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Saturday, October 16, 2010

Reasons Why I Hate Kate Austen of Lost


 The season finale of Lost, The Incident, pissed me off through the one medium of the show that always pisses me off—Kate.  After getting past all the mystical shits and unpredictable events that always make up a Lost season ending episode, what you’ve got to notice is the predictable reactions from the show’s weakest character, Kate Austen.  In it I saw Kate fucking Austen being Kate—which is to say she was incredibly annoying and all acting like she knows what she’s talking about and generally slowing down the story and getting in the way and getting a more interesting character killed (although not so interesting in this episode)—and I don’t think I can take much more of her crap.  When the show ends, I have two things that must happen for me not to be seriously disappointed.  The first, previously mentioned, is that the real Locke had better be ruling the Island when shit comes to a close, and the second, is that Kate had better die. I am fed up with her whole sanctimonious, self-righteous bullshit—using her sex to get the shit she wants, slapping any number of men, just letting cooler people die, etc.—and I can’t wait for the show to hold its little tribal counsel and finally vote her off the fucking Island.  The only episodes of Lost I have hated were episodes that focused on her.  She’s manipulative and stupid and self-absorbed and boring and pointless and makes others around her seem like tools. It’s like she is Meg Griffin.  A while back I found someone’s assessment of Kate’s character which came in the following four phrases, which are spot on:
1. I’m pretty.
2. What should we do, Jack?
3. Shut up, Sawyer.
4. I’m coming along whether you want me to or not!
Yeah, Kate in a nutshell.  So with that finale, I am finally prompted to write out my Ten Reasons Why I Hate Kate Austen.  Here goes.
1. She’s Fickle- We can never be sure whom she is going to sleep with this week or how her sexual escapades will end up because she is constantly changing her mind about what the hell she is doing using her sexual allure as like a female executive trying to sleep her way to the top.  She makes out with Sawyer one minute and then beats him down with a suitcase or slaps him across the face or whatever.  Then once she gets off the Island she hops in bed with Jack and they were supposed to get married even, but she is sneaking around doing things for Sawyer.  When Jack gets all fussy and points out that he has repeatedly saved her and what not she says she doesn’t want him acting like that around her “son” and Jack utters a serious burn with “you’re not even related to him.”  Woo, ultimate face.  So now she hates Jack for speaking the truth and the wedding is off.  For Christ’s sake Kate, either pick Sawyer or Jack, quit bouncing back and forth to whichever one is more useful at the time.  She is always turning these leader types into heartsick idiots that she walks all over when she wants something.  She’s like a parasite befriending Sawyer for the shit he hoarded when they first crashed and then sidled up to Jack because he was the leader and saw the power of his position as her opportunity to be the Island’s Lady Macbeth or something.  It pisses me off that she keeps using everybody for her own personal gain and just keeps on lying to them to get it.  I pity the both of them for mainly just having to deal with her bullshit.  Next season, look for the reemergence of Skate (Sawyer + Kate = Skate) since Kate pretty much did nothing to help Sawyer help save Juliet (See Reason #2 for more on that), her competition, and hey hey, he’s now single again and Jack has sort of spiraled down the down the drain and lost his faith in humanity.  But maybe the existential Jack will grow on her.  Who knows with her.
2. Gets People I Like Killed (Or Seemingly Killed)- As hinted in Reason #1, she keeps on getting more interesting characters killed for absolutely NO reason whatsoever.  In the Lost time-line, the first death she was responsible for was that of her abusive father, which was justified I guess, but I don’t care about that. Then came her childhood sweetheart Tom who she got killed when she was escaping from the law by busting through a barricade and he got hit by a bullet meant for her.  What does she do, nothing, she just leaves.  Again I don’t care; there isn’t anything of interest that has to do with Kate’s back-story.  But then once she gets on the Island is when the her getting people killed starts to drive me crazy.  There was the guy who was extraditing her back to the states who was dying anyway, maybe, and I assume Kate practically begged Sawyer to “end his pain” by giving him a quick death but only makes it way worse by shooting him in the lung instead of the heart.  Around the same time, she as well as Jack and Charlie let the pilot of 815 go walking around outside of the cockpit with the Monster making noises, failing to warn him that there might be danger.  He then gets eaten by the Monster and we later see him up in a tree all mutilated and all—yeah, I acknowledge this one might be a stretch, but the rest are not.  When they find Charlie in the jungle pretty much dead, having been hanged in a tree by Ethan, who was a serious bad ass, all she did was stood there and cried.  Way to help out, Kate.  Great effort there just standing there in the way and crying while Jack has to do everything. But Charlie lived that near-death-experience.  Then there was the most infuriating one where she was supposed to go get Jin from the inside the freighter but instead stood around on the deck with her thumb up her ass.  Ten minutes after Kate was all, oh don’t go, Sun, you’re holding Aaron and pregnant and stuff, I will go get Jin for you, you get on the chopper, we see Kate finally try to go down into the freighter. What was so goddamn important Kate, that’s what I’d like to know? But Jack stops her saying something about him not leaving without her and they all look down at Jin as the ship explodes, again an inspired performance from Kate.  Way to make the extra effort there.  That made their flight back toward the Island pretty awkward.  So when Sun said to her old man, that she blames two people for the death of her husband and one of them was him, I figured the other one must surely be Kate for dicking around and not doing what she said she was going to do.  But frustratingly this turns out to be false and Sun and Kate are great old friends back on the mainland.  What the shit?  If I were Sun I would be pulling me some hair and punching the so called tough girl in the face instead of taking care of her stolen kid.  But Jin somehow survived, we think, but he could just be an incarnation of his form as the counterpart to the Locke imposter or something.  We shall see about that next season.  Then there was the death of my second favorite character (Locke being the first), Daniel Faraday, which she just let happen as she always does.  When Kate and Jack go along with Faraday on into Crazytown as he was about to go into the Others’ camp where he gets shot and killed by his mother, then pregnant with him, Jack was about to stop him but Kate was all “no Jack, don’t go.” Thanks Kate, thanks for stopping Jack from ending the whole Infinite Jest-ish “the woman who kills you is always your next life's mother” thing.  Yeah, that was awesome.  Ugh, fucking Kate.  And then there was the season finale, when Juliet was dangling there above that electromagnetic hole with Sawyer trying to pull her up and Kate did what Kate does and just stood there.  Nicely done.  I mean did I expect anything more from her than to stand around awkward doing nothing when lives are at stake.  No, not really.  She was predictably unhelpful.  That bitch.
3. She’s Annoying- First, there is that whole bit about her trying to be the tough, strong, kick-ass-and-take-names female on the Island but then she does things like cry over a toy plane. Its like we get it Kate, you are a fugitive, but that doesn’t make you a hard ass.  Give up the act and stop making everyone’s life harder by trying to prove you’re a free spirit who doesn’t need anybody’s help.  Because Kate, if anyone does, its you.  Just stop.  Its getting embarrassing how everyone else keeps having to save you.  Also, she is ALWAYS interrupting people, suggesting that she feels what she has to say is way more important than whatever Hurley and Miles are saying.  What Kate has to say is rarely that important or interesting.  I can’t really remember any positive contribution she has ever made to life on the Island.  All she does is whine and lie and make a mess of things.  Its like to get anything useful or truthful out of her you have spend an entire episode twisting it out of her when she could have just said or done whatever in the first minute or so.  This is connected to another annoying fact about her, which is that she is a busybody, always butting into people’s business (like she did when she screwed everything up by talking to Ben’s dad) and asking about their pasts and all that but won’t say anything about hers.  When we finally figure out what she is doing it is always something really stupid, again I reference the goddamned toy plane, that really infuriated me.  I guess she did get some information out of Miles but that was only for her own personal gain (See Reason #4). 
4. She’s Unbelievably Self-Centered- She is unable to think about anyone but herself, ever, and is the most egocentric character in the show.  The only thing she really ever did was pull some bullshit con to take Miles to Ben but that was done only to get information about herself.   Always begging to be included and whining when being left out, she just has to tag along no matter who protests for whatever sound reasons so as to not to miss out on any of the action.  But shenever follows orders so even when she is ordered not to come along, of course she follows the group anyway which always ends with her getting captured and her needing to be rescued thus ruining whatever mission the group is on.  Sneaky bitch.  She is a manipulative liar that lacks all empathy and care for others showing no conscience whatsoever in doing stupid things that she thinks she must do to survive.  Her megalomania is such that she couldn’t even get over herself when delivering Claire’s baby, Aaron, saying, “I’m scared too.” Why is that do you think?  Maybe because she is a sociopath, I mean she does steel that baby later.
5. She’s Got The Worst Backstory- Her whole ridiculous pre-Island life was basically a way to give her character cause to whine for the entire run of the show.  It doesn’t make her look tough or anything and her flashbacks don’t really make any sense when you think about them long enough.  A fugitive from law being chased by the whole world it seems for blowing up some douchbag?  I think not.  I just want to grab her by freckled arms and scream “We get it, you’re a victim, you’re the way you are because your dad (that you thought was your step dad) beat your mom, but you blew him up. And instead of being grateful that you blew him up your mom betrayed you and still made you stand trial when you got back from the Island, but hey, she got over it and you didn’t go to jail.  Seriously, we get it.  Poor Kate.  Now stop bitching about it every other freaking episode, we aren’t going to forget it so you can stop reminding us all the time.” 
6. Gets Away With Everything And Constantly Whines- Which brings me to the obvious fact that she gets away with everything.  No one seems to care that she is constantly ruining whatever people are doing to better their lives on and off the Island.  She didn’t get in any trouble for murdering her old man, ducking the conviction by clinging to her stolen child and with the help of Jack and that incredibly dumb story he told in court that made her into some kind of a hero, which she isn’t, that was so lame and impossible it just made me want to throw up; no one lets the Others kill her for sneaking around when she should have stayed put; people defend her when her actions screw up their lives directly, as was the case when her erratic behavior tipped off Ben’s dad to the fact that she knew more about all that was involved in the shooting of little Ben than she let on, having Jack, Juliet, and Sawyer stick up for her, resulting in the end of Suliet (Sawyer + Juliet) and the comfortable life they had developed with the D.H.A.R.M.A. Initiative; etc.  She manages all this simply by putting on a pouty face (her only face) which affords her anything she wants.
7. Steals Babies/Screws up Children- Another thing she got away with was steeling Aaron away from the Littleton family to use him for all her emotional needs, for shame Kate.  How does the media not follow up on the apparent problems with the time-line/pregnancy stuff?  I think that would have been something that people would have noticed when they captured her.  In any case, Kate was well on her way on her mission to screw up a little kid before she finally did the right thing and gave Aaron to Claire’s mom while spilling the beans, as she always does, on the real story of Flight 815.  So when the blond lady who looked like Claire from behind appeared that she was running away with Aaron to live amongst the crazies or wherever, for a second I thought she would lose him, which would serve her right, and we would be rid of Aaron, at least for a while.  Yeah, he is a little kid… but he has to be the most irritatingly bad child actor ever, way more so than those Olsen twins on Full House, which is no small feet.  For a while I thought he had Down syndrome.   Every single time he says “mommy” or “juice box” I have to fight back the feeling that I am about the spill the groceries all over the couch and coffee table in the living room where I watch TV.  So why all of the sudden did she give Aaron over to an actual blood relative?  So she could basically watch him for a while as she goes back to the Island to find Claire and bring her back to raise her son.  Yeah right, she was tired of playing house like (in one of her painful-to-watch flashbacks) when she married Captain Hammer (from Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog) only to drug and run out on him when things got difficult. 
8. The Producers Have Serious Kate Love- Cassidy was right about Sawyer and his motivation for jumping off the chopper, the reason he deplaned in such a dramatic way wasn’t to save the woman he loved, oh no, it was to get away from the succubus that is Kate.  Yeah, Sawyer had the right idea.  Get a clue Lindeloff/Cuse.  Not even your own fictional characters can stand her.  But they have themselves some serious love for Ms. Austen.  
It would be great if they would get over her apparent hotness like everyone else and realize there is no use for Kate and kill her off which they won’t. She’s a criminal with a heart of gold just like every chick in Brisco County Jr., Cuse’s first show, staring one Bruce “Jack of All Roles” Campbell, which is pretty awesome, yeah yeah, we understand that you love this type of female character…but this has got to stop already.  Jack, who seems more annoyed with her than anything else, was willing to go back in time and take incredibly drastic action by blowing up the Island either erasing the 3-years he knew her which she of course is against because that would mean her going to jail since her celebrity status couldn’t possibly save her or killing him.  Whatever happens, or doesn’t, its clear that Jack is hell bent on removing her from his life by any means necessary.  Her only merit was as one in a boring love triangle (or square I guess) that was the worst part of the show.  Any episode that focuses on her ends up sucking, therefore, they should have done the thing that talked about doing where Vincent had a flashback, which would have been awesome, I love that dog, but instead we got Kate overload.  Boo.  It isn’t so bad, I guess, that she is irrelevant as far as the story goes but the screen time she gets is unreal.  The episodes without Kate are almost always great but these are few and will probably disappear as the two camps, in 1977 and 2007, start to bridge the time gap.  Like that kid in your neighborhood growing up that was an asshole and everyone hated but always found out when and where you were hanging out or the guy trying too hard to get laid at a party, Kate never goes away.
9. She Lacks Self-Awareness- This, I think but cannot prove, is one of the reasons her mother hates her.  First of all, she killed her dad because she could tell her mother really loved him and took it upon herself to end the relationship.  Of course she didn’t see her mom turning her in coming because she can’t tell what people think of her. All she sees is this persona she has constructed and follows that without looking back, ever.  On the Island, she believes her place is that of a strong semi co-leader instead of the wimpy, annoying, crying waste of space she really is.  She has always been weak link of the show/the Islanders with her whining and inability to make a rational decision for herself basing her actions on her unreliable emotional state at that exact moment.  It’s like she never developed the ability to look at the facts as they are when doing something and not just follow her impulses.  That is probably why she can’t help but jumping into bed with Jack and/or Sawyer seeing as how she can’t really function without a man around to manipulate first, including stolen baby Aaron.
10. Fucks Everything Up- This is her main problem, this constantly turning things into shit for everyone while offering no help in fixing things.  Usually the Losties are correcting some mistake she made or was in some way responsible for while she just sort of stands around all pathetic.  When she didn’t cause whatever new development, she is more than likely working on her own agenda that opposes what the majority has decided is right.  The most predictable part of Lost is that Kate will defy everyone with her ridiculous horseshit and do what she wants consensus be damned.  Like when Kate, in her ever-stupid-way, rushes to save the young Ben that Sayid tried to kill in order to spare their past selves that are confusingly in the future from the manipulating maniac he grows into.  Pretty much everyone agrees that Ben’s death here would be a good thing and they should just let him die, but oh ho, not Kate, who doesn’t think any child should die, after all young Ben is a victim too.  Not even if you know that he’s eventually going to kill a bunch of your friends, the entire D.H.A.R.M.A. Initiative, and a bunch of people who may or may not deserve it, not to mention tried to take the baby you rightfully stole and then telling those incredible lies that is just one series in a long and proud career of manipulation that gets you and the few friends that the adult version of this dying kid has yet to kill trapped-once again-on the this crazy patch of land that happens to be a time machine to boot that you flings you back some thirty goddamned years in the past.  Really Kate?  Fucking really?  Well, if anyone were to snatch away the hope that Sayid gave them by nearly de-mapping some asshole little kid who grows into a mass-murdering genocidal maniac, it would have to be Kate

Why I hate Monica (and the writers)-Part 5


Here's a less sarcastic version of why I don't want Monica with Chandler.
There's a reason why my "I hate Monica" rant starts in season 6, not season 5. At first I liked Monica and Chandler because they were sweet, and the secrecy plot was funny; TOW Everybody Finds Out episode is particularly strong, and even though Monica does have moments of being annoying and competitive this season, she still supports Chandler over issues like his work laugh, cares about his feelings, and apologizes to Chandler about incidents like cutting off his toe. In season 6, though, I began to see a change. She got more annoying more of the time, was quite inflexible and unfair over the game room/guest room issue, took Chandler for granted, and didn't apologize as much even when she was clearly wrong in an argument. Chandler also became less funny, less assertive, and less macho (he hardly ever did sports and crazy games like he used to with Joey and Ross). He was more of a straight man to Monica's freaky behavior, and he was constantly reassuring her sweetly if she overreacted about something. It was a disturbing trend, as if the writers were going to do as much damage to their characters as they had done to Ross with his Mental Geller antics. When I saw the proposal, though, I told myself that Monica would must truly love him more than Richard; she would be nicer and sweeter again next season, he would be more like his old sarcastic self, and they would work out what issues they had before the wedding. Everyone would be happy. (I still would have preferred Joey/Chandler, but as long as Chandler was happy with her, I could stand to see Joey end up with someone else like Phoebe, Kate, etc.)

But then season 7 came along and ruined Monica/Chandler for me. She got even more annoying, more shrill and bossy, and less sincere and loving. So I retroactively decided that they never should have been together, or that at most they should've had the sexual fling that the writers originally intended for them. I know other fans who aren't even Joey/Chandler shippers that agree that Monica became a harpy and a shrew in season 7. Nothing Monica has done in seasons 8, 9, and 10 has won me back. The rare moments when she is supposed to be sweet and touching again, like over the infertility issue, are too few and too poisoned by my memories of her mistreating Chandler and manipulating him to get her way. Sometimes I want to cut that wedding ring off her hand and make her eat it and choke on it. I can still root for Chandler in other couples, like in the Chandler/Rachel fics or the Chandler/Janice/Joey plot I have for "Instead of Yemen", but now I don't want Chandler with Monica under any circumstances. She's ruined it for me, and he's become a stereotypical hen-pecked husband out of some inferior sitcom. I don't understand how the writers can seriously think that Chandler with Monica is supposed to be a happy ending to the series. He belongs with Joey, or someone else who can truly love him and make him remember what he used to be like.

Why I hate Monica (and the writers)-Part 4


Joey/Rachel fans might want to skip my comment on 919, unless you want to see why I get mad about Kate Miller being forgotten. My problem's with the writers' handling of the pairing. The writers can't treat any non-lobster storyline with any decency and effort.
  1. 903: I understand that Monica doesn't want to move to Tulsa, and she resents Chandler for springing it on her so suddenly. But nothing justifies Monica holding up her wedding ring and saying "I have to [go with Chandler to Tulsa], because of this stupid thing!" That's not funny, Monica. At one time, you were so proud of that ring that you shouted from your balcony "I'm engaged!" and pretended something was wrong with your hand so you could show off the ring even more. Talk about being ungrateful and bitchy! Oh, and after making a seemingly sincere speech about how she couldn't live without Chandler for four days a week, she breaks her promise as soon as she gets a job offer. If she really wanted that job so bad, and loved Chandler, why didn't she think up some other compromise? Why couldn't she say something like, "Chandler, you hate that job anyway! Why let them force you to work in Tulsa? Why don't you quit and stay here with me? I've got a great new job now that can support us for a while, and you can figure out what other job makes you happy." Too much to expect from Monica? I guess so. I'm glad that Joey didn't let Monica talk to him on the phone. Bad wife, Monica! Bad wife!
  2. 904: Oh, gross! Shark Porn. Does Monica really not know Chandler at all? And she told this embarrassing idea of hers to Rachel before even asking Chandler exactly what he was doing in that hotel room. This dumb plot is so contrived and ridiculous! It was not funny or sweet for her to get drunk and offer to thrash around in the bathtub for him; it was as unattractive and out of character as episode 614.
  3. 905: While chatting with the gang, Monica doesn't remember that Chandler isn't in New York with them. Even Rachel's not self absorbed enough to forget him like that. Monica is shocked when she realizes, but then she continues to be a bad wife and friend in this episode, so I don't forgive her for the slip. Then Chandler comes home, and she finds out that he was smoking. I don't blame her for getting mad; smoking is unhealthy, and they're trying for a baby, and Chandler's quit several times, before he was ever dating her. But Monica gets all bitchy, forbidding him to smoke, despite the fact that in Vegas she got furious when he forbade her to see Richard. Hypocrite! As if to assert her control over him even further, she insists that they put the fight on hold and have sex now. Huh? You're mad, Mon, and you know that you're already late to Phoebe's birthday dinner. Why don't you put the fight on hold and go to the dinner? That way, you'll be a considerate friend to Phoebe, and you and Chandler will have time to cool down from your fight. I know you're ovulating, Monica, but your eggs can wait a couple of hours. Phoebe already asked you if you were going to be late, and you promised that you wouldn't be. Quit treating your husband and friends like dirt! Does Monica really want a baby so badly that she really wasn't moved by Chandler's speech about not conceiving while they're angry? Apparently so.
  4. 908: I don't get why the writers wanted Amy and the gang to discuss who would get custody of Emma if Ross and Rachel were to die, but I suspended my disbelief. Monica, on the other hand, wouldn't let me suspend my hatred of her, not even for Thanksgiving. She reveals that she lied to Chandler about what wedding china they were getting, and she also puts Chandler down about his "feminine" taste in china. When Ross and Rachel said they didn't want Chandler to raise Emma alone, I started to resent them too. Monica was somewhat sweet and comforting to Chandler when they talked in the hallway, but I wish she had defended him in front of Ross and Rachel. Why couldn't she have reminded Ross that he made Chandler godfather to Ben years ago? If he trusted Chandler to raise Ben alone, why not Emma too? There was also a really dumb plot about Joey not being able to lie, which was a glaring continuity error, considering the fact that Joey lies all the time to his dates, such as when he poses as Ken Adams.
  5. 913: Monica sings at Mike's piano bar and unknowingly flashes her boobs to everyone. Even when Chandler tells her and tries to hide her, she doesn't care and keeps singing to all those strangers. Monica literally craves the spotlight and doesn't care about upsetting or embarrassing her husband.
  6. 916: Monica and Chandler need to borrow some money. When Monica secretly goes to ask Joey for it, he thinks Monica is coming on to him, so he turns her down. "It would be wrong. Good. But wrong." Yeah, Joey shouldn't have made that assumption, but it's his typical sleazy behavior. He's hit on all the girls before, and in season 5, he even asked Monica to sleep with him in exchange for keeping her and Chandler's affair a secret. When Joey winks at her, does Monica roll her eyes and yell with outrage, "Joey!"? Does she look offended and disgusted? Nope. She says, "First of all, it would be great," then moves on to her request for money. See the entry for 822, where J comes off in a better light, but Monica doesn't.
  7. 918: Monica is so money-crazed by this lottery, it's shocking. Chandler even supports her because he's feeling desperate without a job. "Screw you, the tickets are ours!" Oh my God, and Monica's actually proud of this awful man that she's turned Chandler into. She even yells, "Fine! Don't be my friends! I'll buy new friends! Yeah, and then I'll pay for their plastic surgery so they'll look just like you!" Phoebe tries to stop the madness by making everyone choose between friends and money, but Monica yells out "Money!" In contrast, it's such a sweet moment when Joey reveals that he wished for Chandler to get a job. It's sad that I actually believe that Monica would rip Joey's heart out for that, like Chandler said.
  8. 919: It's not Monica that I hate in this episode; she's actually quite sensible when she tells Rachel that the dream was about Drake, not Joey. And I love Phoebe predicting that Monica and Chandler will divorce in seven years, although I would prefer that they divorce right now. What I hate in this episode is the writers for revisiting the Joey/Rachel plot in the most aggravating way. My apologies to JnR fans for this rant; you've every right to root for your unconventional couple, but I must object to the shoddy way the writers have gone about it, without regard to plausibility and continuity. In this episode, Joey claims that he's never had a romantic storyline on Days of Our Lives before, and that's why he's nervous and needs Rachel to help him out. As I mentioned in TOW Kate Returns, it's all CRAP! On soap operas, aren't all eligible men of a certain age hooked up with all eligible women of a certain age, in revolving-door combinations? That's one of the things that the Friends writers made fun of from the start. When Joey first starred on DOOL in season 2, all the gang including Rachel would watch the episodes and comment on how Drake is kissing one woman, then another, then (for variation's sake), stopping one girl and telling her that she's his half-sister. One would think that, since Joey reprised his role as Drake a couple of years ago, that the DOOL writers would have given him a new romantic storyline as well. Furthermore, Joey claims in this episode that he's only been in love with one woman, and that's Rachel, which is crap too; in season 3, Joey had very strong feelings for Kate Miller the actress, and although he always said "I'm crazy about her" instead of "I love her," Joey does many things that signify love, such as watching Kate sleep, crying when she rejects him, and talking all night with her instead of rushing to more sex. Thus the whole premise of Rachel's Dream is a house of cards waiting to be toppled. I wouldn't resent the Joey/Rachel pairing so violently if it just stopped messing with continuity/plausibility and could stand on its own feet about why Joey or Rachel would have feelings for each other. The writers could have spent this episode convincing the JnR skeptics that the chemistry between Joey and Rachel is romantic, rather than platonic. Love could have blossomed believably, unlike with that fake date during the 8th season, when Joey just magically and suddenly found himself in love, only to forget about it within a few episodes. But the writers just went for a quickie contrived plot, and to add insult to injury, they had Ross and Chandler go on the trip to Vermont, instead of Chandler and Joey. What ever happened to Chandler's promise to make more time for Joey? What ever happened to Kate?
  9. 920: Back to the Monica bashing. Monica does a good thing by trying to talk Rachel out of her "fooling around" interest in Joey, but she spoils this with her behavior at the soap opera party. When Phoebe points out that Chandler is missing, Monica gasps, but stays at the party, saying stuff like "If I had known I was coming to this party I never would have gotten married!" Why won't she leave the party and go get Chandler? Or if she can't sneak him out of the theatre, the least she could do is keep him company during the play. But no, Monica loves wearing her see-through shirt and chasing guys in hot leather pants. Even Rachel, despite her distraction about Joey, also notices that "Clearly you've forgotten about Chandler." I can see once more why Phoebe is convinced that Monica and Chandler are going to divorce; it's just a matter of time if she keeps up this behavior. What am I saying? Of course she will; in season 10, the writers are going to keep her a domineering, neglectful shrew, because it's just so funny. NOT.

Why I hate Monica (and the writers)-Part 3


Marriage doesn't make her better.
  1. 802: After all that anticipation, after all the time and money spent, the wedding's over, and Monica is depressed the VERY NEXT morning. What, she can't wait until the honeymoon's over at least? "I'll never be a bride again," she grumbles to the hotel clerk, embarrassing Chandler publicly and forcing him to make a joke as if all's well. Didn't Chandler already have this talk with her about how marriage is more than just a wedding? Even if she weren't listening in episode 702, there was an Oprah show on TV about "starter marriages" where an author discussed couples who get so caught up in the hype of the wedding that they have unrealistic expectations about marriage and wind up divorcing in a few years because it wasn't as perfect as they thought it would be. Sound familiar, Monica?
  2. 803: Monica continues to be obnoxious and embarrass Chandler publicly. She mentions his speedo in front of the others while packing for the honeymoon. Then during the trip, she gets obsessed about the freebie stuff that another honeymoon couple are getting instead of them. This other couple apologizes for their luck, and they say, "We're here to celebrate our love together. We don't have to get free stuff. We just want to be together." Instead of following that fine example of loving newlywed behavior, Monica sulks silently until Chandler says for her, "Yeah, we need the stuff."
  3. 808: At long last, we find out that Monica had a bachelorette party even though Chandler didn't get to have a bachelor party. Sure, Rachel and Phoebe surprised Monica with the party, but couldn't Monica have controlled herself and not removed the stripper's g-string with her teeth? And couldn't she have felt guilty afterward, and told Chandler that he could have a party now? They didn't leave right away after their wedding to go on their honeymoon. There was time to at least confess to Chandler and ask him what he wanted; knowing him, he might have even made one of his sweet speeches and said he didn't want a bachelor party to even things up. But instead, Monica chose to lie to Chandler, and now in a belated, apologetic gesture, she decides to hire a stripper for him so he can have a bachelor party. Even though Joey can presumably see strippers whenever he wants to, Joey cancels a date to be there, because Chandler's that important to him. Because he always wanted to throw this party for his best friend. Because he misses how inseparable they used to be. That's love. Not the crap that Monica gives Chandler.
  4. 809: Monica invites Will Colbert from high school to Thanksgiving dinner. She's gushing so much about how gorgeous Will is now that Joey sternly reminds her to say that she loves Chandler. And when Will arrives for dinner, Chandler clearly feels intimidated by the guy's good looks, so why can't Monica control herself and not flirt with Will? She might think that it's as innocent and meaningless as the flirting she confessed to in 519, on her and Chandler's 10-month anniversary, but they're flirting right within earshot of her husband, and it's Thanksgiving for heaven's sake--the one holiday during which Chandler is especially sensitive!
  5. 810: Monica buys some really expensive boots, and won't listen to Chandler's reasonable argument that she should return them. She would rather bleed and waste all that money than let Chandler be right about something.
  6. 816: See the entry for 724.
  7. 818: Monica wants to give the toast at her parents' 35th anniversary party, because she wants to make everyone cry. This is reminiscent of her desire to make Chandler cry in 614. I know that Ross was the favorite child, and Monica craves attention and praise, but it looks more like she enjoys making people suffer. Her toast is tortured, insincere, and random; it looks like she can't feel or comprehend real emotion anymore. Plus, if she thinks her parents are an amazing example of true love, then why doesn't she follow it and treat Chandler better? Judy may be too critical of her daughter (a fault she acquired from her own mother), but I've never seen Judy control or put down Jack.
  8. 822: Joey's war movie Over There premieres, and he only gets one guest ticket. Even after Monica offers to wear a slutty dress, one that she's never even worn for her husband, Joey decides to take Chandler. "I don't think you're comprehending how slutty this dress is!" I don't think you're comprehending that you're not supposed to hit on your husband's best friend, Monica! Even if he's starring in a movie, you don't offer to be Joey's eye candy and quasi-date for the night. Thank God that Joey still wanted to take Chandler to the premiere despite these bribes; I wish that Chandler hadn't fallen asleep during the movie, though. For that, I hate the writers.

Why I hate Monica (and the writers)-Part 2


Monica's obsession about the wedding ruins everything.
  1. 701: On their engagement night, Monica is obsessed about it being her night; yes, she has a right to be happy, especially after that proposal trouble last season, but tone it down, woman! You're getting more annoying than Janice ever was!
  2. 702: Monica won't let Chandler have any say in the wedding plans, even though he protests more than once in this episode, and this season. Yes, most grooms don't care about planning the wedding, but Chandler isn't like most guys. He likes getting manicures and having poultry for pets. And how dare Monica expect Chandler to spend all his savings on the wedding?! Chandler has to remind her that there's more to marriage than the wedding, and after they make up, she ruins their touching moment by insisting that they have a pet dog in their future house. Sure, Monica is genuinely allergic to cats, but she could at least meet Chandler halfway (like letting him have the birds instead)! Discuss things first, instead of making unilateral decisions. In an equal relationship, both partners' opinions have to matter.
  3. 703: Chandler gets glasses and everyone (inexplicably) thinks that he's always worn glasses. I hate the fact that the writers would come up with an insulting plot where all his friends don't know him at all, but I especially hate it that not even Monica, his fiancée, knows any better than the rest of the gang.
  4. 705: Monica takes her engagement picture with Joey, instead of Chandler. I hate the writers and Monica and Chandler and Joey for this. What self-respecting guy would let his fiancée take engagement pictures with someone else? And have them published in a newspaper for all to see? No matter how bad Chandler's smile turned out in the photos, Monica did not need to replace Chandler in the picture, nor wonder what her and Joey's kids would look like; they could have just sent in an announcement without a picture, you know. I don't get why Joey would do such a thing to Chandler, either. That's why I altered this incident in my Love Boat story. Plus, the writers shot the continuity to hell because on all past and future occasions when Chandler is in front of a camera, he smiles just fine.
  5. 708: Chandler Doesn't Like Dogs. See the entries for episodes 620 and 702.
  6. 711: Monica can't even treat her family right. She gets offended about not receiving an invitation to her cousin Frannie's wedding, and she forces Ross to cancel his date and take her as his guest. She tells Ross that she'll be nice, but actually has every intention of sabotaging the wedding. If blood relations mean so much to you, Mon, why would you ruin Frannie's wedding day? You might have been close to Frannie once, but people grow apart, which is why you didn't get invited to Rachel's wedding to Barry. Also, Janice already tried in 706 to invite herself to Monica and Chandler's wedding, so why can't Monica see how wrong and obnoxious it is for her to force her way into Frannie's wedding reception? Monica makes the other guests uncomfortable with her obsessive talk, then she ambushes Frannie, only to find out that the groom was an ex-boyfriend. You'd think Monica would have at least looked at the groom's name on the wedding invitation, assuming that Ross let her see it, or asked Ross who Frannie was marrying out of curiosity, if nothing else. But it's clear that Monica is only obsessed about herself all through this episode. I swear, she literally is more annoying than Janice, and I hope Frannie made Monica grovel for forgiveness.
  7. 716: I hate the writers for The Truth About London. Why did they have to revamp the London incident at all? It was better when we assumed that Monica got drunk and depressed and went home with him from the rehearsal dinner. I don't want to hear how Chandler was a gentleman who at first walked her back to her room, and that Monica came to Chandler's room later, looking for Joey. I don't want to see Monica and Chandler stopping their kisses to say how it doesn't feel weird. Gee, what a subtle way to say "we're meant to be together"! NOT. I don't want the writers to foreshadow love this early in their relationship. It's bad enough that some CnM fans think they've secretly been in love as early as Thanksgiving 1988! Shouldn't Monica cutting off Chandler's toe be as traumatizing to him as Chandler peeing on Monica's jellyfish sting? Shouldn't it be a real turn off, and make them regard each other as just friends for years? I hate this unnecessary, horrible episode.
  8. 718: Monica gets anxious about never getting to sleep with someone else, and she expects Chandler to feel the same, like a typical guy. Newsflash: Chandler is not a typical guy; you're supposed to know him and love him for it, just like he knows and loves you, despite your weird obsessions and meanness. When Monica invites him to express concerns about the wedding, Chandler again says that he doesn't like the flowers and she yells (why does she have to yell?) "You're wrong! The centerpieces are fine!" then moves on to her sexual concerns, because it's all about her. He comforts her very sweetly and similarly to how he comforted her when she wanted to prove that they were as hot as Phoebe and Gary in season 5. Why doesn't Monica ever see how lucky she is to have him?
  9. 722: Although Monica does a positive thing by making Chandler reconcile with his dad, I hate how she takes the opportunity to lord her power over him. "Now that you're marrying me, you don't get to win anymore." Hello? In a marriage, shouldn't it go 50-50 with fights, or at least 60-40? Monica seems to think it's her right to win 100% of all fights from now on. And does anyone find it odd that Chandler tells a story here of his father going to high school swim meets dressed as Carmen Miranda, when 1) as a childhood smoker, Chandler would hardly have the lung capacity to swim competitively, and 2) the Bings have been portrayed as neglectful parents who don't attend Chandler's school functions? (See episode 614, where neither of Chandler's parents came to Parents' Day in the first grade.) Besides, Chandler reveals here that he stopped keeping in touch with his dad because "it's all very Cats in the Cradle." Cats in the Cradle is a song about a father not having enough time for his son, and the adult son becoming too busy to see the father. Pick a version of his childhood, and stick with it!
  10. 724: In her wedding vows, Monica calls Chandler her prince and her soul mate, twice. Given that she doesn't believe in soul mates in episode 816, is she lying through her teeth right now? Or does she have a short memory? Or does she actually believe in soul mates, but was just choosing to agree with Chandler in 816? Even if she was trying to make him feel better about Don, Monica could have said much better things to him. I covered this in chapter 3 of TOW All The Lobsters, but Monica should have basically said, "Phoebe's not right about Don. You're my soul mate, Chandler, even if you don't believe in that stuff. Let me convince you right now." She sure as hell shouldn't have said "We work hard" as if their love was an awful chore. If anyone's been working hard and making sacrifices in this relationship, it's Chandler, not you Mon.

Why I hate Monica (and the writers)-Part 1


I do not own the Friends characters, but I wish I did, because I'd give Joey and Chandler the happy ending that they should have had. And I would have definitely broken up Monica and Chandler a LONG time ago! No profit is made on these stories.

Also, I do know how to separate reality from fiction, so let me clarify that none of my hatred for Monica applies to the actress who portrays her. Courteney Cox Arquette is probably a very lovely person in real life and nothing like the screechy shrew that her character has become. In fact, she said a very lovely thing once that I will always treasure.

From an interview, "The secret life of Courteney Cox", February 1998, by Suzan Colón:

"I don't know, but I hope the last episode is something that you would never imagine. Like, Joey and Chandler finally get together, Ross and Phoebe take their kids and move to the country... and Rachel and Monica start dating, fall in love and realize they've had it with men."

Thank you, Courteney, for showing people that slash fans aren't crazy for seeing something there that conventional romantics miss. If only the writers hadn't decided to hook up the wrong couple in London that May!


People wonder why I hate Monica so much, and I say that she has transformed into a shrill, bossy caricature of her former self. But some people say that they find her less boring and more funny this way; they insist that Monica and Chandler's relationship is sweet and beautiful and involves mutual respect. And I respond by retching.

So this is a summary, season by season, of why I feel the way I do. I remember all these incidents not only because I see the reruns a lot on TV, but also because I know of some good websites with Friends transcripts, and I consult the very helpful episode guide at friends-tv.org often.

  1. Episode 602: Monica and Chandler tell their roommates that they plan to live together. Monica doesn't want to hurt her "best friend" Rachel, and Chandler points out that Joey's his best friend. Monica looks shocked and offended. "I'm not your best friend?" Both Chandler and I can't understand her reaction. "You just said...!" This incident didn't annoy me the first few times I saw it, but I blame it for all the CnM fics out there that insist on calling Monica and Chandler "best friends", when they aren't.
  2. 603: Monica and Chandler fight about what to do with Rachel's room; I've touched on this absurd dispute in my story Naked Thursdays. Monica won't even hear Chandler out, and the most she'll concede is to let Chandler have his barcalounger in the living room. What a victory for him! NOT. Chandler has wanted a game room for a long time; when Joey moved out in season 2, Chandler considered making Joey's room into a game room, and since Chandler knows how much arcade games cost, he's obviously been thinking about it since then. How long has Monica wanted a guest room filled with antiques? I've no idea, but she could have made it one during that period after Phoebe moved out, and she has had a permanent guest in the form of Rachel for years. But Chandler's never had a game room, and he rightly points out that all their friends live close by. Why does Monica want a guest room so badly anyway? She made Rachel move out because she wanted it to be just her and Chandler! This whole thing makes no sense, not even for her "hostess" obsession. You know, if Monica had given Chandler a game room, she could have convinced him to put his "ugly" barcalounger in there too, leaving her pristine living room unspoiled. And if Joey came over all the time to play foosball and arcade games with Chandler, it would be practically like having a guest too. Win-win situation. Sadly, competitive Monica prefers getting her way, and the writers ignore all the inconsistencies of this plot.
  3. 607: Monica nags Chandler to finish unpacking his boxes now that he's moved in. "Hey, that's a great idea, nailing those boxes to the floor!" Shockingly, I like Monica for a moment, when she mentions her youthful crush on Kermit the Frog; that and her mention of her imaginary boyfriend Jared in 809 renders her pathetically lovable once more. Fat Monica is so endearing; too bad she had to evolve into the Thin Bitch. Anyway, Chandler unpacks his stuff with his best friend, and Joey even decides to let off some extra flirting energy by giving Chandler a "How you doin'?"; I hate the writers for not pursuing that moment further, but I digress. Chandler cleans the apartment, but gets scared when Ross points out that he's moved everything. (This plot is an unnecessary repeat of the season 1 plot where Rachel cleaned the apartment and rearranged things, to Monica's dissatisfaction.) It's very unattractive and unfunny to see Chandler going about in fear of his girlfriend. Nor do I like Joey commenting that both Ross and Chandler "repel women"; in season 5, Chandler flirted fine with the pizza delivery girl that Ross wanted. Chandler also charmed Aurora, Janice, the Dutch girl, Kathy, Ginger, and more; he should have more self-confidence by now. I also REALLY don't like Chandler putting himself down and saying that he's so lucky to have Monica. At the end of this episode, Monica surprisingly doesn't freak out when she sees that the apartment has been rearranged. If only she could keep up this sweetness in later episodes.
  4. 609: Monica tells Chandler that she hasn't told her parents about him yet, even though they've been dating for over a year and now live together. Her excuse that the Gellers hate Chandler is ridiculous. Monica had much more cause to be worried when telling them about Richard; her parents like him but would be horrified to know that Monica was dating him. Yet Monica defiantly told her parents about Richard after two weeks. Two freaking weeks! She was not forced into confessing because of Jack Geller's birthday party; she was happy to admit the truth because she found out that Richard was falling in love with her. Chandler has said he loved her since last Thanksgiving, and did that make Monica tell her parents about him? No.
  5. 611: Joey is now dating his roommate Janine, and they are trying to double-date with Monica and Chandler. Janine maybe snooty and two-faced, but Monica continues to be loud, obsessive, and grating. I wish that both Joey and Chandler had decided to stop making excuses for their annoying girlfriends and just dumped them in this episode; they could have become roommates again and found each other instead.
  6. 613: Monica is sent home from work, but she won't admit that she's sick. That's for "weaklings and pansies" and she supposedly hasn't been sick in over three years. Wrong. Just two years ago, in 405, Phoebe got a cold that she passed onto Monica. Monica gladly let Phoebe pamper her and complained when Ross and Rachel were too busy fighting to hand her some cough drops. Back then, Monica was normal and sensible, but now the writers choose to ridiculously distort her personality, for cheap laughs. It's actually more in character for Monica to think about cleanliness and to not want to spread germs to other people (especially to the kitchen staff at the restaurant where she works). Yet here we have Monica in competition mode instead, trying to seduce Chandler in order to prove that she's not sick. What happens when he catches a cold from her too? Is she going to call him a weakling and a pansy? I wouldn't be surprised if she did. This episode highlights the drastic transformation her character has undergone over the years, becoming more neurotic, irrational, and impossible to argue with.
  7. 614: In the previous episode, Monica's character was tampered with for an absurd plot, and here, Chandler gets similar treatment. Chandler claims to have never cried before, but we've actually seen him cry, in episode 414 (when Chandler was getting over Kathy, and Phoebe yelled at him to go to the strip club) and 422 (when Ross chose both Joey and Chandler to be his best men, and all the guys broke down). Did the writers just forget everything from season 4? Besides, hasn't Chandler always been characterized as a wimpy, hyper-sensitive guy, prone to freaking out unnecessarily? He's the last guy I'd think would ever keep his composure in a sad situation, and wouldn't the gang have noticed that Chandler was "dead inside" long before now? Apparently, making Chandler look defective and feel like an outcast from the group is worth more than having a plot that make sense. Worst of all, Monica fakes a sweet, loving, understanding speech to Chandler about their future married life, just so she can coax tears from him. When her ploy doesn't work, she takes personal offense and yells at him. There's also a rehash of this plot in 623, where Rachel nags Paul (Bruce Willis's character, who seems much more the type to repress tears) into sharing his emotions, but regrets opening the floodgates. If they were going to do that, why bother messing with Chandler for this plot?
  8. 617: Monica and Chandler make each other Valentine's presents. I've covered this in chapter 2 of my Concealed Crushes story, but basically Monica got what she deserved. She forgot about making the gifts too and tried to pass off Phoebe's sock bunny to Chandler, even though Monica could have easily "made" a last-minute gift by the simple expedient of cooking him his favorite dinner.
  9. 618: When Phoebe and Rachel get burned out of their apartment, Monica welcomes them to her redecorated guest room, but she is so controlling and obsessive that Hotel Monica is more of a flop than a success. The pampering that she offers them is great at first, but then both of Monica's former roommates realize the price they have to pay for the mints on the pillow and breakfast in bed. Phoebe discovers that Monica has disabled the lock on the door, thereby depriving any guest of privacy. Plus, Monica bakes homemade goodies for you every five minutes, but you have to follow by her rules for enjoying them. You must eat the cookies while they're still hot from the oven, even though you're full from her prior treats, and you must eat them over the sink to catch the crumbs. This kind of hospitality would surely ruin any hotel or bed-and-breakfast! Even worse, Monica has evidently scared Chandler into being wary about "crumbies" too, reducing him to the level of a cowering child, instead of someone who might fight back, the way that Phoebe does with the wet paper towels. Besides the whole Hotel Monica fiasco, let me also note that Monica gets jealous in this episode because Chandler, as a favor to Joey, contacts Dana Keystone from college and goes out with her a couple of times, trying to ask her to let Joey audition in her movie. Chandler apparently dated Dana once, which somewhat justifies Monica's reaction, but she really should let it go, since it was years ago, it wasn't a long-lasting relationship, and he really has no intention to cheat on Monica in the present. Plus, considering how Monica behaves in 624 with Richard, Chandler's offense here seems very mild and meaningless.
  10. 620: Monica hates the chick and the duck, and apparently won't let Chandler invite the birds over. She even pretends to be allergic to them, as if Chandler would be fooled by that. The birds have lived across the hall from her for three years already, and did she have an allergic reaction before? No. Even worse, in the ridiculous "Chandler Doesn't Like Dogs" Thanksgiving, Monica won't respect Chandler's so-called allergy to dogs, even when he confesses that he's actually scared of the dog. So Chandler has to humor Monica all the time, but she won't humor him?
  11. 622-625: Originally, I refrained from commenting on this season finale, since it really wasn't Monica's fault that Richard showed up and foiled Chandler's plans to propose. Nor could she help it if Richard came back later and proposed to her. Likewise, how was Monica to know that Chandler's crude rants against marriage were only part of his plan to surprise her with a proposal afterward? I don't blame her for being tempted to accept Richard's offer in such circumstances, and in fact, I wish she had accepted it. However, on a second look, I realize that Monica does deserve some censure for the first half of this whole fiasco. Remember how she promised Chandler in Vegas that she would never see Richard again? She'd only had a casual lunch with Richard, but she found out that the brief contact was enough to upset Chandler, and evidently, Monica felt the same when Chandler had casual contact with Dana in 618. (Although Dana wasn't a significant relationship to Chandler, not like Richard was to Monica.) So here in 624, Richard's appearance at the restaurant understandably makes them both uncomfortable. She and Chandler exchange awkward hellos with Richard and his date, and Chandler goes into goofy idiot mode (much like he did during Thanksgiving with the Gellers), even saying, "Hi, I'm Chandler. I make jokes when I'm uncomfortable." Then the waiter suggests that Richard and his date sit next to Monica and Chandler, but why didn't anyone protest with, "Sorry, but we kind of wanted to be alone tonight?" or "No, we wanted to be in the smoking section, remember?" It's simple enough, but no one thought to say it, even though Chandler's discomfort is perfectly clear. Even worse, as the nightmare dinner goes on, Monica and Richard start chatting happily, even reminiscing about the days when they were dating. How inappropriate is that? How would Monica like it if Chandler reminisced with a significant ex like Janice or Kathy in front of her? Wouldn't she want Chandler to be aloof and try to gracefully get away from the situation if possible? But she doesn't seem to regard Chandler's reaction as an issue at all. He tells a story about catching his parents making love to the same guy, and instead of recognizing this as a cry for help, Monica doesn't rush to his aid or make an excuse to depart or do anything to end this torture. She just continues having a good time and finds Richard's poetic toast impressive. I mean, no wonder Richard got the impression that he could possibly swoop in and rekindle his relationship with Monica. She actively participated in ruining the night for Chandler, even if the rest of the finale was not her fault.