Saturday, October 17, 2020

The Roommate Years: #Shea's Top 7 Smaller Moments!


 

#SHEA Seeds...

The highlight of the week came early, when we were treated to an all-new footage S4 promo… and the endearing image you see above. Yes, COVID-19 is impacting the first two episodes of S4… and for Shaun and Lea, it’s definitely impacting the nascent stages of their budding romance as well. Take a look at this promo—which is actually a supercut of the newest 30 second promo, the semi-generic 30 second promo that preceded it, and the 15-second #Shea promo I showed last week—and you’ll see Shaun talking to her on the phone, Lea telling Shaun good morning virtually (over the computer), and both of them talking on opposite sides of the apartment door. (Many have noted that Shaun’s about to reach for a note that Lea must’ve slipped under the door.)



Before all this went down, were you able to catch last Sunday’s ComiCon discussion via Zoom with TGD cast? 



The conversation—which was not interactive as we’d heard it would be, but still quite enjoyable—runs about 42 minutes and can be watched here.

And WAY before all that went down, #Shea’s Roommate Years got mined for precious smaller moments…

#21-15 can be found here...  

#14-8 can be found here...  

And now, without further adieu!

**

7) “Do NOT text Carly that.” (From 3.7 “SFAD”)



IN SHORT: Carly’s away at a conference, trying to engage Shaun via text as the day progresses. When she sends the eyeroll emoji, apparently frustrated with something he’s said (or, more likely, hasn’t said), Shaun turns to Lea for help. Lea opts to soft-pedal Carly’s intent with the eyeroll… but that doesn’t seem to help Shaun develop an appropriate response.

BEST REMEMBERED FOR: Shaun’s adorable re-creation of the eyeroll emoji itself.

Clocking in at a mere 1:07 (more like 1:00, since the last 5 seconds of this clip is TGD logo), this one definitely checks the box as a “smaller moment” between Shaun and Lea. But, hilarious as it was, it packs plenty into that minute: the irritation people with ASD surely feel with onset of emojis-as-acceptable-communication (“You get all that from one fake face?”)… Lea deciding on-the-fly how honest she should be about her interpretation of an eyeroll… then, 15 seconds later, trying to spare Carly some ASD relationship reality when Shaun admits she’s not on his mind throughout the workday. Of course, throughout it all is Shaun and Lea’s endearing friendship… particularly handy in an episode where Shaun’s female colleagues were both busy trying to give an adolescent, soon-to-be-blind boy a great last “seeing” day.


6) “Should I change my pants with you in the room?” (From 3.1 “Disaster”)




SETTING UP THIS CLIP: While recapping his first-date to Claire—privately, unlike his full-on grilling by the St.B’vites at other points in the episode—Shaun reveals that he attempted to tell a joke during his dinner with Carly. “No!” Claire gasps. “Lea said I should,” Shaun immediately responds in his defense. Cut to a flashback of date night prep at Murphy/Dilallo headquarters, and Lea saying “No, that is not what I said!” as if she was defending herself in real time during Shaun and Claire’s conversation. The scene picks up from there, as Shaun emerged from his bedroom…


 

IN SHORT: In Lea’s only appearance in this S3 opener, she’s offering not only wardrobe advice but suggestions on what to offer—and NOT offer—as conversation. “You have to know how to tell them. You have to know… WHEN… to tell them,” she warns Shaun.

Shaun, knowing neither of those things, stubbornly goes ahead with his joke at the restaurant… thereby adding to the “disaster” that he perceived his date with Carly to be.

 

BEST REMEMBERED FOR: Speaking for myself, it’s “best remembered” as setting the tone for the Shaun/Lea dynamic of S3 (or at least the first half of it). And that tone was these two are still very important, but you’re not going to see them together much for awhile so pay close attention to every minute. (Or half-minute, in this case.)

I initially wanted to place this scene even higher in the countdown. Why? Because in the thirty seconds Shaun and Lea share the screen I came away feeling remarkably good about their relationship at that point:

 

-        “Does this tie look good?”/ “Yes, but not with those pants” immediately demonstrated the comfort level Shaun and Lea now had as friends/roommates. I loved the organic feel of that tiny exchange.

 

-        We see Lea kindly but matter-of-factly explaining first-date chatter to him, and we get instant confirmation of where she’s at with all this following a somewhat ambiguous reaction to his plans at the end of the end of the “Trampoline” finale of S2. (Translation: she’s being very supportive, even putting any plans of her own on hold for the evening until she can get Shaun as ready as he’ll ever be and out the door).

 

-        “Should I take off my pants…”/ “No!” is a testament to two things: 1) Shaun’s ASD challenges (he’s asking because he honestly doesn’t know what’s acceptable/appropriate), and 2) the ongoing need for boundaries in their relationship, especially if he’s testing the romance waters with other women. If she was just a roommate, Lea probably couldn’t have cared less where he undressed. But as “Friends and Family” confirmed later in the season, she cared about him much more than she was willing to verbalize. Telling Shaun to, literally, keep his pants on (twice!) was a good way to keep the boundaries in place as Shaun forged ahead.

 


And let’s face it—"taking off his pants with her in the room” is not something Lea is likely to object to for much longer. Which makes this exchange from 2019 even more precious.


5) “I AM going to rock it!” (From 3.5 “First Case, Second Base”)



IN SHORT: After some gentle teasing about his returning home late the night before (from Carly’s place), Lea finds herself advising Shaun through his latest dilemma—the “I prefer to only touch one thing at a time” issue—until a text from St. B eclipses all conversation. Shaun’s first lead surgery has been scheduled! He and Lea celebrate briefly—no hugs, just very exuberant jumping in place—before he bounds out the door for an exciting day of work.

 

BEST REMEMBERED FOR: “I AM going to rock it!”/ “Oh, hells to the yeah you are!”

 

Which is to say it’s remembered best for the absolute joy


Shaun felt in that moment, and the fact that it was Lea who got to share in it. We hadn’t seem him this happy since he asked Carly out for the first time, and we hadn’t seen him this happy alongside Lea since she agreed to become roommates (about a year earlier). This counts as one of their most treasured moments at ANY stage of their relationship.

 

But it’s easy to forget the significance of the conversation they were having prior to that text. Lea was now giving advice about something much more intimate than first-date protocol—and this time, Shaun took it. Him being him, he named Lea as the source of said advice when talking to Carly later that day—which displeased Carly, although Shaun was oblivious to her displeasure.

 

Is it any wonder, then, that Carly approached Shaun at work (less than an hour before his lead surgical debut!) and essentially showed him how to feel her up? At the time this episode aired, I must admit Carly’s bold move took me by surprise. (And the timing of it still does, though the debate about Carly’s early sexual “pushiness” rages on.) But in retrospect, it comes off as Carly’s first counterstrike in Lea’s general direction: So, Lea told you to tell me you want to touch only one thing at a time…? Well here’s “ONE THING” for you! Tell Lea how you feel about touching THAT!

(And oh, BTW, I’ve got another one you can touch. But not until later.)

 

I’m going overboard, but given what happened (and didn’t) all the way until “Fractured,” six episodes later… I think it’s noteworthy.


4) “You proved that just because something is hard doesn’t mean you can’t do it.”  (From 2.9 “Empathy”)

I know this is an unusual choice, as the Lea-teaches-Shaun-to-drive saga was scattered throughout “Empathy” and, cumulatively, took over seven minutes to unfold (longer if you include the final scene with them picking Glassman up for his appointment). But since it was far from the lead storyline of the hour, and yet something involving #Shea by themselves for four complete scenes… I’ve gotta include it.

But not all four scenes.

There’s the “visualization” scene in the empty parking lot, the


“panic” scene (when Shaun froze in the midst of traffic), the “pep talk” scene at the apartment where Lea dropped some cool-but-flawed analogies between driving and surgery that got Shaun back behind the wheel…

… which brought us to this one (the one I’m officially including in the countdown):

 


Wow, talk about checking all the boxes! Of course it’s easier to do when you have three other scenes setting up before it, but here… we had triumph (he’d successfully navigated the intersection he’d had trouble with previously). We had turmoil
(soccer kid runs out into street blindly, causing Shaun to swerve and knock over a trash can). We have the drama of Shaun’s self-doubt trying to overtake him as he returns to saying
I can’t do this. We have Lea scrambling to re-encourage him when he’s twice as resistant as before. We have her clutch delivery of this task (Who else could have done so? Not so fast, Glassy…)

We even have a touch of chivalry (Shaun going over and opening Lea’s car door, even while distressed), a fair dose of TGD humor (“That soccer ball was a dropped Metzenbaum”/ “I... know, right??”), and last but not least, Shaun’s infectious optimism melding with Lea’s determination, bringing us all the way back around to triumph by the time the scene ends.

Now that their relationship has been re-established and upgraded, let’s hope a few episodes of S4 can spare THIS amount of time, development, and #Shea dedication!

 

(p.s. I looked it up… a Metzenbaum is a type of surgical scissors designed to cut delicate tissue. Keep that fact locked away until a TGD trivia game emerges!)


3) “That was NOT a good joke, Lea!” (From 3.10 “Friends and Family”)


IN SHORT: Lea, trying to get Shaun’s mind off of his troubling reunion with his dying father, convinces him to make a pit stop at a nearby lake so they can run in and back out for an off-season “rush”. Trouble is, Shaun doesn’t recall his dislike for a lake’s accompanying muddy banks until once they’re already there. When Shaun turns out to be inconvincible—despite some heavy persuasion attempts on Lea’s part—she hits the lake alone, disappearing under the surface just long enough to send Shaun into a panic. She emerges just fine, but not before Shaun has offed his shoes and socks in preparation to hit the water looking for her. (The consequential mud on his feet later triggers a memory for Shaun that, combined with the pancake house plea from his mother the following morning, prompts his decision to pay his father one more visit.)

 


BEST REMEMBERED FOR: Maybe nothing sticks out for #Shea fans, aside from this being a rare-at-the-time 2:30 of uninterrupted Shaun and Lea. But the more I’ve watched this scene, the more I’ve thought about how it fits into that sub-stack of #Shea moments that is fraught with the will-they/won’t they palpitating energy of an all-neurotypical twosome on the cusp of Something Bigger.

Ask yourself this: had Shaun willingly stripped down and hit the water alongside Lea… would this scene have ended as innocently as it did?

I mean, think about it. It’s a moonlit lake, and these two are completely alone. They have a romantic history (of sorts) together. He’s dating another woman, but he’s invited THIS woman. They’re in desperate need of a distraction from the misery at the Murphy house. Lea has proposed something that requires stripping down to their skivvies, and while Shaun never comes close to doing so, she certainly follows through. Then comes the flirting… and I don’t mean an endearing nudge of the shoulder like she did during S1. I mean body language. I mean facial expressions. I mean…

 

LOOK
                                             AT   HER.



                                                                                                               

Had Shaun been more aware of such things, and been more in-the-moment in general that night, he could have made an excellent case down the road for Lea leading him on in brutal fashion… for someone who would then turn him away once the declaration of love was made, I mean.

And of course, I don’t mean to suggest Lea was deliberate in toying with Shaun when he was especially vulnerable. In fact, he seemed completely unresponsive to her charms that night once “time for action” arrived. What I am saying is that this was, perhaps, another indicator that Lea was more attracted to Shaun than she realized. Either that, or she was fully aware but didn’t worry about Shaun figuring it out because of his ASD and/or devotion to Carly.

Either way, it was an innovative manner for the show to both re-introduce their chemistry (remember, Lea had been completely AWOL from the show for the two episodes leading up to this one), AND move the storyline with Shaun’s father along.

 

P.S. When Lea told Shaun that the “warm, tingly feeling” one gets from a quick dunk in a freezing lake was “the best high there is”… and Shaun thought a moment, and decided “That can’t be true,” were any of you thinking he was about to follow with something about sex probably being better?

Or was that just me?

I think the TGD writers could have gone down that road, but I’m not sure where it would have led to. Besides, they were saving all the big emotional guns for a certain catapult at the end of the episode. I love what this scene ultimately was… two and a half minutes of #Shea getting back into shape for the highly-eventful second half of the season.

 

2) “My life is better with you.” (From 2.13 “Xin”)

IN SHORT (more long than short this time, sorry): Dr. Glassman, still housebound and feeling exceptionally lousy from his chemo treatments, has flat-out told Shaun he doesn’t want his medical advice anymore and urges him to leave. Back at the apartment, a distraught Shaun has just updated Lea on all this when we catch up with the two of them.

 (Although we don’t see Jake this time around, the fact that Lea’s in her camisole and robe again—and exits to her bedroom and closes the door when she’s done talking to Shaun—implies Jake is waiting for her while she takes time with Shaun. That implication gets underscored later in the episode when Shaun puts on headphones—then leaves the apartment altogether—as Lea carries on with Jake in her room. But I digress…)


She advises Shaun to lay low with Glassman for awhile, but of course the conversation she and Shaun have is much quieter and even-tempered than when Glassman advised the same thing… so it resonates with Shaun this time. “Thank you, Lea,” he says just before she returns to her bedroom. “My life is better with you.”

And he turns back to look her way in time to catch the warm smile she offers in response. “Mine too,” she responds.

BEST REMEMBERED FOR: The tenderness of those last lines.


But to really appreciate what was being said, you have to take into account the way Shaun was introduced to the phrase earlier in the episode…

“Xin” is the one with the autistic roommates/sexual partners (Javi and Lana) that has Lana requiring brain aneurysm surgery, and has Shaun and Morgan trying to convince Javi to join them in the OR since Lana will need to be awake throughout the surgery. When Javi balks at the idea, citing his extreme light sensitivity, Morgan takes a different approach:


“You should do it because you love her,” she tells an initially alarmed Javi. “Your life is better with her. You’re a better person with her. You need her. That’s what love is.”

(And immediately we see the wheels turning in Shaun’s head as he considers this definition of “love”.)

“I don’t love her,” Javi says after some thought. “She’s my roommate.”

(And immediately we see the wheels turning some more for Shaun.)

So yes, Shaun is essentially quoting Morgan when he says what he says to Lea. But, especially without Glassman to talk to at the time, Shaun was piecing together an understanding of romantic love all his own. It would be another year before he put all the pieces together, summoned his courage, and professed his love to Lea out loud in that same apartment. At this point and time, my life is better with you was the biggest sentiment they could share.

That’s why it carries so much weight in the back half of S2, and why I put it so high on this list. Lea may not have realized what her reciprocation was specifically saying to Shaun, but that didn’t make it any less real on her part.

As you may recall, Javi changed course post-operation and told Lana “I think I love you” despite the fact she was his roommate. Shaun heard that part too. He didn’t follow suit with Lea, but by the next episode (“Faces”) he was getting much more curious about love itself… and much more real about his feelings for the Jake/Lea coupledom.


Which takes us to… #1!!!

 

“You want to… talk about last night?”

(From 3.11 “Fractured)



IN SHORT: They, uh, talked about ‘last night.’

 

I’ll get back to that in a minute. But think about what typically leads to a woman asking a man (or man asking woman, etc.) that question, in a hotel/motel room, the morning after ‘last night’. Was this—Shaun and Lea, holding each other tearfully (and fully clothed) all night—different from that?

I say yes and no, for while nothing happened in the traditional sense… something happened. And everything changed as a result.

Obviously the scene with The Embrace was way too pivotal to count


as a “smaller moment”. But rather than push the action back to St. Bonaventure (and a couple weeks later) at the start of “Fractured,” TGD writers kept the Casper motel room, the rumpled clothing, Lea still curled up asleep as Shaun sat on the edge of the bed, looking calmer than when we’d left him but deeply puzzled in thought. No jumping ahead; Shaun and Lea were doing the morning-after thing.

What could they say, though? Shaun was on the verge of realizing something new (or was it??) about his feelings for Lea, but his commitment to Carly remained intact. Lea was, I believe, realizing something new (WAS it???) about her feelings for Shaun, but if his relationship with Carly wasn’t keeping her quiet, her own fears and doubts were certainly doing the trick. Plus we have Shaun as difficult to read (and as short on words) as ever on the morning after… and oh, yeah, the man had just lost his father hours after being verbally assaulted one last time by him. What to say, indeed.


So when Lea suggested that yes, perhaps they should talk about last night, it’s not surprising that Shaun was startled (responding with “Why?”) and remained succinct as Lea veered towards the reason she’d stayed all night (“I feel better now… thank you.”)

Lea knows him well enough by now to know when he’s done talking about something personal, so it was up to her to figure out the right thing to say in that moment, with vulnerability still lingering all around the two of them. She kept it simple (“I’m glad I could help you”), but gave a for-what-it’s-worth suggestion too (“But I don’t think we should tell anybody I stayed all night… people might get the wrong idea.”)

He said Okay, then got up and started packing… and by the end of the week, he’d be asking Lea to move out of their apartment. I guess that’s the way it goes sometimes.

I can say that with the apropos shrug, now that we know things worked out for these two by season’s end. But back in January when “Fractured” aired for the first time, we were coming off a six-week hiatus that felt like… oh, I don’t know, maybe seven bewildering, pandemic-soaked months… and the what-happens-next aspect of #Shea was rather gut-wrenching.

But with dialogue so simple, wrapped in acting that had to be delicate enough to capture a dozen emotional branches in about a minute and 20 seconds, I think this scene hit us the hardest of all of #Shea’s smaller moments.

(And as codas-to-scenes go, Shaun's We slept together followed by Glassman's perfectly delayed Did you use protection? is TGD perfection. Cracks me up every time I watch it.)

What’s YOUR pick for the top 3? What would you have ranked lower? Higher? I wanna know! Lucky for both of us the Comments section is great for that kind of thing!





8 comments:

Tony said...

Great recap, Kelli. Not only the Top 7, but also the big news concerning the promo! I feel better than ever that Shea has what it takes to endure to the long-term...starting off with this early separation occurring through no fault of their own.

As to the scenes you picked, all I can say is BRAVO! I don't know why I didn't include the "Friends and Family" lake scene in my lineup last week - perhaps I errantly considered it a "big" scene due to its extended length. I also praise your pick from "Empathy" as the highest-impact of the four - and one I use frequently in my "body of work" arguments on Facebook and Reddit.

And great mention of Lea being AWOL prior to this episode. A frustrating quick fact for the Lea fans: in the first 9 episodes of Season 3, Debbie appeared in as many episodes (6) as Lea did scenes!

If you scaled back the "better with you in it" scene from #1 to keep me from looking like a fool with my prediction last week, I appreciate your kindness. I admit I got a little nervous as I kept reading and getting closer to the end. But #2 for that scene is still an accomplishment.

As to my own Top 3, they'd all be things you included in your upper-most tier as well:

3. The Emoji Scene
For me, this short scene captures everything that is great about the show. A mix of humor and hope, combined with Shaun figuring out his way, further combined with Shaun's blunt honesty ("I have stopped thinking about her many times today").

In the Shea sense, I like to think of Lea's advice not just being for Shaun to handle someone else. Even if it wasn't her intention of the time, the general advice she gave (be casual; let them know you're thinking of them) could very well help Shaun in dealing with her!

2. "I am going to rock it!"
This scene ranks high for me for two reasons.
(1) A showcase on the high value Shaun and Lea placed on each other's lives. For Shaun, having someone with whom he could easily share his joys AND troubles. And for Lea, an opportunity to take pure joy in one of Shaun's career highlights to that point (receiving the news of his first lead surgery).
(2) The fact that Lea's advice was proven useful and acknowledged as genuinely good! Lea's few appearances in early Season 3 - showing her as helpful, stable and reliable - proved particularly useful against the arguments of taking Lea's "selfish, messy, needy" self-deprecation later in the season at face value.

1. "Just because something is hard..."
This ranks among my Top 5 Shaun/Lea scenes of all - big and small - pre/during/post-roommates. And perhaps my single-favorite Shea scene when I think about Lea's overall character.

The reason I enjoy it so much: Shaun wasn't just frustrated here. He had given up on himself! He had convinced himself that there was too much of a human-factor to driving for him to be able to adapt and handle. Yet, even as Shaun was giving up on himself, Lea never gave up on him. Her words to him demonstrated a respect not just for his potential as a driver; but as a person. And her actions throughout the episode demonstrated a big trust, given that this was her grandfather's Striped Tomato at stake!

Andreas said...

Hi Kelly,
great interpretation about Carly delivering the first blow against Lea by urging Shaun to touch her breast – I had not thought about that yet. Her uneasiness about Lea giving advice was obvious but her taking action against Lea this soon makes all that happened in 311 “Fractured” and later on even more comprehensible.

Barbara said...

Kelli, thank you, thank you for all the time you put into these analyses. Reading them is a most rewarding way to spend the waiting time until the Season 4 premiere -- savoring those "small moments" that David Shore loves so much.

I also think that in light of the concluding scene of the Season 3 finale, we can put to rest, emphatically, the notion that Shaun doesn't like to be touched in two places at once... It just has to be the right person doing the touching.

Andreas said...

"... the notion that Shaun doesn't like to be touched in two places at once... It just has to be the right person doing the touching."

Hell, yesss! As an #ActuallyAutistic person in fully support this notion: it just has to be the right one. :)

Amy D said...

Shaun most definitely does not have an aversion to being touched in more than one place, and yes, that's as long as it's the right person, and the right person is Lea.

In fact, going back to "Friends & Family" (aka The Episode That Turned the Tide), Shaun was so okay with Lea that they had full body contact (albeit completely clothed) and slept in each other's arms (juxtapose that with the fact that he couldn't even lie in the same bed with Carly and maintain eye contact while not touching at all for even 30 seconds), so yeah, that level of comfort on Shaun's part with regard to Lea's touch first made itself known in "F&F," and then in "I Love You," the way Shaun initiated the kiss that ended season 3 while simultaneously wrapping his arms around Lea and pulling her closer against him, actually holding her, only THEN did Lea hold Shaun completely--she framed his face in her hands when she kissed him the first time, then she was clutching his jacket with both hands while kissing him again and declaring her love and telling him he makes her more--Lea followed Shaun's lead there with the physical contact. Only AFTER he had her wrapped in his arms did she wrap her arms around him and let her fingers play in his hair.

Lea teaching Shaun to drive was a watershed moment not only for Shaun but for their relationship as both friends and future mates. Even when he was nervous/frazzled/convinced he couldn't do it, Lea didn't get angry or upset, she remained encouraging and she bolstered him and gave him the confidence to believe that he could do it, and he did. As Tony said, Shaun had given up on himself, but Lea refused to give up on him. Is it too much of a stretch to say that that's something they accomplished together? When Shaun had given up, Lea was there to let him know that he could do this, that she believed in him, that she had his back, and he did learn to drive.

#Shea are a bright spot in an insane world for me. For all of us, I'm guessing, since we're here. :-)





Unknown said...

Hey Kelli!! I definitely agree with your choices and tbh I'm surprised because my number 1 would have been between "my life is better with you" or "I am going to rock it" but certainly that moment after the storm was so meaningful, I would have loved if they started that scene with an actual visual of how they slept together, both comfy in each other's arms but well I guess we will see that as a couple now and will be so much better (fingers crossed).

The moment at the lake lmao Yes, I see you flirting girl! Lea was so unaware of her feelings and as such she just acted without realizing and well Shaun didn't notice the details either so she was lucky, but the look of love was there, the care and the attention... She was always worried about his feelings first, setting the pace to what happened later on too...

The level of trust Lea and Shaun have is shown in each one of these moments and they all lead to the you make me more climax, they have learned to teach each other many things and to grow as friends and roommates and as Shore said in the Comic Con and interviews they are now ready to take this to the next level to a committed, serious and full of love relationship... Simply can't wait.

Thank you again for such awesome entry! ❤️

Unknown said...

This is Vale BTW forgot to put my name 😂

Vale said...

Kelli the comment above is mine, I didn't put my name on it sorry ✌️��