For those of you who watch Person of Interest, do you care much for the new character, Shaw? I really don’t. To be perfectly blunt, she’s just too annoying to be likeable at all.
Given her personality and her tendency to want to solve every single problem by shooting someone, I’m expecting that she’ll eventually get herself killed.
But she loves Bear. She’s mellowing and I think she’s there to show the growth that Reece has been through. He wasn’t a whole lot different than she was in the pre show flashbacks but look at him now! He has relationships with people that don’t involve threats and violence.
I do like her; I like her relationship with Finch. As we discovered last night, she isn’t as cold as she makes herself out to be. I don’t like that she’s taking the spotlight off of John, though - he’s my favourite character on the show.
Like any red-blooded heterosexual male, I like Sarah Shahi - but seriously, they seem to have just shoe-horned her character in doing stuff that John managed solo before, and I’d rather the screen time went to the Root/Amy Acker character.
Speaking of which, my suspicion is we’re being prepped for a spin-off with Root and Shaw doing what Howard and John do, except for The Machine and its agenda. This season will be Howard reforming Shaw while his baby straightens out Root, and away we go.
I like her. She’s raw and cold-blooded. They’ve taken some of the edge off John because his character has developed beyond the blood-thirstiness, and Shaw is taking up the slack.
Yeah, this. Audiences do enjoy the ‘ice-cold badass character’ storylines, but when it’s a character we’ve gotten to know, the same old Ice-Cold Badass stuff gets old (and harder to reconcile with our wishes to see an empathetic protagonist).
Also, as mentioned in this thread: yes, Carter-in-the-bar was an enjoyable sequence. (You knew something was going to happen when the ‘rookie’ started spouting misogyny.)
Also also, to another poster up there: Harold, not Howard.
My theory is that the Machine has a “suicide mission” planned for Root. There’s something it needs done, but it has calculated that whoever does the job probably will not survive. So it’s going to send Root, because it knows she’s a total nutcase and is essentially expendable.
This will open up all sorts of disturbing questions about what the Machine is becoming…
I’m not sure John was ever blood-thirsty - I recall from the first episode something along the lines of, “I’m very good at killing, but I don’t like it much.”
I don’t watch PoI, but since they hired Sarah Shahi, that meant Chicago Fire had to suddenly write her character out, which was awkward. Not that her character wasn’t a little awkward. Not that Chicago Fire doesn’t *live *for awkward.
I don’t care much for Shaw, and I actively loathe Amy Acker/Root. I prefer the focus to be on John, Harold, Carter, and Fusco, but I suppose the show has to evolve. More John!!! More Carter!!!
Or you could make it POI: Hawaii. Which makes a certain kind of gustatory sense. Plus, you’d get some Five-O style fanservice. Like Shaw in a bikini simultaneously riding a long board and shooting people. Man, this stuff writes itself, doesn’t it?
The thing is, we’ve seen that the machine is everywhere. How can Harold be so driven to chase the numbers in New York, and uncaring about everywhere else? I’d imagine the most numbers would be generated by the largest cities - more surveillance, more people, more data to work with - but it seems like there should be a POI: Chicago, POI:LA, maybe POI: London. For terrorist work, it watched Shaw all over the world.
I totally agree. The sooner they kill Root, the happier I’ll be. She’s proven time & time again that she’s a total psycho whackjob, and I really can’t see her ever becoming a “good guy,” altho she might play along with them for a while if it served her purposes.
As for Shaw, the difference between her and John is that John isn’t sociopathic, just hardened. From last week’s episode, we know that Shaw has always been a sociopath. (No, the car accident didn’t make her one. It just showed that she was one, since he didn’t have anything like a normal reaction to the news that her father had just died.)