Don't tell me not to be angry! I'm Irish; 'tis my birthright! I'm getting a drink.
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@hellolaracroft
Don't tell me not to be angry! I'm Irish; 'tis my birthright! I'm getting a drink.

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The good thing about being an adult: I can buy pizza in the middle of the week and have an emotional breakdown.
The bad thing about being an adult: I'm also the one who has to go to work and deal with my own mess in a few hours.
Season 1 Declan would've hated Season 2 Declan
I didn't want to come here and talk about Rivals again. I swear I didn't. But I just ate three slices of pizza, drank a glass of wine, and I'm very upset because I've been holding back from talking about this for weeks.
So, since I don't have dominic treadwell-collins' personal phone number to cry into his ear, I'm going to leave my rant here instead. And this is about Declan.
I don't want to talk about the other things in the writing that bothered me or the other characters anymore, because I can barely see my keyboard through the alcohol and the tears.
maybe if the season hadn't been split into two parts,
maybe if I already had access to the next six episodes,
I wouldn't feel like Declan's writing has become so lazy.
But since they split it into two parts, there's no other way to put it: I can only judge what I've actually been given. (Yes, Disney, I will curse you until the end of my days for this criminal release schedule.)
Declan O'Hara was never a saint.
In the first season, he was a neglectful husband, an absent father on many occasions, drank too much when under pressure, and frequently put his work above his own family. Therefore, the problem is not that season two is showing his flaws. Those flaws have always existed.
What bothers me is that Declan's flaws now seem different from the ones that were previously established, and the series does not develop that change.
In season one, surprisingly, it wasn't Aidan's handsome face that made me root for him (although, of course, I fully acknowledge the effect). He was an outsider in Rutshire. He frequently placed himself in a position of moral superiority, with his hero complex, wanting to drag the "bad guys" before the court of public opinion. He was not a present husband or father, but he was still a "good person" trying to do the right thing.
when Paul Stratton is homophobic, Declan calls him out and points out his hypocrisy.
when Deirdre puts a misogynistic note on Cameron's office door, he is the one who reminds Cameron that she is excellent.
when Tony refuses to let him conduct the interview with Thatcher, he tries to resign because he would never compromise his professional integrity.
when he discovers what happened to Daysee, unlike Tony, he chooses to sacrifice the institution rather than the victim. He is disgusted by what goes on there.
and when Rupert shows up with the proposal he stole from Cameron after seducing her, Declan throws it into the fire because he considers it dirty and disgusting.
It's easy to root for this guy, isn't it?
He's nowhere near perfect, but he has clearly defined moral principles and follows them in a way that makes sense within the character's established portrayal.
He repeatedly chose the harder path when he believed it was the right thing to do, even when that meant ending the day drunk, drowning in debt, and unemployed.
So far, that isn't happening in season two. The only good thing he does in season two is take his clothes off and I'm not complaining, far from it. my smartwatch kept going off every single time he appeared naked. watching that was better for my heart than going to the gym, and that is the fault of inconsistent and superficial writing.
And it shows up even in the smaller things.
In season one, Declan's cruelty was generally directed only at people he considered corrupt, hypocritical, or morally reprehensible. He frequently put himself on a pedestal because of it.
That's why it surprised me to see him being deliberately cruel to Maud before an important performance. Yes, he apologizes in the latest episode. Yes, their marriage has been failing for a very long time. But even so, it was one of those moments where I felt like I was looking at a version of him that I didn't immediately recognize. And I refuse to talk about that failed marriage. Because both of them are responsible for that disastrous marriage, and if you're being honest, you know it. I'm tired of the competition over who's worse.
In season one, he has no problem sacrificing the institution for the sake of an individual (Daysee), because that means doing the right thing.
In season two, he throws Rupert out of Venturer without the series spending more than two minutes on his decision. All the show gives us is a frustrated expression and somehow expects that to be enough for him to discard a friend for the sake of an institution in a way that feels coherent.
You see, Rupert is not just a friend.
Rupert is not just a colleague. Rupert started Venturer, financed the project, and bought half of Declan's property to help him with his debts. When no one else was offering a solution, Rupert bet on him. (And Declan is aware of that ā at least that "Thank you, Rupert" at the end of season one certainly leads me to believe so.)
Rupert also represents one of the biggest lessons Declan learned in season one. At the beginning, Declan judged Rupert by his reputation. Later, he learns that Rupert is more complex than his public image suggests. That's why, when season two seems to push Declan back toward making judgments based on scandal and public perception, it feels like a step backward.
"but don't you see the look on Declan's face when Rupert wins the election? It's obvious Declan doesn't like Rupert!"
Disagreeing with Rupert does not mean Declan doesn't like Rupert. They have always disagreed. Rupert comes from a privileged conservative background; Declan is an Irish socialist. And apparently the series has forgotten what it means to be Irish under a Tory government, because Declan has every reason to dislike a Tory victory regardless of who wins.
But the fact remains that Declan knew Rupert's reputation. He knew about the scandals. He knew his history. Even so, he became his friend, chose to trust him, founded Venturer alongside him, and accepted his help when Rupert bought part of his property.
Season one Declan establishes a very specific moral pattern:
He does not care about personal consequences when he believes he is right.
He sacrifices money, status, and security for his principles.
He refuses to participate in something he considers unethical.
He judges actions based on what is morally right, not on what is convenient for a public image.
He did not abandon people to protect institutions. On the contrary, he abandoned institutions to protect what he believed in. That's why it's difficult not to feel a contradiction when he suddenly seems willing to push Rupert out of the very company Rupert helped build.
Even so, in theory, it could make sense for Declan to decide that Rupert should leave Venturer. With responsibility comes pragmatism, and it makes sense that he would be more concerned about Venturer's survival than the purity of his principles. Venturer is no longer just a job. It is the livelihood and investment of a lot of people who believed in him. It is his professional dream, something he is building from the ground up. That could have been a genuinely interesting character arc.
For this to work dramatically, the series would need to show Declan struggling with this decision. There would need to be scenes where he:
feels guilty;
acknowledges the debt he owes Rupert;
questions whether he is putting the company's image above loyalty;
debates whether he is repeating Corinium's mistakes;
has an honest conversation with Rupert about what is at stake.
The problem is that the series doesn't even try to convince me of this direction. As a result, the decision doesn't feel like the next logical step in his character arc, but rather an abrupt change in behaviour.
I'm not saying Declan couldn't make this decision. I'm saying the series didn't do the homework necessary to convince me that this decision makes sense for who he is.
When you omit the reasoning of such a central character, the audience fills in the gaps with the worst possible interpretation.
In Declan's case, the gap was filled with: "he's an ungrateful hypocrite." And the situation with Cameron in Ireland only escalates the problem.
I refuse to talk about his relationship with Cameron here, alright? The actors have more chemistry than the periodic table, and their dance scene is the hottest scene in the entire series. The problem is that the show seems to have decided that chemistry can replace development. It can't. Declan just comes across as a terrible friend and father, since he's practically devouring his friend's girlfriend with his eyes (the same friend he pushed out of the company, who is going through the lowest point of his personal and professional life) while his own son is in love with her.
Very little character development. Just a checklist you need to tick off before rushing on to the next item.
"cause scandal and drama with this storyline?" check.
"move pieces into place for the next plot event?" check.
The problem is not what he does; it's how the series shows it (or doesn't).
His actions could have made sense if the series had devoted time to exploring and developing them. The rushed pacing murders character and logic, and makes it very difficult for me to root for him.
And I wish I could say that at least he's still excellent at his job and obsessively devoted to it. But then Tony gets his hands on those tapes with all the difficulty of stealing candy from a child. LOL.
Declan knows exactly who Tony is. We know who Tony is. Declan himself constantly reminds us who Tony is. So why did he make it so easy for him?
who is this guy?
am I ever going to see season one Declan again?
or maybe in part two they'll finally give him enough time to develop, so he doesn't come across as contradictory and superficial?
can I still hope that part two will redeem him?
or is this the end of the road for us after this disastrous sequence of scenes?
(I got a little hopeful in episode 6 when I found out he didn't sleep with Cameron, because that gives us time to develop them properly without trampling over the character traits that define him.)
and I don't want you to reach the end of this ridiculously long post thinking that I stopped rooting for Declan because he isn't perfect.
for God's sake, I spent two weeks (episodes 4 and 5) rooting for the bloody Tony Baddingham! Look, I have many issues, but I have no problem rooting for someone who is morally corrupt.
I'm not asking for a perfect Declan. I'm asking for a Declan who makes sense. If the series doesn't show me his development and internal reasoning, then when he makes questionable decisions, that's not a "complex character." That's lazy writing.
Declan's development has been very poor, or practically nonexistent, and that hurts more than anything he has actually done on screen. So here's the question: is it really worth assassinating character development just to serve plotlines and reach the events you want to get to?
I also don't want you to reach the end of this post thinking that I hated the series, because that's not true! It's still my favourite show. It's a huge and incredible season.
the cinematography is gorgeous.
the costumes are gorgeous.
the soundtrack is gorgeous.
i would like to personally shake hands with everyone responsible for those departments.
possibly kiss the camera operator. respectfully.
Having issues with a character arc does not mean i hated the show. It does not mean i think i could write it better. I absolutely could not. I possess approximately 10% of the talent required to create something this ambitious.
It simply means there are parts of Declan's development that aren't working for me right now. The overall balance is still overwhelmingly positive. They could keep making seasons for the next ten years and i'd still be sat here watching this cast every single time.
Also, if this post sounds combative, please know that there is currently more sugar and wine than common sense in my bloodstream. And if anyone from disney or happy prince somehow reads this and decides to sue me, i would respectfully like to remind the court that i was emotionally compromised. there is so much alcohol and glucose in my blood that the probability of them seeing this or caring about it is zero.
anyway if you've reached the end of this post, congratulations! you've shown more commitment to declan's character arc than the show currently has.
having said all that, a big kiss to everyone at happy prince, disney and hulu.
the season is beautiful, I love it.
see you all in october.
xx
Iāve got approximately 47 essays, 19 breakdowns, and 3 emotional crises about a certain Rivals character trapped inside my head right now. The self-restraint Iām showing should be studied.
there will never be anything as funny as the mutual disbelief between long form and short form fic writers about each other's style.
short form writers look at people writing 100k+ fics as though this is some sort of talent given as part of a fae bargain, that the commitment required shows some sort of ungodly mental fortitude.
meanwhile long form writers look at people writing 1000 word one shots like god I would cut off my left nipple to be able to say anything concisely. i would love to play with multiple ideas. free me from the shackles of this child I have birthed. i love them but I now must take them to t-ball and doctor's appointments and they're going to destroy everything I own.

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Declan O'Hara, Rivals S2Ep6
Photos: bibs, X
some quick art of mr. clark backrooms. i am endlessly fascinated by his progression as a character.
I have nothing to say about Rivals episode 6 except this: the show's greatest achievement is, without a doubt, its cast. Its biggest strength. Its greatest victory. Not the drama, not the scandals, not the romance. The cast is the best thing about Rivals.
Claire, David, Katherine: you're all brilliant as hell!
Declan at Fred's place.
My expectations for episode 6 are becoming dangerously high. The complete lack of spoilers and the fact that nobody has seen a single scene from it is not helping.Ā Depending on what happens, this will either be my healing era or the official start of my villain origin story.

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Itās 2am and Iām out here looking for Maud/Tony fanfiction. I fear that if Tony doesnāt do something absolutely terrible in the next episode, there may be no saving me. Because I cannot spend the next few months rooting for him during the hiatus, so I really, really need him to do something awful in the next episode.
RIVALS | 2x05
bonus:
I love Mike hahah
I think we all just died a little.
Iām down on my knees I want to take you there

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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That scene is SO good, the soundtrack, him throwing the tapes in the air with the cigar in his mouth š absolutely iconic! He looks like such a diva here, how was I supposed to not root for him in this moment?š
Rivals season 2 is failing Cameron Cook so far.
We donāt get her POV.
We donāt see her vulnerability.
We donāt get a quiet moment with her.
We know only this about her life prior to 1986:
Her mother is an activist;
Her father a teacher;
Her parents divorced when she was 14;
Her mother didnāt really want to be a mother;
Her motherās next partner āwas an assholeā;
Sheās from New York;
She left home when she was young;
And sheād been on her own for a while, until Tony. And Corinium and Venturer and Rutshire.
Now when I write it out it seems like itās a lot to know about character until you remember that we learned this 11 episodes ago in a show thatās aired 13 episodes.
Weāre told she feels lonely in her relationship with Rupert, we donāt see it. We donāt see how she grapples with the fact that she almost killed someone she was in a relationship with. Someone who was manipulative, and dare I say abusive, someone who put his hands on her, tried to coerce her into sex then bribed her when the coercion didnāt work and you know what? Letās say we take the BaddingCook out of it, just the fact that she almost KILLED a personā¦We donāt see her take any of that in.
And even if you want to say āoh the show is not that seriousā that I āshouldnāt be expecting them to deep dive abusive relationships and power imbalancesā or Iāmāmaking everything about raceā,
1. THE SHOW made her Black and its acknowledged in the material: Tony and Ginger made it a Thing in 1x01 when Declan arrived at Corinium by saying āwho says no Blacks, no Irish?ā; when Ginger chortled after Tony told Cameron sheād ābe on the next boat backā; when she was called āexoticā by Val and Fredās kids. All this means they should, ideally, be willing to understand how things will read differently now that there is Blackness where there was none before and that they be mindful of unconscious biases.
and 2. her writing is lacklustre this season with other characters too. Iām not going to lie, Cam and Declan being such good friends in this episode honestly took me by surprise because we donāt get more than one quick scene every other episode with trading barbs. Or Cam with Rupert, or Cam with Patrick, or any other woman.
Cameron is just there to have sex and solidify that the white right people remember in their hearts that they love their white right partners and not her. Weāre five episodes into a 12 episode season and theyāre only just now starting to develop her supposed endgame, Patrick, who has been markedly less into her in season two than he was last season until this episode.
Cameron is running the risk of falling into the disposable black girlfriend trope and even if she breaks up with Rupert, itās the same trope just superficially feminist.
Right now? Sheās the Jezebel trope, her entire character revolving around her romantic/sexual tension and relationships with the 3 main men (Tony, Declan and Rupert.)
Sheās a girlboss, sheās a āball buster,ā sheās quick as a whip, can hang with the boys and donāt forget SEX!SEX!SEX! but all that without the more human and low sides to her just make it seem to me like sheās falling into a common way Black female characters are written/viewed: good enough for sex but never for love.
As of 205, Cameron Cook is not given the same amount of well roundedness that her white counterparts are given. I havenāt completely written off this season in regards to her, I really hope the 7 episodes remaining do better and change my mind because I know Nafessa would be so good with a meatier script, and it would be refreshing to have a black female character that isnāt strong all the time. A messy Black woman. A Black woman that isnāt there to be the devil to another womanās angel. That isnāt stagnant.
Oh, hereās a meme I made. Go follow me on twitter for Rivals season two tweet-alongs, Iām hilarious
OMG, YES! Cameron is one of the characters suffering the most from this messy, lazy writing!