The Day We Became Confused

The Fringe finale was confusing. “A major character will die!” “Peter meets his destiny!” “The Doomsday machine completes its purpose!” While all of those spoilers were true, I almost feel like the finale wasn’t a conclusion to the Season 3 arc, rather than a stand alone episode. We had no Lincoln Lee, no mention of Henry (Nugget; who may or may not exist now), no Sam Weiss, no Mr. X, no mention of William Bell, etc. A throwaway line by Peter as to who the First People were did not satisfy me at all, and if anything, soured the whole mythology of the First People.

Did I like the episode despite all of this? Yes. I’m a bit confused, though. Are we now to believe that the timeline of the show has been a flashback and it’s actually 2026 now? I almost hope that is the case, as I don’t want to see a ton of time travel on Fringe. I would guess, however, that we will not go forward again and will be in the 2011 current day for Season 4. Now that the teams from the two universes have been brought together, I’m not sure how everyone will get home.

I’m also no less confused by The Observers. I get the last scene, I really do, but what a messy way to achieve their means. There had to be a less complicated way to bridge the universes if the need was so great. OK, maybe I don’t fully get it; did they create Peter? Was he a Starbuckian avatar? I’ve read speculation close to that, and I guess it makes the most sense to me. Young Peter died in both universes, but Walter/Walternate still became entangled in the quantum entanglements that resulted from their work, leading to the same moment of decision in “The Day We Died.”

All I really know is that Fringe Season 4 needs to get here soon.

380,819 thoughts on “The Day We Became Confused”

  1. Thanks for every other excellent post. The place else
    may just anyone get that kind of info in such an ideal means of writing?
    I have a presentation next week, and I am on the search for such info.

  2. DABET ???c xây d?ng theo h??ng m?t n?n t?ng n?i dung có c?u trúc rõ ràng và d? ti?p c?n, giúp ng??i truy c?p nhanh chóng xác ??nh khu v?c mình quan tâm bbc

  3. My whole view of betting changed the day I discovered how
    sure bets work. Honestly, it sounded like a scam when I first heard that you could bet on both sides and win. But after testing it
    myself, I was shocked at how consistent the profits can be.

    All you do is place bets on each side and let the numbers guarantee the return. I remember testing it with $200 and seeing how
    the profit came out no matter the match result. For once,
    I didn’t care who won because the profit was already locked
    in.

    What surprised me most is how steady the returns are. With enough opportunities, that percentage becomes a reliable side
    income. It’s closer to long-term investing than traditional betting.

    The right software totally transforms the experience.

    It finds the opportunities instantly and saves hours of searching.
    I never imagined software could help beat bookmakers so effectively.

    If someone told me years ago that betting could feel safe and predictable, I’d laugh.
    Now I treat it like a side investment that grows a little every day.
    If you enjoy long-term strategies, this is
    a perfect fit.

  4. Hi! I know this is sort of off-topic but
    I had to ask. Does operating a well-established website like yours require a
    lot of work? I’m brand new to operating a blog but
    I do write in my journal every day. I’d like to start a blog so I can easily share my experience and views online.
    Please let me know if you have any ideas or tips for brand new
    aspiring bloggers. Thankyou!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *