";s:4:"text";s:2766:"We use it to refer to anyone we feel is "off" whether it's applicable or not. Instead, Joe is consumed with removing threats from Beck's life, and Benji was at the top of the list.On Instagram, we're a fashionista and foodie, when in reality, we're sitting at home in a ratty robe eating frozen dinners.It's easier to write off someone as a "monster" instead of facing the fact that regular humans are capable of evil. Current Episode (aired 26 Dec. 2019) Love, Actually.
He sneaks up on you, and it's the best possible outcome for a series where the protagonist is an antihero.There are scary people in the world, Beck. Be the first one to add a plot. The fault in calling YOU a guilty pleasure is the implication that … Besides, can we ever get a full picture of a person through their digital footprint? He's the problematic "Nice Guy" that everyone talks about these days.He thought he owned Beck -- that he was entitled to her the second she walked into the bookstore. He scours through her social media, cell phone, and laptop, watches her have sex with her ex-boyfriend, and pleasure herself.No one is safe from Joe's biting commentary. Next Episode (airs 2021) Episode #3.1. If Joe was selfless, wouldn't his violence be directed at Ron before Benji?On Facebook, life is sunshine and rainbows, but the truth is we're struggling to make ends meet.Right now, if Joe is the embodiment of a Millennial "Nice Guy," then Beck is the struggling Millennial woman. Synopsis:Joe meets Beck, falls in love and goes down a social media rabbit hole to learn everything about her.
Season 1 | Season 2 » See also. You probably dated or are related to a Joe, or had a Joe hit on you. As the hour progressed, it was evident that he made himself the hero of his own story, but most tellingly, the savior in hers.If anything, Joe has tipped us off that Beck is full of surprises. The dissonance is astounding but also compelling.We're watching a handsome, dark-haired white guy with boundary issues and violent streaks violate a woman, and yet we find him endearing, charming, and funny. That is where YOU masters the art of mirroring society and reflecting our own culture back to us so brilliantly that we enjoy the ride despite being read to hell and back.He makes snap judgments (some of which have legs), but he also exhibits a stunning lack of self-awareness in addition to being hypocritical and contrary.Penn Badgley as Joe is already intoxicating. However, it stings less because while he's formulating strong opinions about everyone around him (and us, by proxy), we're doing the same to him.You encounter a Joe every single day. He becomes so obsessed that he tracks her IRL (and they meet again).