It's paradoxical: Lala is the secondary antagonist of the series, yet he has no connection to the 'A.S.A', which in turn is the secondary antagonistic faction. Same thing for the Whales' father, Eldridge: he is the overarching antagonist, yet the overarching antagonistic faction is the 'Shadow Board', Lady Eve's criminal cartel (which, by the way, is never the primary antagonist, despite being appeared in multiple seasons and had quite an important role), with whom he has no connection.
@@ThorstenDerWeberknecht Tobias said that people Lala killed both directly and indirectly would be tattooed on him and I only count direct kills so I don't know which ones are direct and which ones aren't
It's absurd, that the series ended with that unresolved cliffhanger.
@@giosy0072 Blame CW for announcing season 4 as the final season in the middle of the season :/
It's paradoxical: Lala is the secondary antagonist of the series, yet he has no connection to the 'A.S.A', which in turn is the secondary antagonistic faction. Same thing for the Whales' father, Eldridge: he is the overarching antagonist, yet the overarching antagonistic faction is the 'Shadow Board', Lady Eve's criminal cartel (which, by the way, is never the primary antagonist, despite being appeared in multiple seasons and had quite an important role), with whom he has no connection.
@@giosy0072 this isn't uncommon
Can he be considered the primary antagonist of a season, given that he's the secondary antagonist of the series?
@@giosy0072 no
What about the people he had as tattoos
@@ThorstenDerWeberknecht Tobias said that people Lala killed both directly and indirectly would be tattooed on him and I only count direct kills so I don't know which ones are direct and which ones aren't