yourlibrarian: ArthurPoint-the_muppet (MERL-ArthurPoint-the_muppet)
yourlibrarian ([personal profile] yourlibrarian) wrote in [community profile] tv_talk2025-05-20 11:11 am

TV Tuesday: Who'd Have Thunk It?

Laptop-TV combo with DVDs on top and smartphone on the desk



There are shows whose twists and turns kept us on our toes so much that we developed our own theories. How have those theories compared to canon reveals or developments? When were we super wrong about something? Or when were we the person who called it first (at the kitchen table or in an internet discussion)?
starfleetbrat: photo of a cool geeky girl (Default)

[personal profile] starfleetbrat 2025-05-21 12:43 am (UTC)(link)
There's a theory going around that Doctor Odyssey is a covid dream and/or that the ship is the ship of the dead ferrying passengers to heaven. I fully support it, because its the only way that show makes sense. Theres so many weird things that defy explanation if it was a real ship, but also, they make way too many references to heaven for it not to be the ship of the dead. Even in the last ep they literally said that the Odyssey wasn't heaven and it wasn't hell, it was somewhere in between. I mean REALLY.

I need that show to either be renewed so it can be revealed, or for the showrunner to confirm if it gets cancelled.

Another one I heard recently is that in 911 the character that recently died isn't actually dead, that its all a dream another character is having. I don't buy that its a dream, but if the character isn't dead my theory is the character was unconscious not dead when the people in hazmat suits removed the "body" and they've taken the character back to a government lab somewhere to work on a cure/experiment. I'm not convinced the character isn't dead like a lot of people, its more likely the death will stick, but if somehow it is revealed the character is alive? then thats my theory.

executrix: (Default)

[personal profile] executrix 2025-05-21 07:16 am (UTC)(link)
Sounds like the Doctor Odyssey/Good Place crossover practically writes itself.