for us to pass copyright on youtube, so unfortunately I have to cut a bunch for great moments and use allot of tricks to get it to pass. In a perfect world we could all create art for free and still have our needs met.
One thing that bugged me about that scene with Keeley and Roy is that she pesters him to open up, then immediately belittles his feelings when he does. I kinda wish they'd just cut out her sarcastic "guys who feel sorry for themselves are so hot!" line and skipped straight to her bringing the kid over to help allay Roy's self-doubt. That one line was just weird and off-putting, as if the worth of his feelings is dependent on what *she* finds attractive.
I think a big part of it is just… being British. Like, not to lean into stereotypes, but it’s practically a national pastime to take the piss out if people you care about. In all honesty, though, it’s about perspective. Roy’s feelings are valid, and she does honor that by the end of the scene, but what she actually does first is give him perspective. It’s a three-pronged assault. First, she (I’d say) rightly undermines his incredibly negative self talk by reflecting that attitude back. Obviously that kind of attitude wouldn’t work on certain types of people, but if you notice, it only succeeds in having Roy open up more. Sometimes overwhelming sincerity actually isn’t the best way to get some people to become vulnerable, as messed up as that sounds. Besides, if Roy is supposed to move forward from this problem, Keeley recognizes that she needs to draw a line separating Roy from “Roy Kent,” which is actually what she does during the whole consolation process. It’s only after that does she follow up with the Phoebe move and then hitting home with actual care and acceptance. Besides, I actually think it gives Keeley texture as a character. She isn’t perfect. She commonly has a bit of an edge with her kindness. At no point in that scene do I think Keeley isn’t acting like Keeley. If anything, this scene reminds me why she’s actually a really good match for Roy. She matches his shit blow for blow, knows how to get through to him, and then shows that she truly does care for and respect him. I get not liking the attitude, though. I wouldn’t take it well if somebody hit me with something like that. But it works for Roy, and I think we’ve seen why that would work for Roy. And that’s all that really matters.
It's a bit rough on her part, but she's ultimately trying to show Roy how absurd his fear is. He's obviously so much more than just a footballer, but he consistently minimizes himself and his feelings because he's too proud of his self-image to ever deviate from it. Roy is terrified that he doesn't have a second-act whereas Keely senses that he has so many more dimensions to him just waiting to be explored once football is a distant memory
@@Zakemaster I'm from elsewhere in the Commonwealth and can confirm that American-style (as depicted in all her cultural exports) Hallmark Sincerity (TM) is really, deeply offputting. Sarcasm and joking is an in-crowd indicator. You needle the ones you love, not the ones you hate, because you know the result will be laughter rather than confrontation. It's a social cue that you feel safe with this person, not on guard. There's no mistaking the emotion behind Keeley's cheek here, vs. the visceral disdain in the 'wanker' chants earlier in the season, as an example. The intention is expressed in the delivery. It makes the scene feel more genuine to me
It wasn't created as one, it had time as one and still gets used as one, but it also gets used in a more general sense. It's not inherently fascist, context matters.
Is it me? Or can you see Ted process what Rebecca is telling him, you see him get angry, and different emotions across his face as she keeps speaking.And when she says "all you good people", the anger drops away. He's still hurt, but he decides he can move past it.
The show demonstrates what goes into both a proper apology and a proper forgiving. Rebecca owns up to everything, why she did it, why it was wrong, and accepts whatever Ted's reaction will be. Ted, clearly heartbroken and insulted by this revelation, chooses to release his feelings of anger towards her because he can sense the hurt she's going through. This shows struck such a chord when it first released because it depicted adults acting like, well, adults
Spot on ! It’s amazing acting
I personally didn't see anger, but I did see realization and forgiveness.
@@susiemartinez8983I saw a flash of disgust, rather than anger. Then again, I’ve been watching Inside Out on loop with my grandkids for three years…
Also his look when he says “I forgive you” is almost aggressive. Like “Well take that. Own it”. He softens you after but it’s a great touch
When we get that post credit of Roy touching the believe sign! Chills. Such a great show.
One of my favourite BTS moments abt this episode happens in the scene where Rupert tells Rebecca he's having a child with Bex. During filming, actors will often do the lines repeatedly, for different camera angles, wide shots, coverage, etc, and it's very common for "reaction shots" to be filmed without the other actors in the scene, either because the camera is placed where the other character would be, or in this case, because Rupert walks away and Rebecca turns (at 06:03) and decides to go down and come clean to Ted. This means an actor will sometimes have to do dialogue with a random crew member off-camera, or in Hannah's case, will have to act like she just heard smt devastating even though they ran those lines hours ago. Anthony Head, the actor who plays Rupert, stayed behind after he was done for the day to support Hannah Waddingham. Right before cameras rolled on her closeup, he would repeat the lines Rebecca would've heard moments ago to get her in the emotional space required. This likely meant Anthony stayed for hours after he could've left, just to make sure Hannah gave the best performance she could. I love that the cast was filled with such outstanding performers, even when they're playing awful ppl.
Giles is the best. It's tough seeing him play such a jerk.
@@EleshNorn-ui1egI always consider Head’s character here, “Evil, non-magical Giles” 😂
Loving your guys reaction to Ted Lasso. I prefer watching reactions rather than just straight rewatching the show and so well done Jessica for the excellent edit that loses nothing from the heart of the show
This show will make you cry, laugh, love and hate in one episode at times.
Years later, Rebecca's confession to Ted is still one of the best scenes I've ever watched on television.
This show is much like Bluey. It’s made with care and it sneaks up and grabs your feels.
why is this such a joy to watch... its nice for you ladies to have something _nice_ to react to for once :)
Anthony Head is such a great actor. From playing the lovable, funny Rupert Giles on Buffy, to playing the toxic,cruel Rupert Mannion. The smug bright-eyed smile on his face has he trggrz his ex-wife is horrific but fun to watch an actor so good.
Giles was funny, a fuddy duddy; that is until he needed to go into the "I will destroy anyone who hurts Buffy" Giles, or the serious teacher Giles, or the serious father figure Giles. But he was always just Giles! And we love him for it. Anthony Head is a really fine actor and he plays a bad guy so well.
@@TheSwordOfTheJedi-u2p "The Ripper"
@@JoshuaMartian-go3tmHe's certainly come a long way. Before Buffy his most famous role was on Nescafe Gold Blend adverts which went for years and years where he played a handsome man who lent his attractive female neighbor some coffee and it became like a mini soap opera every time a new one would come out.
He probably made enough from those ads to retire if he'd wanted to
There's a little video about how popular they were in Britain in the 80's and 90's here as I was only a kid then but as boys we would tease our mums as you could tell they all fancied Anthony 😂
ua-cam.com/video/jLRJu-dS704/v-deo.htmlsi=P6EVL8VdEYEQdWlr
He should play another Rupert who’s in the middle of kind and evil!
"Buffy's a hero you see, she's not like us"
Man I could watch Roy talk about football and his upbringing in football for hours, it’s perfect. It’s such an amazingly realistic portrayal of an aging footballer. It must be so hard to have to let go of something you’ve been the best in the room at for 20 years.
Important fact: Roy's actor actually got to meet Oscar the Grouch. And Elmo. And Grover. It was the best day of his life.
That performance Brett Goldstein years ago where he sang all the songs in Muppet Christmas Carol? Lives rent free in my head 😊
Beard is right. A relegation means a massive revenue loss which means job losses and a smaller budget for transfers which means a loss in quality and a harder time going back up.
Teams from the Premier League get Parachute payments if they get relegated. Millions to keep them from some of the pitfalls you mentioned.
@@fayesouthall6604 A lot of times relegation happens because of something more than money. Parachute payments rarely actually work.
One of this show's incredible uses of foreshadowing: in E104 "For the Children", Rebecca jokes in her speech that she's "not much of a hugger" but when Ted offers a handshake in a show of courtesy and professionalism, she abandons any pretense of self-protection and allows herself to be truly vulnerable to him. I think the hug is so cathartic because we could always sense that Rebecca wasn't irredeemable, she's a deeply hurt and confused woman who is just trying to find happiness again and that involves her confiding in someone rather than shutting the world out. The first season is very much her character arc, not Ted's
If you don't have an emotional reaction to Rebecca's confession and Ted's immediate forgiveness, you're dead inside.
Fun fact, and you may already know, but Higgins and the woman who plays his wife are married in real life.
And he plays the heck out of a stand up bass....so good.
Yu girls Rock!!!!!!!!!! and a special shout out to your editor, Jess ( hope I got it right) for doing a Great job😍
5:13 “ you really did nail that in huh?” THATS WHAT SHE SAID
"Oh, cmon, just shake this hand, my arm's getting..."
...and going off the self-deprecating joke she made from episode 4, she's never been much of a hugger.
Another lovely reaction!
One of the things I love about Keeley is her very sweet sarcasm. It’s so sweet that sometimes you don’t know what she’s really saying to you.
I’ve watched this show twice already and re-watching it you 2 is really fun. Thanks for sharing.
This show is the literal depiction of heartwarming!
Watching y'all cry, I'm telling you - Shrinking! It's gonna get you like Ted Lasso.
What an amazing episode & series! *Believe* ⚽
This season is filled with great episodes, but this one is what proved its a show for the ages. And pretty much delivered an Emmy into Hannah Waddingham's hands.
Before the baby news reveal, Sudeikis told Tony Head to be as cruel and evil as he could possibly be to Hannah and to make her cry. But he didn't tell Hannah that he had given him that direction. What we see is Hannah's raw reaction on Rebecca's behalf.
In football, 32 counts as old. You have to have special techniques or be fast or be so fit & athletic to still get playtime from your team. Also, a lot of players don't play the full 90 minutes in the game
Brett is a writer on the show and loves the muppets. I wonder if he wrote that Oscar the Grouch line.
Yes, we know that little girls are mysterious, but they don't hold a candle to Coach Beard!
Oh boy, if you think you're crying now, wait until season 2 when Ted talks about his dad. I burned through half a box of tissues.
'If you stay alive for no reason at all, please do it for spite.' -- Maria Bamford
Dammit, Rupert... When the Watcher's Council finds out about this!
Rupert is truly an amazing villain.
The series changes with this episode. It improves immensely when Rebecca stops being a mustache-twirling cartoon villain.
This show is a form of therapy
5:46 That's the moment Rebecca realizes there's no way she can possibly hurt Rupert more than he can hurt her. Confessing to Ted is easy after that. She didn't care that she was becoming as bad as Rupert; but that's the moment she realizes she just doesn't have it in her to be *that* cruel.
I think I fell in love with Hannah after this episode.
Shout out to jess🎉
I love this show. I love this show the way I love Firefly.
Rupert wasting Rebecca's prime years while also making a younger woman forever tied to him is nasty work. He's essentially doing the same thing to someone else but in a different way.
Diegesis Awesome Video Today!!🔥🐐🐐💎
If you enjoyed Coach Beard in this episode, you’re gonna really enjoy season 2. 😁😁
Roy Kent is based on Roy Keane an actual premier league legend of the game
Love the thumbnail just says Ted Ass lol 😂
Uther Pendragon staying evil ✨
Thought this episode was an over edit. Cut a few items out that your reactions would of been nice to see. I know ow you want to push your patreon, just remember not all of your fans are on patreon. Don't be the ones who only care or respond to those who give you money, those are called politicians. Be a Tedd Lasso! Great watching you both. Keep at it!
Ted Lasso is the hardest show for us to pass copyright on youtube, so unfortunately I have to cut a bunch for great moments and use allot of tricks to get it to pass. In a perfect world we could all create art for free and still have our needs met.
@@JESITEL Most of the lasso episode so far were 20 minutes plus, this one was 16 minutes,
Can attest 4 pints of beer will get you lit, good and proper.
I want, no, NEED to hang out with Beard
❤❤❤
Cry number 1 of many to come
👍🏾
One thing that bugged me about that scene with Keeley and Roy is that she pesters him to open up, then immediately belittles his feelings when he does.
I kinda wish they'd just cut out her sarcastic "guys who feel sorry for themselves are so hot!" line and skipped straight to her bringing the kid over to help allay Roy's self-doubt. That one line was just weird and off-putting, as if the worth of his feelings is dependent on what *she* finds attractive.
I think a big part of it is just… being British. Like, not to lean into stereotypes, but it’s practically a national pastime to take the piss out if people you care about.
In all honesty, though, it’s about perspective. Roy’s feelings are valid, and she does honor that by the end of the scene, but what she actually does first is give him perspective.
It’s a three-pronged assault. First, she (I’d say) rightly undermines his incredibly negative self talk by reflecting that attitude back. Obviously that kind of attitude wouldn’t work on certain types of people, but if you notice, it only succeeds in having Roy open up more. Sometimes overwhelming sincerity actually isn’t the best way to get some people to become vulnerable, as messed up as that sounds. Besides, if Roy is supposed to move forward from this problem, Keeley recognizes that she needs to draw a line separating Roy from “Roy Kent,” which is actually what she does during the whole consolation process. It’s only after that does she follow up with the Phoebe move and then hitting home with actual care and acceptance.
Besides, I actually think it gives Keeley texture as a character. She isn’t perfect. She commonly has a bit of an edge with her kindness. At no point in that scene do I think Keeley isn’t acting like Keeley. If anything, this scene reminds me why she’s actually a really good match for Roy. She matches his shit blow for blow, knows how to get through to him, and then shows that she truly does care for and respect him.
I get not liking the attitude, though. I wouldn’t take it well if somebody hit me with something like that. But it works for Roy, and I think we’ve seen why that would work for Roy. And that’s all that really matters.
It's a bit rough on her part, but she's ultimately trying to show Roy how absurd his fear is. He's obviously so much more than just a footballer, but he consistently minimizes himself and his feelings because he's too proud of his self-image to ever deviate from it. Roy is terrified that he doesn't have a second-act whereas Keely senses that he has so many more dimensions to him just waiting to be explored once football is a distant memory
@@Zakemaster I'm from elsewhere in the Commonwealth and can confirm that American-style (as depicted in all her cultural exports) Hallmark Sincerity (TM) is really, deeply offputting. Sarcasm and joking is an in-crowd indicator. You needle the ones you love, not the ones you hate, because you know the result will be laughter rather than confrontation. It's a social cue that you feel safe with this person, not on guard.
There's no mistaking the emotion behind Keeley's cheek here, vs. the visceral disdain in the 'wanker' chants earlier in the season, as an example. The intention is expressed in the delivery.
It makes the scene feel more genuine to me
Lol wild
Ted Lasso drunk off 4 beers? Firstly, those are large beers, and secondly they’re English beers, not that weak ass American beer. 😉
Too bad the second season sucks.
Uh, the frog character at 25sec is a fascist icon. Just fyi.
I don't think anyone cares... It's a funny character. Just like the rainbow ain't just for gays
Lmao, get a fucking life.
It wasn't created as one, it had time as one and still gets used as one, but it also gets used in a more general sense. It's not inherently fascist, context matters.
You're a fascist icon: the insufferable straw leftist who hall monitors people enjoying cartoon frogs.