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Instead
of having Alex gracefully exit the picture because
she decided to move back home with her parents, or simply because
she saw the writing on the wall with Marissa and Ryan, the writers
inexplicably turned Alex into a jealous, psychotic girlfriend
who stalked her girlfriend, threw beer cans in a fit of jealous
rage, and made violent threats. It was as if the Alex in the
last two episodes was a completely different person than the
Alex in every other episode before (and a much worse person).
But
even more bizarre and nonsensical was Marissa's sudden switch
from being really into Alex, to avoiding her like the plague
and mooning over Ryan--telling Summer that he's the only person
she's ever really been in love with, and confessing that the
only reason she hasn't left Alex's house and moved back home
is that it would make her mom too happy. Huh?
While
Marissa was supposedly reacting to being overwhelmed by the
realities and responsibilities of living on her own (like rent
and laundry), that didn't explain her sudden indifference to
Alex, or her conflicting behavior. Prior to her relationship
with Alex, Marissa had a brief summer fling with the gardener,
and while he dumped her because he (correctly) accused her of
not being that in to him, at least Marissa was consistent about
it--she was always one foot out the door on their relationship.
But
she went from spending all of her time with Alex, asking Alex
if she could move in with her, and telling her mom about the
relationship--surprisingly, not because she wanted to upset
her, but because she wanted to make it feel more real--to lying
to Alex, avoiding her, and not joking and cuddling with Ryan
as Alex walks away in the last scene after saying goodbye. All
in about a two-week period.
Melodrama
is the staple of a primetime soap, and we weren't expecting
the lesbian relationship to be exempt from the same drama that
characterizes the rest of the relationships on the show. But
we were expecting consistent character development, and plot
developments that didn't defy logic.
The
problem with the end of the lesbian storyline isn't that Alex
and Marissa broke up, but that both girls turned into completely
different characters in the last two episodes of their relationship.
It's as if the writers came into work one day, decided they
were too tired to try and keep this up anymore, and voted to
go back to what they knew best--Marissa and Ryan--as quickly
as possible, regardless of the credibility strain such an abrupt
reversal put on the show.
The
characters deserved a better ending that that. The show's Viewers
deserved a better ending than that. With writing like this,
it's no wonder The O.C. is getting lower ratings its
getting this season--at
least someone's getting what they deserve.
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