Tagged: Westworld Season 1

Teddy Is Dr. Ford’s Bladerunner

Guys, love the show. Two theories I have had for a few weeks that are looking increasingly plausible: I think the massacre at Escalante was Teddy, as Dr. Ford’s agent, cleaning up the bicameral misfit toys after Arnold was killed. Maybe Ford created him to be a kind of Bladerunner,...

Please Answer Westworld Question

Thank you in advance for your time in responding. I’ve listened to all 30 of your podcasts (it feels like you are my friends somehow), read all the data dumps online and watched each episode 4 times. I thought I had a handle on things but one thing keeps nagging...

An Analysis of the Westworld Maze

I’m a friend of George, whose email you read out for episode 8 telegraph. We’ve been discussing the maze reveals in episode 10 and I thought I’d share my musings. I think the maze allegory is an elegant, and fascinating theory of consciousness. It feels like a new event is...

Westworld Episode 10 Theories: "The Bicameral Mind"

Westworld Episode 10 Theories: “The Bicameral Mind”

Westworld Episode 10 Theories: “The Bicameral Mind” The Season One Finale of Westworld overwhelmingly answered many of the questions and theories presented throughout the season, however, that didn’t stop the #ShatNation from filling our Telegraph Inbox. Gene, Rog, & Big D close up 2016 by responding to the Top 15...

Wolf Reference

Hi Guys, Listening to the new Podcast right now and thought I’d answer a question you posed…. The wolf in the Episode is a Timber (Grey) Wolf. I see no GOT reference here. But I do have some training in the Native American belief in Spirit Animals and other symbols,...

The Handshake!

Hi Guys Been listening since the first episode, love your podcasts. I have tried many others but yours is the only one I have stuck with all the way. I have a question about your theme music, is it The Ecstacy of the gold? I am wondering if you just...

Arnold, Ford, and Liberty

Dear Gentlemen, It appears that I was correct and suffering was at the heart of Westworld. My error was to assume that suffering was a bi-product of Ford’s creativity. Instead, it was deliberate. The result is an interesting distinction between Arnold’s motives and Ford’s. They are distillations of Isaiah Berlin’s...