Sons Of Anarchy The Final Season!!! Official Thread. HOLY SHIT!

I wouldn't have guessed I'd be the one to ask this question.

Who was this pornstar bitch?

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Julie Cash.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Soooo thankful for <a href="https://twitter.com/laxmodels">@laxmodels</a> and giving me the opportunity of a life time to be on <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/sonsofanarchy?src=hash">#sonsofanarchy</a> !!! Thanks for all y'all do for me !!</p>&mdash; julie cash (@juliecashxxx) <a href="https://twitter.com/juliecashxxx/status/542514196949118976">December 10, 2014</a></blockquote>
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Julie Cash.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Soooo thankful for <a href="https://twitter.com/laxmodels">@laxmodels</a> and giving me the opportunity of a life time to be on <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/sonsofanarchy?src=hash">#sonsofanarchy</a> !!! Thanks for all y'all do for me !!</p>&mdash; julie cash (@juliecashxxx) <a href="https://twitter.com/juliecashxxx/status/542514196949118976">December 10, 2014</a></blockquote>
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i thought she was in need of cash to finance her nursing school studies..? im sure Sutter and the cast pitched in :roflmao2:
 
Julie Cash.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Soooo thankful for <a href="https://twitter.com/laxmodels">@laxmodels</a> and giving me the opportunity of a life time to be on <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/sonsofanarchy?src=hash">#sonsofanarchy</a> !!! Thanks for all y'all do for me !!</p>&mdash; julie cash (@juliecashxxx) <a href="https://twitter.com/juliecashxxx/status/542514196949118976">December 10, 2014</a></blockquote>
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word.

I think that's ol girl who called somebody a n*gga during a scene.
 
Perfect song...

This was my first time watching the show live without commercials....I also knew the spoilers...

After watching it again....

Shit was done nice....

I get Jax putting on the 'hot' plates on the bike...

The ending of him talking to his dad and saying Gemma had her plans goes perfect with the song....

My opinion...others my feel different....

I agree. A series finale is supposed to tie a show up. Which is why the penultimate episodes are generally the ones with the biggest bang (Ozymandias anyone?)


The finale ties in perfectly to the pilot and the series. He completed what JT set out to do...but we also see Abel with the ring to tell us that maybe the Tellers are destined to the outlaw life.

It was a pretty gut wrenching episode, watching Jax accept his fate...almost welcoming it. The sacrifice he made for both of his families, his relationship with Wendy, the father/son relationship with Nero (which is really a great relationship when you look back at the whole thing - no matter what Jax did, Nero loved him like a son and forgave him like a father would forgive a son - he also served as a witness to Jax).

The more it sinks in, the more i like it.


BTW a group of crows is called a murder. The final song is "Come Join the Murder"
 
I agree. A series finale is supposed to tie a show up. Which is why the penultimate episodes are generally the ones with the biggest bang (Ozymandias anyone?)


The finale ties in perfectly to the pilot and the series. He completed what JT set out to do...but we also see Abel with the ring to tell us that maybe the Tellers are destined to the outlaw life.

It was a pretty gut wrenching episode, watching Jax accept his fate...almost welcoming it. The sacrifice he made for both of his families, his relationship with Wendy, the father/son relationship with Nero (which is really a great relationship when you look back at the whole thing - no matter what Jax did, Nero loved him like a son and forgave him like a father would forgive a son - he also served as a witness to Jax).

The more it sinks in, the more i like it.


BTW a group of crows is called a murder. The final song is "Come Join the Murder"

the club is still in guns and crime jt wanted the club out of crime..all jax did was head off what would be a power struggle for guns and territory if the irish fell through...which is why he killed one of the kings becuz connor had no problem dealing with nonwhites and could get his hands on just as much shit as the IRA.
 
:smh::angry: bullshit ending!!!i felt robber.if he was gonna kill his self he should have went threw the mayhem shit!!!alot of loose ends an the part i hate is for 6 1/2 years they lead us to believe gemma an clay killed john an a few epeisode into the 7 season they throw us that john killed his self..i hate that titanic ending like that nigga was flying at the head of the boat..hate it hate it hate it...:lol::smh:
 
:smh::angry: bullshit ending!!!i felt robber.if he was gonna kill his self he should have went threw the mayhem shit!!!alot of loose ends an the part i hate is for 6 1/2 years they lead us to believe gemma an clay killed john an a few epeisode into the 7 season they throw us that john killed his self..i hate that titanic ending like that nigga was flying at the head of the boat..hate it hate it hate it...:lol::smh:


We still dont really Know. Jurry Could have just been fucking with Jax.

Regardless, Gemma and Clay themselves thought they killed JT and was ready to do anything to keep that a secret.
 
I agree. A series finale is supposed to tie a show up. Which is why the penultimate episodes are generally the ones with the biggest bang (Ozymandias anyone?)


The finale ties in perfectly to the pilot and the series. He completed what JT set out to do...but we also see Abel with the ring to tell us that maybe the Tellers are destined to the outlaw life.

It was a pretty gut wrenching episode, watching Jax accept his fate...almost welcoming it. The sacrifice he made for both of his families, his relationship with Wendy, the father/son relationship with Nero (which is really a great relationship when you look back at the whole thing - no matter what Jax did, Nero loved him like a son and forgave him like a father would forgive a son - he also served as a witness to Jax).

The more it sinks in, the more i like it.


BTW a group of crows is called a murder. The final song is "Come Join the Murder"

Yeah, and Gemma had other plans. JT didn't want to be an outlaw and a father and was working to end that shit. He was just going to be a dad.

Like the last verse said, the crow(Gemma) made him hate and burn, but it no longer spoke to him(he killed Gemma and ended the manipulation). He was Sam Crow until the end. Never took off the colors to run into the truck. Left them in a great position in the 'game,' but made sure his other family was out since it was too late for JT's vision for the club thanks to Gemma.

Gemma didn't even have the decency to take herself out. Made her 'baby boy' do it. Cold blooded and manipulative to the end(cried in Unser's arms to end last season, didn't blink when he died this season).

For the most part, Sutter was on point when he chose music to end shit. His song for the ending for last season was perfect too....
 
I agree. A series finale is supposed to tie a show up. Which is why the penultimate episodes are generally the ones with the biggest bang (Ozymandias anyone?)


The finale ties in perfectly to the pilot and the series. He completed what JT set out to do...but we also see Abel with the ring to tell us that maybe the Tellers are destined to the outlaw life.

It was a pretty gut wrenching episode, watching Jax accept his fate...almost welcoming it. The sacrifice he made for both of his families, his relationship with Wendy, the father/son relationship with Nero (which is really a great relationship when you look back at the whole thing - no matter what Jax did, Nero loved him like a son and forgave him like a father would forgive a son - he also served as a witness to Jax).

The more it sinks in, the more i like it.


BTW a group of crows is called a murder. The final song is "Come Join the Murder"


Interesting. An I would like to ask concerning a song.


BTW does anyone have an HD copy of the show?

I watch on cable or FXNOW, while traveling. FXNOW is not good, it has some weird lag.

Yeah, and Gemma had other plans. JT didn't want to be an outlaw and a father and was working to end that shit. He was just going to be a dad.

Like the last verse said, the crow(Gemma) made him hate and burn, but it no longer spoke to him(he killed Gemma and ended the manipulation). He was Sam Crow until the end. Never took off the colors to run into the truck. Left them in a great position in the 'game,' but made sure his other family was out since it was too late for JT's vision for the club thanks to Gemma.

Gemma didn't even have the decency to take herself out. Made her 'baby boy' do it. Cold blooded and manipulative to the end(cried in Unser's arms to end last season, didn't blink when he died this season).

For the most part, Sutter was on point when he chose music to end shit. His song for the ending for last season was perfect too....

Ok. Song in the BEGINNING Of the episode.

Didn't it talk about, " I birthed, CAIN. " An then the camera concentrated on Jax's ABEL tattoo. Just a thought. The whole Judeo/Christian thing?

Like is Abel gonna come back as his brother's savior's? :confused:

Just a thought.
 
Man, I was stuck in a hotel without FX, but had the History channel and some other bullshit :hmm:

Started to stream it, but I waited

It had a poetic ending.

The scenery was dope and the music was fitting as always

I think they gave hints John Teller killed himself. They just never gave a clear answer. You can tell by his writings it was a possibility.

I still don't get the homeless woman. Angel of death :dunno:

Having Vic Mackey do it :lol:
 
FINAL QUESTIONS:

1. What was up with Jax's leg in the final episode?

2. Who killed Gemma's crows?

3. Who put the knife through the teddy bear and wrote that note?

4. How were they able to pull Jax's son from school and move to another country with an open abuse case from child services's?

....
 
Julie Cash.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Soooo thankful for <a href="https://twitter.com/laxmodels">@laxmodels</a> and giving me the opportunity of a life time to be on <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/sonsofanarchy?src=hash">#sonsofanarchy</a> !!! Thanks for all y'all do for me !!</p>&mdash; julie cash (@juliecashxxx) <a href="https://twitter.com/juliecashxxx/status/542514196949118976">December 10, 2014</a></blockquote>
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http://www.bgol.us/board/showthread.php?t=781854&highlight=cash
 
I don't really remember him but :smh::smh::smh:

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Sons of Anarchy actor Dimitri Diatchenko has been arrested and charged with killing and eating his ex-girlfriend's pet rabbit before threatening to do the same to her, according to authorities.

According to a press release from the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office, the 46-year-old actor allegedly waited for his ex-girlfriend to leave the house before he "skinned the pet, cooked it and ate half of it while sending her step-by-step pictures of what he did… When she returned the defendant allegedly told her he would do the same to her."



Diatchenko had apparently been living with his ex-girlfriend in their North Hollywood home for some time after they had broken up, according to Deputy District Attorney Lou Holtz.

The actor -- who plays the head Russian on SOA -- allegedly killed and ate the pet rabbit on Dec. 7, after his ex told him that the two should no longer live together.

He has been charged with one felony count of cruelty to an animal with the use of a knife, and one felony count of criminal threats. If convicted as charged, Diatchenko could face a maximum sentence of four years and eight months in prison.



The L.A. County prosecutor will be asking for bail to be set at $90,000 at Diatchenko's arraignment, which is set for Dec. 30.

Diatchenko is best known for playing Russian and Eastern European villains in a number of films, television shows and video games, including Bones, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and Call Of Duty: Black Ops. Most recently, he had a guest role on the CBS sitcom 2 Broke Girls.
 

Kurt Sutter, Charlie Hunnam talk 'Sons of Anarchy' ending on 'Afterword'


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KURT SUTTER: We had the conversations, and not to be morbid, but I think the example I used was the idea of someone that’s struggling or in a manic state or depressed or heavy hearted, that when they make that decision to end it in some way that there is a certain amount of peace that falls over them. They’re no longer burdened by whatever it is they’re burdened by. We had talked about that a little bit as being perhaps an influence on some of the choices that Jax was making.

CHARLIE HUNNAM: As you know, that resonated so clearly with me in the penultimate episode, in 712. I loved the freedom that you gave Jax and me playing him in those last two episodes. The emotional crescendo that happens for Jax certainly in this season’s story, but really in his journey, that epiphany moment of really realizing who his mother was and that specifically that she was responsible for Tara’s death—that’s sort of a moment that we were marching toward all season. And I loved that you chose to have that moment in 711, because it created that sense of clarity of vision of what he needed to do, of responsibility, but also I think that it came with that sense of liberation. If you remember, we had talked about there being various potential versions of the end in the beginning of the season, and had a couple of conversations as we went through the season, and when I read that episode, 712, even without us discussing it, I received so clearly from your writing that sense of liberation and peace and calm. And that was the moment that it really dawned on me that you had decided to really go for it, and that we were gonna say goodbye to Jax at the end. That’s when I asked you to have that conversation to talk me through if he knew exactly at that point what his plan was, because if he did know, and I felt like he did, then I needed to know, too.

SUTTER: Yeah, I think so. I had a sense from the beginning of this ride that I liked the notion of Jax being brought to the same place of his father but getting it right. You know what I mean? And the idea that he was going to go out in the same way—whether it’s tribute, whether it’s going out on the road—but I wasn’t sure how much of it I was gonna leave up to the imagination of people. There was discussion that he’s on the road, and we see that truck and we leave it sort of open-ended. Then ultimately, I felt like this has not been a show of what ifs…. This has always been a show about direct, specific choices, and direct, specific consequences, so I realized I needed to be clear in terms of whether it happened or it didn’t. And I just felt that it ultimately was the greatest sacrifice, and that’s how it would have to end.


HUNNAM: The thing that I loved about the way you chose to end the show… for me, it felt like the greatest celebration of who Jax was. I got the sense that being away from the family and being away from the club, there was no real happiness for him. And I felt truly in my heart, as the man who was so close to this character in those final moments, that he had found true peace and happiness, and I walk away from this celebrating his life and feeling as though he did exactly what he set out to do.


More on Jax’s mindset:

HUNNAM: He’s got himself into a bind. He’s in a corner and decided that the only way to extract himself from this situation and keep everyone in tact was to remove himself completely. And like we discussed, I think there was a great sense of peace and liberation that came with that decision. And then, you know, I think he knew he wanted to be out on the bike, which is where he was always happiest. He’s out there, and decided to have a little fun with the cops as you would in that situation. I know I certainly would with nothing else to lose, why not piss off 500 cops? A little extra bonus. So he’s out there on the road, and I think fate stepped in: that truck presented itself and he just thought, “Perfect. This is the moment. This is right.”….It was the final sign that this is the right course of action. Everything was gonna fine.

SUTTER: It was this sort of beautiful sadness, but like joy as well.

On Michael Chiklis’ truck driver, Milo:

SUTTER: There was an opportunity to have somebody driving that truck at the end, and I just thought I loved the callback or the irony of it being [The Shield‘s Michael] Chiklis who ultimately runs head-on into Jax Teller. And then from that, I thought, well, there’s an opportunity here to perhaps set that up in terms of who this guy is so that when he comes back into our world that it’s organic and yet, it feels a little bit like part of the fate, part of the destiny of all these characters—that he intersects with Gemma, and that perhaps spending the time to take her somewhere created that gap. You know what I mean? So that it all sort of came together. I went over and stopped by Chiky’s house and had a conversation with him about it, and he loved the idea.

On the Homeless Lady:

SUTTER: Jax understood, and that’s all that really matters….I loved the idea that people have varied opinions of who she is and what she represents and why she’s in so many key places throughout the series. In a world that’s so black and white, to have some energy that feels a little bit magical without being goofy or special effects, I think is a tip to some of the Shakespearean qualities as well as allowing people to talk and think about it a little bit.

HUNNAM: I think it worked really well. I always loved the Homeless Lady.

http://bcove.me/o0c1u8q6

http://bcove.me/rh8yjq0p
 

'Sons of Anarchy' producer Paris Barclay defends Jax's finale choice


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Spoiler alert: Sons of Anarchy‘s Dec. 9 series finale had an ending that left many fans with a burning question: If Juice was told a Son doesn’t commit suicide, how was that an acceptable option for Jax (Charlie Hunnam)? Executive producer Paris Barclay explains.

EW: One question that keeps coming up in the comments of our recap is how Jax could commit suicide if Sons don’t. I feel like creator Kurt Sutter may have addressed this during Anarchy Afterword when he described it as Jax’s “greatest sacrifice.” He truly believed he was doing it for the good of others, not for himself. Is that how you view it, or what is your take on that?

Paris Barclay: Well, there’s two different ways to look at it: One is that he is no longer a Son at that point, so the question is moot because he’s already relinquished his president’s patch to Chibs and he’s just a human being. Chibs was holding the presidential patch before Jax committed suicide. That’s the technical answer. The second answer is, and I really like it, the sacrifice. There’s a lot of religious imagery that happens here—between the blood and the bread and the outstretched arms. There’s something going on of a person who believes that what he’s doing is the best thing for others—specifically for his family. He really wants to leave a legacy that’s negative in his kids’ minds. He wants them to feel bereft. He wants them to hate him. He’s said as much. I don’t know, if my father, who’s still alive, committed suicide, that would be a difficult thing for me to forgive. So in a way I think he’s also cementing the future that he wants for his children of never going into this life and never finding anything attractive about it. And that’s a big sacrifice. So there! (Laughs)

Jax had that speech at the marker of his father’s accident: “I know who you are now, and what you did.” He says they both realized that a good father and a good outlaw can’t settle inside the same man. Some fans are having a hard time accepting that Jax would “abandon” his boys, who end up with Wendy (Drea de Matteo) and Nero (Jimmy Smits). Do you see it as “abandoning”?

I don’t. Just what I was saying, this is the way he wants them to look at him, which is not as a hero but as a criminal. And also, as Charlie explained it in the Afterword, I don’t think that the actual [decision] of what he would do with the truck was conceived until he saw the truck. I think a lot of different possibilities could’ve happened: Suicide by cop. Maybe he was thinking, “They’re gonna get me sooner or later.” I think when he saw the truck and put it together—there’s just one little shot of his eyes glancing and a flicker of a smile—that he found the poetic balance of that. And then he recognized, of course, Michael Chiklis and said, “Oh, this would be so great. The guy in The Shield would run me over. Perfect!”

I gasped when I saw that it was Chiklis, mostly because I was like, Why didn’t I think of this watching the last episode? Of course that’s why he’s here playing a trucker.

What Kurt never explained to me–and I heard it in the after show and I thought, “Why didn’t he mention it? That’s so good”—is his thinking about the way fate works then. If Milo had not stopped and taken Gemma somewhere [in 712], he might have not been coming back at the same time that he was. It’s one of those butterfly effect kind of things. And while certainly it can be looked at as some kind of a contrivance that it would happen to be the same guy who took Gemma somewhere who is in the same truck, there’s also something interesting about the decisions that Milo made to help and assist in her final journey ending up being the things that put him in this place at that time unable to stop that truck. I’m saying, “This is written.” It’s a story. It’s a mythology. It’s supposed to have a shape and a form. And that’s part of the form of it all. It’s built in reality, but it’s not a documentary. It’s a story. (Laughs)


Let’s talk about that roof scene between Jax and Chibs (Tommy Flanagan).

Beautiful.

This episode was Tommy Flanagan’s best work on the show.

I agree. Tommy Flanagan found a place going through the pain and dealing with Jax’s decision of just a mature, less emotional Chibs. Just grave, emotionally spent but at the same time solid and present for his friend. That has a lot to do with Tommy Flanagan and a lot to do with Kurt Sutter’s direction, which I think is undervalued. But Kurt has a way of helping all the actors to quickly find the tone that he imagines. And he never imagined that this is gonna be a super emotional farewell. I think their farewell when Jax was headed to prison [in the season 6 finale] was more outwardly emotional than this final farewell. But this one I thought was more powerful because their eyes were drier.

There was also that scene where Tig (Kim Coates) was talking to Chibs about whether they were really going to vote for Mayhem for Jax, and there’s a single tear clinging to Kim’s bottom right eyelid. Like it’s fighting not to fall because Chibs needs him to hold it together.

One single tear, and that again wasn’t [scripted]. It was just what they were doing living in the moment, and so sometimes we just have to film them.

Were you on set when they filmed the Mayhem vote?

I was. When they did it, that scene was so long and had so much air and so much pain floating between the lines. Even as each character voted, it was incredibly painful. I think Kurt very shrewdly tightened it up and took a lot of the air out of it. It runs almost half as long as it actually ran when it was filming because the guys were just feeling it. We pulled back on it just a touch, just to keep it moving along. The show is, whatever it was, 77 minutes. It could have gone on solidly for three hours. (Laughs) We had a lot of ground to cover, so we had to tighten it up.

I’m not sure if you’ll remember, but I was wondering if Chibs having to start his line over because he was getting emotional was scripted or just Tommy: “All those, all those in favor…all those in favor of Jackson Teller meeting Mr. Mayhem…”

That was not in the script. That was just acting. (Laughs) He’s good. But, you know, he’s not a SAG Award nominee but it’s okay. (Laughs) I just thought I’d get that in there somewhere.

Nice.

We did get one nomination.

I saw, for stunts.

Eric Norris and the stunt ensemble. That was nice.

I wanted to also talk about that scene between Jax and Nero, when Jax explains his plan. Just another crucial scene between Jimmy and Charlie.

You just get those guys in a room. That was one of the ones that I actually picked up [directing] when Kurt was hospitalized [for an appendectomy].

There was some concern—I was concerned about it because it’s a very delicate scene. But the guys just came to play. Kurt had it laid out how he wanted it shot, where he wanted the guys to be very specifically. I was there trying to channel him as much as humanly possible. “Simplicity” was all that I had to say: “Just keep the emotion as simple as possible and not try to layer anything into it.” Kurt just doesn’t like a lot of stuff on top of the words: He likes the words to be just as honest and true, and I think he used the word “direct” on Anarchy Afterword. I think that scene came together really, really well without being overly wrought and like a stiff piece of bread.

I loved that Jax was sitting in Gemma’s chair in her office. So that was very intentional.


Yes. And yeah, he’s also going through the files. He knows what she does and it doesn’t take him a long time to find stuff and put things together. He knows his mother. We were going to do a little something where there’s some remnants of her there. I’m not sure it made it to the final cut: I think it was her cigarettes or something that he was going to move out of the way. But originally, she had a pack of cigarettes that were sitting there and one of the first things he did was pick them up and move them out of the way.

Just a few more quick questions. [Ed. note: Sutter said on Anarchy Afterword that he wants fans to decide the true meaning of the Homeless Lady themselves, so we didn’t ask.] The boots Jax changed into were his fathers, yes?

They were. He gave up the sneaks. He threw them in the garbage at the beginning of the episode, and then he put on JT’s old motorcycle boots and they kinda felt good, and that’s what he wore throughout this last day.

When we saw Venus (Walton Goggins) comforting Tig, it seemed to me that she was dressed like an old lady. Was that intentional?

I did not hear if that was intentional. That may have been a Walton Goggins choice because he’s very shrewd, and a lot of times the fashions that Venus wears go through the Goggins filter because he wants to make sure they’re as flattering as possible, especially to his cleavage. (Laughs)

Some fans feel bad for Milo—Jax drove into him, and now he’ll have to live with that death. Was that ever discussed? Was it a little selfish?

(Laughs) Yeah. He ruins a guy he doesn’t know’s life. Pretty much. But I think his greater goal was to end his own and to create the family that he wanted to create in absentia.

If Wendy sells the garage will Chucky (Michael Ornstein) be okay? Can he do books at Red Woody or something?

Chucky will be okay. You saw him get more mature and express himself much better. He’s mellower. The ticks are sort of dying down. I think he’s found new meds, so I think Chucky will be all right. If there’s ever gonna be a spinoff, let’s do it with Chucky.

Do you know the reason for choosing that punkish version of “I Can’t Help Falling in Love With You” for that chase scene with Connor? That’s a song strongly associated with Elvis. Was it a Bobby reference?


I think that, too. But I think it’s another way of saying that Hamlet quote [that was the last image of the show: “Doubt thou the stars are fire; Doubt that the sun doth move; Doubt truth to be a liar; But never doubt I love”]. It’s another way of saying love is an irresistible force that drives the choices that we make.
 
shoulda known y'all woulda come thru :lol: decent final ep...it ended the way it needed to

Julie Cash.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" lang="en"><p>Soooo thankful for <a href="https://twitter.com/laxmodels">@laxmodels</a> and giving me the opportunity of a life time to be on <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/sonsofanarchy?src=hash">#sonsofanarchy</a> !!! Thanks for all y'all do for me !!</p>&mdash; julie cash (@juliecashxxx) <a href="https://twitter.com/juliecashxxx/status/542514196949118976">December 10, 2014</a></blockquote>
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funny you should say this...I watch the show on friday nites...and right after I usually jump on to GTA to "live out" the wild cowboy antics...but ya like the shield the violence/mayhem were a guilty pleasure...very short on story tho

For the most part this sums it up for me.

SOA was entertaining to watch but was never brilliant. It almost had a video game feel to it IMO, like GTA or Saints Row so I could never take it too serious.

But I was always entertained though.
 
FINAL QUESTIONS:

1. What was up with Jax's leg in the final episode?

2. Who killed Gemma's crows?

3. Who put the knife through the teddy bear and wrote that note?

4. How were they able to pull Jax's son from school and move to another country with an open abuse case from child services's?

1. ya that shit was random and pointless...I thought dude woulda suffered a blood clot like someone said

2. & 3. I seen y'all debate this a few times and making it more than it needs to be...marks and co. is the best guess we can make

4. it's TV :lol::cool:
 
I watched the first episode a few months ago and never watched it again. Has Timothy Olyphant ever played a character with a personality? He's always stiff as hell(Dead Wood, Hitman, Die Hard 4).

ok...so it's not just me...he reminds me of this autistic kid I knew
 
the club is still in guns and crime jt wanted the club out of crime..all jax did was head off what would be a power struggle for guns and territory if the irish fell through...which is why he killed one of the kings becuz connor had no problem dealing with nonwhites and could get his hands on just as much shit as the IRA.

Jax learned that he and the club are all outlaws. They were too entrenched. If he got the club out of guns at the end, then why bother sacrificing himself in the end, and destroying any ties to the club that his sons can find?
 
This ending was bullshit

*edit*

But it's to be expected. Jax going out as the Superman Jesus Assassin makes sense basing it on how things have gone throughout the series.

It did tie things up, but the ending, the mayhem vote...nah


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Jax learned that he and the club are all outlaws. They were too entrenched. If he got the club out of guns at the end, then why bother sacrificing himself in the end, and destroying any ties to the club that his sons can find?

you said he completed what JT set out to do...JT wanted the club out of crime. He was a disillusioned vietnam vet who had a beef with govt and society and created a club that was supposed to live outside of society's bullshit as he saw it..but then they got mired in criminal activity and he didn't want that either. Jax actually did achieve it at one point trading off the guns to black and brown and getting into the pussy trade (Diosa and Red Woody prod.) but it didn't last long for the reason you stated and conclusion Jax came to..theres no way to balance being an outlaw with a family life.
 
Happy getting shot and reacting like he got stung by a bee was hilarious to me

SOA was like a comic book show to me.

Jax died 54-0

and it was funny how they even had a random badly filmed chase scene in the last episode

and where did the little short Mexican come from :confused:
 
Happy getting shot and reacting like he got stung by a bee was hilarious to me

SOA was like a comic book show to me.

Jax died 54-0

and it was funny how they even had a random badly filmed chase scene in the last episode

and where did the little short Mexican come from :confused:

:lol: dude who played Happy has always been a terrible actor though:lol:

Yeah SOA like I said earlier was just a live action GTA or Saints Row
 
you said he completed what JT set out to do...JT wanted the club out of crime. He was a disillusioned vietnam vet who had a beef with govt and society and created a club that was supposed to live outside of society's bullshit as he saw it..but then they got mired in criminal activity and he didn't want that either. Jax actually did achieve it at one point trading off the guns to black and brown and getting into the pussy trade (Diosa and Red Woody prod.) but it didn't last long for the reason you stated and conclusion Jax came to..theres no way to balance being an outlaw with a family life.

Watch the episode again. SAMCRO is out of dealing guns. Connor deals with the Mayans. SAMCRO has Redwoody as their money maker, which is doing better and better.
 
Watch the episode again. SAMCRO is out of dealing guns. Connor deals with the Mayans. SAMCRO has Redwoody as their money maker, which is doing better and better.

true...but if you look at the history of the show it won't be long before they end up in some shit again..otherwise Chibs, fully aware of their business dealings and what Jax wanted...wouldn't have given the sheriff a veiled threat when she said theyre going back the cops and robbers relationship. Legit people wouldn't need to do that. They may be out of guns but they aren't out of criminal activity it took A LOT of killing to get them to that point..lol
 
true...but if you look at the history of the show it won't be long before they end up in some shit again..otherwise Chibs, fully aware of their business dealings and what Jax wanted...wouldn't have given the sheriff a veiled threat when she said theyre going back the cops and robbers relationship. Legit people wouldn't need to do that. They may be out of guns but they aren't out of criminal activity it took A LOT of killing to get them to that point..lol
Chibs is reeling from the conversation with Jax and what will happen.

With that said, whatever happens after is speculation.

Jax succeeded. At the point of his death, SAMCRO is legit and his family is leaving Charming.

Abel has the ring, but it's not a given he'll be in SAMCRO. In fact I can say that he wouldn't be in the club at all. The ring is a link to JT and Jax, and he twists the ring around the same way Jax does. However, Jax wants his sons to hate him, and they will. There is no Gemma there to push them to the club. Wendy won't. Nero won't. As long as Chibs, Tig, Happy or any of the other guys are in the club Abel won't join unless it was allowed to save Abel from a worse fate.
 
Jax learned that he and the club are all outlaws. They were too entrenched. If he got the club out of guns at the end, then why bother sacrificing himself in the end, and destroying any ties to the club that his sons can find?

He didn't sacrifice anything, he was dead the second he told the other club leaders that he killed Jury and it was all just a mistake. All he did was went out on his own terms and try to get to get the club out of the shit he got them in
 
abel is going to grow up to be a rapist or serial killer...he would be better off joining the club
 
He didn't sacrifice anything, he was dead the second he told the other club leaders that he killed Jury and it was all just a mistake. All he did was went out on his own terms and try to get to get the club out of the shit he got them in

And he sacrificed himself and his reputation. It's all semantics.

He surrendered himself to a higher purpose. The very definition of sacrifice.

The bread and wine is to drive that point home.
 
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