Why do people assume that Cersei wouldn’t drink if she were pregnant? Perhaps no one in this society understands that you should not do so.
If you exclude the title sequence and the credits, this ep was about 54 min.
That’s the conclusion Tyrion jumped to when he observed she uncharacteristically wasn’t drinking.
I wanna know what the hell that White Walker was doing just outside the Wall way back in Episode 1.
In any normal TV show, it would look like Bronn was going to betray his buddies but he would pull a fast one in the end to save them. But here, I’m expecting Bronn to do something horrific to one or both. Or maybe something horrific to one that saves the other.
I thought that attack happened on the, er, north side of the Wall, and the survivor was captured by the Night’s Watch over there, then brought south to Winterfell.
But I could be remembering wrong.
What I still don’t understand is why the truth about Jon’s parentage should make any difference at all to anyone except Jon and possibly his previously believed to be siblings now known to be cousins. Surely one of the largest themes in the story was expressed by Varys to Ned once: power resides where men believe it resides. So Jon turns out not to be Ned’s bastard son at all but the legitimate son of Rhaegar Targaryan and Lyanna Stark; so what? Ooo, he’s the true heir to the throne – but for quite a while Viserys Targaryon was thought to be that, and that didn’t do him any good in the end, did it?
For that matter, and I realize I could just look it up to pin down the timeframe, who died first, the Mad King or Rhaegar? Because Rhaegar was never crowned king, so surely either way Dany would have a strong claim to being the next one in succession as the Mad King’s daughter over the son of the uncrowned heir apparent. Or have I gotten my rules of succession twisted up?
In any case, Dany’s real claim to the throne is that she has dragons and armies. Without those, her bloodline wouldn’t sway a single person in Westeros into supporting her, so why would Jon’s?
It was on the North Side, but just north. Like a short walk from the wall. South of The Fist of the First Men and Hardhome.
We have no idea how far they were north of the Wall. It’s not like there is a continuous shot from them leaving the Wall until they found the dead Wildlings.
In terms of primogeniture (on Earth anyways) a son of a male heir would be next in line, regardless of whether the male heir perished before his father.
I believe Rhaegar died first, but weren’t Dany and Jon both born after the King died anyway? Viserys (remember him?) was next in line.
It won’t make a difference, and you’re right. Jon’s parentage is nothing but a curiosity at this point in the game as far as human politics are concerned, even if nobody doubted it.
His bloodline will be very important for magical/prophetic reasons though. It’s how the world will be saved from the White Walkers and the long night/winter they bring.
♫ My best friend’s girrrrllllllffriend,
my best friend’s girrrrllllllffriend,
she used to be mine! ♫
Here’s the opening scene on Youtube:
Sure looks to me like when the walk into the forest the Wall is still visible in the background. They might travel a ways into the forest but not far.
To give the bad news that help is not coming from the lannisters, secondly he is an accomplished military leader in his own right, one more sword might not make that much difference but one more general might.
Next, I can see the war on the dead taking about two more episodes and then its on to kings landing, having Jaime as a wildcard might be worth it.
The cast are told to lie by the producers and several different endings were filmed, till the final credits roll, I am not believing anything.
And yes, I know that Rose does not work for GOT anymore
Nah, more like
Yeah, king of da norf, goes down south, picks up some blone bint starts puttin on airs. Ridin the dragon that got my maeve, best goat in the north, like its an orse
Right. And Westeros (except for Dorne) practices male-preference primogeniture, so any male heir inherits before any female. (Not sure if this strictly applies to Targaryens, however, and in any case, as in medieval Europe, it could be cast aside for political considerations.)
Did we see Podrick this episode? I assume he’s back in Winterfell.
My money’s on Ant-man flying into the Night King’s butt and then expanding.