Y'all. There were SO MANY great moments in this episode and this was a very difficult edit. For those interested, the FULL/UNEDITED reaction is available on my PATREON: patreon.com/chachisays
@larchibald17166 ай бұрын
I love how the letter Hawk makes Tim write is actually what Hawk is feeling for Tim.
@joegotham276 ай бұрын
And you can see it in how Bomer plays that scene and then Bailey shows that he knows this too
@ChachiSays6 ай бұрын
I initially felt the letter was intended for Tim which was why I was so confused at the start
@orangemarmalade776 ай бұрын
The guy from the party saying that he had god because he's celibate never fails to devastate me. Loving your reactions and can't wait to see more!
@ChachiSays6 ай бұрын
Thanks so much! :D
@louisepoole_x6 ай бұрын
"This show is going to break me". I fully feel that. Watching along with you is my 4th rewatch ( I may be a little obsessed 👀) and it has destroyed me every. single. time. But it is SO worth it. Loved your reaction and your thoughts on the episode ❤
@ChachiSays6 ай бұрын
thanks so much :)
@katnisseverdeen77026 ай бұрын
I feel like we can't blame neither Hawk or Mary because if someone was investigated there little to no chance to to "survive" because there were also some tests. I think Caroline would have been accused anyway and Mary just took advantage of the situation
@salemoh97596 ай бұрын
Hope you have your tissues near, i finished it and 😭😭😭
@ChachiSays6 ай бұрын
😭
@jl57496 ай бұрын
oh my god I needed this
@PSPguy26 ай бұрын
Really enjoy watching this with you, I loved the series! Keep 'em coming please. 😃
@ChachiSays6 ай бұрын
Thank you!! ❤️
@cazb57776 ай бұрын
I absolutely love seeing your reactions to Fellow Travelers. I have rewatched the whole series at least 5 times because this show has me completely HOOKED... ao I'm watching along with you now 😊. Your reactions are so cute & i look forward to the rest of your reaction videos... Thank you!!! 💞
@ChachiSays6 ай бұрын
Thank you! 😊
@kev1216 ай бұрын
My advice is to have tissues handy because this show breaking you is an understatement.
@ChachiSays6 ай бұрын
😥
@Carol-wv9fs6 ай бұрын
I would like to recommend a very good film for you to watch, the name is "The Normal Heart". I don't know if you've seen it but this film is exciting and very interesting. It talks about the lives of queer people in the 80s in NY at the beginning of the AIDS crisis and talks a little more about this discovery and the struggle of these people to be seen by the government that at the time ignored the emergency situation
@treesny5 ай бұрын
"The Normal Heart" is the film version of the well-known -- and widely produced -- play by Larry Kramer, the writer and activist. It premiered at The Public Theater in New York City in April, 1985. It was (I believe) the third full-length play about the AIDS epidemic to be produced in the U.S.; the first was "Night Sweat" by San Francisco playwright Robert Chesley, which premiered in NYC in 1984, followed by productions in Los Angeles and San Francisco. "The Normal Heart" is written very much from a NYC perspective, and is somewhat distorted by Kramer's self-aggrandizing in his fictionalized version of real events and people, including himself.
@markwood60566 ай бұрын
From today's point of view we are appalled by Hawks actions. But realistically, Tim while trying to live an open and fairly honest life, his is the lifestyle that provides the greatest risk to actual life. Now all gay men and women took the risk to health and risk of losing lively hood, and family. Very real issues that could have terminal consequences (hell in the US at least it still can just dramatically less likely to still happen, but it of course still does). But being in Washington, during this time. Not only does any form of same sex life have risk. But the higher the position, the much more likely that your deviant (how the general public say it) lifestyle would become public knowledge. Knowledge that would follow you through the rest of your life regardless where you lived in the US (unless you truly lived off the grid). By not partitioning that aspect from your day to day to life, you dramatically increase the likely hoof of real harm. And dramatically impact your ability to work or live safely for you and anyone associated with you. In the first episode when Hawk gives up the name of a minor government employee, someone who just does manual work for the government. As cruel and damning as that is. And it is. Because that person wasn't working in sensitive areas or with access to high ranking personnel or access to privileged information, he would loss his job. He would be banned from all government service. But his name wouldn't become public knowledge. It likely wouldn't follow him for the rest of his life (or at least how they would think of it at this time) usually a solid decade or more. It had the possibility of not getting out to family or friends. That's why Hawk provided money. Money to move and start a new life, where you had the chance to start over.
@mehrinahmad84686 ай бұрын
Well that's a good enough excuse that non important ppl could be reported and can start over. If we have seen the whole show hawk surely believes in reporting not important ppl and throwing them under the bus
@ChachiSays6 ай бұрын
Thanks for explaining the difference in how this would impact someone like Eddie compared to Hawk. I just have a very hard time reconciling the fact that Eddie had nothing to do with the situation Hawk was trying to fix while Caroline is directly involved. Eddie was reckless with how he behaved in public (and on the job) so maybe it was inevitable and Hawk knew that.
@corvus13746 ай бұрын
Even if Hawk doesn't apologize to his father, can't he inherit from his mother?
@ChachiSays6 ай бұрын
playing the long game, I like it :D
@markwood60566 ай бұрын
Not necessarily. Remember if this is a privileged family, things like Prenups did exist. People in power would often use those tools to shield their estate so that they had power to keep people behaving how they wanted them to behave.
@AnxietyRat6 ай бұрын
@@markwood6056yeah, the majority of the money was probably still, legally, considered the husband's money not the wifes. 🤷♀️ ... And so he could probably give the money to whoever he wanted to via his will but the wife maybe didn't necessarily have that same level of power over the finances in a legal sense. Idk. Women only gained access to their own bank accounts and credit cards in like the 70s, I think. The husbands and men really held all the power until that point in history.