I don’t buy the security guy. He really wants Echo dead. He would not use her to give his message to the FBI guy. He doesn’t trust her, and would expect her to screw it up, go “off profile” even though the profile was a clandestine one. Probably kill the FBI guy he wanted to help him. Nope.
Topher doesn’t seem right for it. He is too hung up on his technology and his toys. He gets to play with the coolest thing ever, and gets to use people who “volunteered”, so no skin off his back.
Wait, here’s something. Why do I get the impression that Topher created the equipment used? Didn’t they say something to that effect? But then how could the Dollhouse’s have been around in the '80s? Topher would have been a child. Hmmm.
I’m not assuming that Whedon has revealed all his secrets in the first 13 episodes. Assuming that he keeps the identity of the mole unknown, he could change it with the proper justification. I do, however, think he has a specific person in mind himself, and is not pulling a “24” or “Lost” where the writers don’t know the answer when they ask the question.
In addition to this, I think I big reason this episode seemed like such an improvement is that we’re finally getting some of that Joss Whedon snappy dialogue that us hardcore fans love so much. The going from the drama to the funny and back, on a dime, in one scene.
Also, we’re seeing some interestingly ambiguous characters. I agree Topher is shaping up to be a great character in that respect; also, the software mogul guy–you genuinely felt sympathy for him, and yet he was also no doubt about it a slimy little creep.
And, to get back to the point about the humor, the “man on the street” interviews were a hoot.
Great episode. But didn’t Echo say something like that the message was triggered when a specific series of personalities was put together in this particular method? Or something like that. So it could have been in the system for a while, just waiting for Topher to compile a specific profile that matched it’s criteria.
I was thinking about it this afternoon, and I can’t remember if they guy’s wife died “instantly” in the accident, or if perhaps she lingered for a few days (maybe in a coma) and a scan could have been taken.