Janelle Monáe's Alex, who is pretending to be Jacqueline, but, as we already know, doesn't remember who she is after being injected with the Homecoming serum (it's complicated! When he goes to the VA to try to find out This is where he meets up with Alex/Jackie, who he doesn't realize is out to gather information (seeing what he knows about the Homecoming project).
The show based on a podcast was focused on After Walter ran away in the premiere (and again in the finale), he drove to Geist headquarters looking for his file, which he hopes will finally fill in his memory gaps. Five comes up with one last Hail Mary that stretches “This was the best I could come up with.” It’s unclear whether he believes this plan really was the best or just the easiest to pull off in the hours before the party.
Like Leonard, this is his way of making things right. But Bunda, and to a lesser extent, Audrey, have different plans. Alex's job is to make problems go away for wealthy businessmen like Leonard Geist (Chris Cooper), the founder of the Geist company, who didn't even know about the Homecoming program. “I’m old,” Leonard says.Walter doesn't buy it. They don’t always get it. It’s a (somewhat arbitrary) race against time! It’s a (somewhat arbitrary) race against time! He’s certainly not the shell of himself she feared he might be.
When we first hear Leonard's speech about the "giant" whose hunger is so big it will swallow everything up, it sounds like the words of a man suffering from psychosis. Stick around past the credits and you will discover a stinger that puts a button on the conversation between Audrey Temple (Hong Chau) and Colin Belfast (Bobby Cannavale) that transpires earlier in Audrey looks spaced out, as if she’s in a trance. Eventually, she makes her way to the Geist headquarters, following the track of someone named Alex Easton, who's information she found at the hotel room she traced herself back to. While Geist is mostly resigned to the fact that there might not be anything he can do about this plan to basically take over this portion of his company and use the product for god-knows-what, things change when Walter Cruz shows up on his farm. You just got a shitty attitude," he says. But they just drink it up until they all fall down. Online fashion retailer The Folklore argued that there were too many similarities. "Alone.” Has Walter forgotten that?
“I personally am not the type of person who’s gonna sit around and not live my life.”
We still need to learn what comes of the DOD complaint filed by Thomas Carrasco (Shea Whigham), and we still need to find out who is really responsible for coming up with the plan to drug vets and send them back overseas. Alex immediately realizes that the punch is "spiked" with the memory-erasing drug and doesn't drink any but doesn't stop Audrey from drinking it By Smita M Published on : 23:30 PST, May 21, 2020. A woman we've never seen before (Monáe) awakens with no memory in a rowboat.
While Walter does get a kind of sweet revenge, no one on 'Homecoming' season 2 gets a happy ending. While the show's Season 2 doesn't wind up telling a dramatically huge new story, its seven half-hour episodes still form an incredibly compelling arc, particularly for fans of the story creators Eli Horowitz and Micah Bloomberg told in the first season.
He has the list of names of Heidi's other patients and as he drives off, it seems as if he is on another mission. … Finkle is Einhorn!” Perhaps that map is Esmail’s (much less transphobic) way of telegraphing that Geist is Audrey and Audrey is Geist, not because she went through gender-reassignment surgery but because she has kept her identity hidden to provide cover for herself. Audrey is nervous, and Alex slips into problem solver mode. Walter, one of the main characters of Season 1, doesn't re-enter the story until Season 2's third episode, and it picks up right after the events of Season 1's finale. He was known for his walrus mustache and roles as a gruff curmudgeon. Because things aren’t looking good. Lena Dunham Wants to Be the Voice of Her COVID-19 Generation Arrange a party to help the government sell the memory-erasing product to potential clients. After Colin suggests that they pin all blame for what happened at Homecoming on a rogue employee — that is, Heidi — Audrey, says, “Not she. He was known for his walrus mustache and roles as a gruff curmudgeon. It’s a deliberately ambiguous ending, as Horowitz told us: “Hopefully it’s not just ambiguity for its own sake, but actually gets at a larger question we’re asking about what makes a person who they are.”No matter your interpretation of that final scene, it affirms that Heidi did the right thing by bucking company orders. James Murdoch Quits News Corp Board, Citing Editorial Rift In the penultimate episode we learned that Walter was the man who did this to her. She blinks twice. Now in Season 2, fans finally get to know Audrey Temple, and so did Chau. But what makes “Stop” so satisfying is the way that, on numerous levels, it sticks it to the Man — the Man in this context being the various powers that had a hand in creating the Homecoming facility, including Colin Belfast (Bobby Cannavale). Maybe, he like his workers, was just happy to follow someone else's lead for once. Audrey knew what was going on with Homecoming, but she hadn't been put in any new role at all yet.