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@eriingo
from 25 to 26, you’re still my favorite boy. via Boom's Insta 090126

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Aside from the visual symbolism, another really interesting element of the pilot is how Barth talks.
Take the pool conversation, for instance. It perfectly supports my argument that Barth’s relationship with faith is defined by a wounded attachment, not indifference. When he says, "I stopped thinking about God a long time ago because he never helped me," he’s not saying God doesn't exist. He just sounds heartbroken and disappointed. He isn't questioning God’s existence, he’s questioning His absence. And when he says, "Maybe your God is kinder than mine," that’s where it gets really fascinating. Taken literally, it makes no sense. There's no such thing as "your God" and "my God." What he really means is: the God you’ve experienced and the God I’ve experienced feel like two completely different entities. Ultimately, he’s rejecting the version of God that’s been handed down to him through a lens of shame, abandonment, and exclusion.
That’s why I think it’s totally plausible that the way he phrases his argument is almost a subconscious way of wanting Tanrak to prove him wrong. Look at how the conversation plays out: 1. Barth brings up the issue. 2. Tanrak tries to reassure him. 3. Barth pushes back. 4. Then Barth abruptly shuts it down with, "Forget it." That’s a classic pattern for a character who touches on a nerve and then immediately retreats before they have to leave themselves emotionally exposed. If Barth truly didn't care, he wouldn't even bother having this conversation. The whole scene feels like he's testing a hypothesis: "Nobody would believe me." "God never helped me." "Maybe your God is kinder." Those lines are practically begging to be contradicted. Not in a manipulative way, but in the way wounded people sometimes put their most painful assumptions out there just to see if anyone will fight back against them. It’s like when someone says, "People always leave," and then immediately changes the subject. The statement is half defense mechanism, and half a desperate hope that someone will say, "No. Not everyone."
What makes Tanrak so important in this context is that he’s the first person in the pilot who consistently refuses to abandon Barth. He comes looking for him. He shares the pool with him. He listens instead of condemning him. So, when Barth is confronted with Tanrak's unwavering belief in God, I don't think the real dramatic question is whether Barth intellectually buys into it. The question is whether Tanrak's actions make it harder for Barth to keep convincing himself that he's completely alone. Think about it: people who truly don't care about faith don't spend their time fighting it. But Barth argues with it constantly. When he’s talking in the pool, part of him wants to shut the conversation down, but another part of him desperately wants Tanrak's worldview to be true. That's what makes the scene so heartbreaking. Barth sounds like someone who has entirely stopped expecting comfort, yet he's still listening when someone finally offers it.
If I had to reduce both characters to a core question after the pilot, it might be: "Am I truly seen, known, and accepted?" But the way they live out that question is completely different.
Barth's struggle is outward and externalized. Far from oblivious, he is highly conscious of the aspects of his identity that invite rejection. He knows who he is, what he desires, and the precise cost of those realities. The pool conversation epitomizes this dynamic. When Barth notes that the community would believe Tanrak over him, the subtext is entirely about credibility, inherent worth, and belonging. It serves as a proxy for the deeper question: "Why am I always the outsider?"
Tanrak’s question is almost the exact inverse: "If everyone accepts who I'm supposed to be, then who am I actually?" His struggle is completely internal. Everyone admires him, trusts him, and sees him as a good person. He’s the one people would actually believe. But that doesn't mean he's free. Tanrak looks like he belongs everywhere, but the real question is: does he belong to himself?
Barth looks at Tanrak and sees someone who fits in. Tanrak looks at Barth and sees someone who is unapologetically himself. They become mirrors for each other.
What’s fascinating is that even their relationship to God seems to echo this. Barth's question to God is: "Where were you?" Tanrak's question might eventually be: "What do you actually want from me?" They sound different on the surface, but both are fundamentally about connection. Both are trying to figure out their place in the world, and both want to know if they are loved for who they truly are. One fears rejection, while the other fears uncovering a truth that could shatter the acceptance he’s always relied on.
So, I think it's a really beautiful reading that they're both orbiting the exact same human question: "Can I belong without losing who I am?" Barth starts the story focusing on who I am. Tanrak starts it focusing on belong. The tension, and honestly, the romance, is that each of them has to learn the very thing the other one already knows.
"When a foreigner resides among you in your land, do not mistreat them. Love them as yourself." (Leviticus 19:33-34)
TICKET TO HEAVEN (2026) Episode 01, dir. Backaof Noppharnach
You have to ask yourself: do you want to spend your life with that love or with Him.
TICKET TO HEAVEN premiers on May, 30th
TICKET TO HEAVEN | EP 1

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TICKET TO HEAVEN | 1.01
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TICKET TO HEAVEN (2026) episode 1.
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He tried

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idk if this is an usamerican thing or not but it always blows my mind as a small european country resident that yall have many names and types of apples???? what do you mean its not just red yellow or green??? why is it so complicated??? who is granny smith????
'whats your favorite apple' 'red' 'no i mean like what type' '??????' actual conversatiom i've had with a mutual from usa
THIRTY TWO??????
Listen that doesn’t even account for all the weird shit local farmers are getting up to.
May I present the best apple:
the world is so big and beautiful
I don’t like raw apples but I like them cooked so I’ve experimented a bit. I learned that in medieval Europe people used to put apples in like pottage and soup and whatnot so I tried putting them in soup and they’re pretty good. They make the soup slightly sweet. I basically chop them up in little pieces and sweat them like an onion. Pretty good in chicken soup.
HAPPY FIRST EVER INTERNATIONAL AROMANTIC VISIBILITY DAY

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TICKET TO HEAVEN | EP 1
number one thing i want for public bathrooms is for them to be unisex accessible safe private and clean. number two thing i want for pubic bathrooms is for them to have flat surfaces in the stalls you can put your handheld items down on when youre shittin. ive encountered it in like two bathrooms ever and it changed my life for real.