

It’s cool to see the world spread out, even into history. It was a colonial war, and we certainly know about those. This was a conflict that was about 20 or 25 years before the present day of the show.


And it’s also fun because we’ll get to see Alder through the ages. TVLINE | And Tally’s nightmare with the worms was our first taste of that? I make tough decisions every day, and I stand by every single one of them.” Now the question is: Does she? Maybe there was one that she doesn’t feel so good about, and because of Tally’s connection to her, she’s going to have access to some PTSD that she’s not supposed to have. In Episode 10 last season, Tally and Alder had that really intense conversation in the caves. TVLINE | And her struggle isn’t over yet. When I saw the special effects in post, and I saw that cobwebby network they created, and the wonderful Emilie Leclerc who was just giving me David Lynch vibes when she was bringing everything to life… that was one of those moments in the show where everything just comes together in a cool way. TVLINE | I guess this isn’t a question, but that whole de-Biddifying sequence was so cool. It’s quite the assignment, but she just leapt in there because she’s Tally. They’re kind of like biological batteries for Alder. I think she would have found a way to make it work, but that was the choice she made. She believes in her truth so utterly that she does insane things. And that’s very Tally to jump into the breach like that. She was! But did she think that decision out? No, not much. If Raelle and Abigail hadn’t returned, was she really prepared to just live out the rest of her days as a Biddy? TVLINE | Let’s start with Tally, who’s already going through it. But if it was just a dream, why did Tally wake up to find herself covered in worm bites?īelow, Laurence answers some of TVLine’s burning questions from Tuesday’s season premiere: All that said, BBC America can look forward to a few letters of mixed reactions, and Comedy Central can start kicking themselves for not being the first to snatch it up.The premiere ended with Tally having a terrifying nightmare in which Alder and her team were battling (and losing to) some giant worms in the jungle. I'm white"), Bubbles' dragging a drunken Ricky home in the back of his go-cart, or the visit from the hysterically creepy Bible Pimp, there'll be at least something that makes you giggle whenever you think of it. Whether it's J-Roc's identity crisis ("I hate to admit it. If you give it a chance you won't have a single favourite episode more like a collection of favorite moments pulled from each ep. Some of the funnier aspects I've found have been Ricky's constant mispronunciations (there are at least then in every episode), Mr Lahey's constant sh*t analogies, and, of course, Bubbles, who makes even the bad episodes worth watching. As another reviewer said it's not an accurate reflection of life in a Nova Scotia trailer park: more like if you took the weirdest members of every trailer park in NS and put them together to dumb it up. If you can get over the bad acting and the political incorrectness you'll find one hell of a show. However, since then I've forced myself to watched the entire Seasons 1-3 and I have to say it: man, was I wrong. When I first left a review of this show I was fairly unimpressed with it.
