Cassie confirms she has broken up with McKay.According to Levinson, the intent of the party was to not appear to closely to the opening party of the first episode, intending for it to appear as a party taking place at 5am.It's only been around a week since the events of the specials, which take place around Christmas.HBO Max actually crashed for many users due to over activity.According to Angus Cloud, this episode was filmed on location for five days and each day was 7:00 PM till sunrise, all solid all-nighters.This episode takes place on Monday December 31, 2018.The title of this episode is a reference to the Bob Dylan song " Tryin' to Get to Heaven" from his 1997 thirtieth studio album, Time Out of Mind.Aiden Ashley, Diana Grace, Kenzie Anne, Trenee Bowman, Shannon Caetano, Kiajah Powell, and Consuella Torres as Strippers.Rogelio Camarillo as Strip Club Bartender.and Kathrine Narducci as Young Fezco's Grandmother.But Nate knows – and we know – that he changed not because of some blunt force trauma to the head but because he discovered his dad’s sordid sex tapes.Rue and Jules cross paths with each other as East Highland celebrates New Year in an unforgettable party. “Somewhere around eight or nine, you darkened,” says Marsha, adding that maybe he was hit in the head with a baseball. What went so wrong that her “sweet little baby” turned into who Nate has become. What comes next, though, produces a rare moment of sympathy for Nate as Marsha wonders out loud what went wrong with her son. “They dropped the charges… I didn’t f***ing choke her,” he says with such insistence that it sounds like he actually believes what he’s saying. The conversation grows increasingly tense as Nate refuses to admit that he’s an “angry” person – or that he choked Maddy after the fair last season (he most definitely did). They sit down for a heart-to-heart fuelled by whisky and white wine. Nate finds his mum drunk-dancing around the kitchen. Gosh, just kiss already!Įven Marsha doesn’t know what’s wrong with NateĪfter Cal’s exit from the Jacobs household, Marsha is having a ball. Their conversation turns into a movie date night after they discover they’re both huge fans of Stephen King’s Stand By Me. Number two: the potential fallout promises too much drama to pass up. Number one: Lexi’s right she never does anything for herself and this play is her baby. Selfishly, I’m glad to hear Fez encourage Lexi to move forward with it. She’s suddenly unsure about staging her play (Cassie is looking increasingly unstable and admittedly a theatre production dramatising her flaws probably wouldn’t help things). And for now at least, it’s hard to disagree with her.Įpisode six is a treat for fans craving more Fezco-Lexi content – and by the looks of Twitter, that’s a lot of you. “I ruined my life for you,” she tells him. He closes his bedroom door behind them, essentially isolating Cassie from the outside world. It’s another standout episode for Sydney Sweeney, who plays unhinged teenager pitch-perfectly as she screams again and again that she’s done NOTHING WRONG!!! The episode closes with Nate eventually texting Cassie to pack her stuff – she can stay with him for a while. Maddie isn’t the type of person to forgive and so Cassie places all her hope in standing by Nate, who is, of course, ignoring her texts. Of course, Cassie knows she’s kidding himself – but she also knows there’s no way out from here. In an unexpected turn of events, she insists she’s done nothing wrong – yelling at her mum and sister that “THERE WAS NO CROSSOVER” between her relationship with Nate and Nate’s relationship with Maddie. But remarkably, Cassie isn’t backing down. The fallout from last episode’s Cassie-Nate revelation is in full swing. Not that we’re complaining or anything – if Euphoria has taught us anything, it’s to be grateful for every crumb of hope this show deigns to give us. Most ominously, some viewers predicted that Rue might end up sex trafficked given Laurie’s ominous words in episode five: “The good part of being a woman is that even if you don’t have money, you’ve still got something people want.”īut no, by some miracle, episode six opens with Rue sitting at her family dining table. A more believable place for Rue to end up come episode six might’ve been holding up a diner for some money to pay off her debts, or perhaps sleeping in an underpass. The last time we saw her, she was sprinting out of drug dealer Laurie’s home after spending the night strung out on morphine – it was the first time she had done intravenous drugs and seemed to be the beginning of the end for her.
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