2015-11-23



I won’t even lie to you. I’ve never been so in love and yet so equally frustrated and traumatized by a television show ever. I am still in relative shock from all that transpired in this episode. There was Mellie taking a stand for Planned Parenthood. Then there was Olivia playing FLOTUS, the discovery of who was behind the initiation of Lazarus One and finally the implosion of Olitz.

Whoops! Should I have said “spoiler alert” with that last one? You did anticipate that something was going to go sideways with the lovebirds, yes? And I haven’t even mentioned the abortion of a pregnancy that we didn’t even know existed!



I can’t begin to adequately express how unprepared I was for the end of this episode. The pain and sadness that hit me was as surprising in its magnitude as it was in its unexpectedness. I literally shed tears and then I sat in dazed silence in the same spot for an hour after it went off.

A TV show shouldn't be capable of doing this to a person. It shouldn't have rendered me insensible. It shouldn't have made me feel as if I was slapped with a hot slab of concrete. But it did. And I dementedly loved it while simultaneously wishing premature death upon it.



I’m not going to regale you again with the many ways in which Kerry Washington is a riveting human being to watch on screen. Nor will I bother you with talk of Tony Goldwyn’s ability to effortlessly shift through a slew of emotions within a 5 second span. Nor will I mention how fab Bellamy Young was in conveying a determined, yet exhausted Mellie Grant. I’m not going to do any of that because as I said last week, we’d be here for days.

What I will do instead is talk about this episode. Before I dig in, I’d like to recall you to two episodes from earlier this season, “Heavy is the Head” (501) and “Paris is Burning” (503). Think specifically about the conversation between Olivia and Fitz on the balcony (501) and the one that occurred between Olivia and Mellie in the closet (503). If you can’t remember specifics, take a quick look over the recaps for those episodes here and here.

From POTUS to First Girlfriend in Chief

“Baby, It’s Cold Outside” opens up by introducing us to Olivia Pope, First Girlfriend in Chief, and my immediate question is: how did this happen and why are we here? Some time has obviously passed since we last saw Olivia, but how much time is unclear. What is clear is that the space that she used to occupy in the White House has changed to one that is visually anomalous. Instead of the role she had previously played as advisor to the President (or shadow president as Cyrus considers her), Olivia is now playing the Stepford wife as part of a “charm offensive” to help raise the President’s/their poll numbers and get a spending bill passed.

Olivia is shown giving a White House tour to young girls, receiving a giant Christmas ornament from a group of women, and being featured on the cover of magazines. (How long has Olivia been playing at this to have landed several magazine covers?) At one of several holiday parties that the White House hosts, we see Fitz entertaining matters of substance while Olivia is relegated to handling the frivolous such as cookie recipes!

What in the world is happening here? Was Olivia’s release of Rowan responsible for this? Charm offensive or not, something has shifted between Olivia and Fitz, and not in a good way. While she served in a FLOTUS-like capacity last week as co-host of the Bandaris, Olivia was still able to maintain her identity as head gladiator and do what she does best. Whatever this was now? It was weird.

This is further supported by their manner with each other the following morning. As they are dressing for the day ahead, Fitz relays to Olivia that her help will be needed in deciding plate settings for the Cabinet holiday party. Olivia’s response is terse as she tells him that she is aware of the schedule and has a functioning brain. She even remarks under her breath that his spending bill is “crappy” and refuses to repeat herself when Fitz queries her about what she had said. He hadn’t heard her and she certainly wasn’t going to enlighten him.

Now since when does Olivia withhold her opinions from Fitz, let alone mumble under her breath? That’s uncharacteristic of her. Verbally sparring with Fitzgerald is one of her favorite past times. What gives?

Mellie Grant: Woman’s Warrior

Senator Grant gets her first experience with the good old boys club as she enters their domain to discuss a particular item within the spending bill that they are about to pass that she believes  has been erroneously moved to the discretionary column. This item is funding for Planned Parenthood (PP). The atrocious Senator Gibson tells her that PP would still be fully funded, but Mellie points out that placing it in the discretionary column means that funding isn’t guaranteed and can be stripped away at any time. Mellie indicates that if PP remains as it is within the bill that she cannot vote for it, but Gibson isn’t at all worried about that. The bill will still pass without her vote.

Mellie is surprised to hear this. Surely there are others who would be as concerned about this as she was, right? Nope. Gibson boasts that before he brings any bill up to the Senate floor, he already knows how many votes he has in order to pass it and that this particular bill was no exception. He tells Mellie to get with the program if she wishes to be as successful as he in the Senate and vote yes on the spending bill. Doing so would allow them all to go home for the holidays. His buddies derisively laugh at Mellie’s naivete and I feel a capillary pop in my eyeball.

The next day, Gibson is introducing the spending bill to the Senate. He eventually yields the floor to the Senate president, who then asks if anyone wishes to be recognized prior to the bill going to vote. He is set to move on to the voting portion when Mellie states that she would like recognition, surprising her fellow colleagues. She goes up to the podium and presents her case about PP. She tells them that even though the bill will fund the organization, it also gives the Senate the power to strip them of its funding should the government go over budget. She then details a scenario where funding for PP is decreased every year until the organization is no more.

So Mellie is going to take a stand. She’d love to go home just like the rest of them for the holidays, but she won’t be doing it at the expense of women’s health. Mellie proceeds to grab a super thick printed out copy of the bill in question and drops it atop of the podium she was standing behind. She intends to read the thousands of items within the bill that are not discretionary, prompting her colleagues to groan in unison. Senator Grant is filibustering!

Go Mellie!! (BTW, where did this feminist side of you come from? Asking for a friend.)

Do you know what’s disturbing about these inane items that were included in the budget to receive guaranteed funding while PP is relegated to discretionary? It is that items like these actually do get included in the real spending bill. Travel stipend for the Alabama watermelon queen? Excuse me?

Mellie’s stunt has captured the attention of the beltway media. It’s being reported that Mellie’s filibuster of the congressional spending bill could lead to an “untimely government shutdown” if the bill is not passed by midnight. Untimely because it would be occurring during the holidays and could potentially affect the pay of all government workers.

Fitz, Cyrus and Abby are watching this development on TV. Cyrus doesn’t believe that Mellie will succeed with her filibuster because it requires that she stand up at that podium for 16 hours without a break. She can’t lean on anything for support, leave to use the bathroom or get something to eat. Cyrus acknowledges that others have been successful in filibustering before, but they had prepared in advance for it whereas Mellie had not.

Fitz wishes to know what Abby thinks and she tells him that any talk surrounding Mellie and this situation will eventually come around to him. If Mellie seems desperate or unstable in this moment, Fitz would be blamed for it. People would say that it was because he kept her down for years that she is doing what she is doing now. Cyrus suggests that they leave Mellie to hang herself, but Abby is of the opinion that they should bring Olivia in to handle the message outside the White House by having her work some of her media contacts.

If you were expecting Fitzgerald to be in agreement with this plan, you’d be disappointed because he tells Abby that Olivia is busy. (Busy with what, pray tell?) When Abby asks if Olivia can be freed up to handle this matter, Fitz responds with a flat no. Abby is as stunned by his answer as I am. No?! At this point, my eyes have narrowed to slits and there is this uneasy feeling crawling about in the pit of my stomach. Olivia is banned from assisting in the Oval now? Hmm. Definitely trouble in paradise.

Meanwhile, Mellie is still going strong with her filibuster. She is detailing facts about PP and its provision of contraceptive care to millions of women who cannot get it otherwise because they are living below the poverty line and/or are under the age of 20. Should these women be turned away and Congress is asked why, they’d have to say that it was because they chose to allocate the funds to something far more important like tree snake control in Guam or to the study of “hangry” individuals. Not hungry. Hangry. As in hungry + angry.

I shouldn’t be laughing at the absurdity of the things that are in this spending bill, but come on, man. Tree snake control? Funding for a hangry study? And WTF are “talking urinal cakes”? These are things that are going to get guaranteed funding, but not Planned Parenthood?!

Speaking of hangry, Mellie at that moment spots a food bar of a fellow Senator and goes for it. Gibson starts to protest her act, but Mellie cuts him off to let him know that she knows what the rules of the filibuster is. She may be unable to leave the floor to get food, but nowhere does it say that she can’t have food that’s already present.

Haha!! Again, I say: Go Mellie!! I hate that Senator Gibson with a hardcore passion. Beat him at his own game, girlfriend!

When Senator Moskowitz shoots Gibson a look over his failed attempt to waylay Mellie, I am reminded that I despise this woman almost as much as I do Gibson. Moskowitz was all about standing up for women when it came to impeaching Fitzgerald for not keeping his snake caged, but she can’t do the same when it comes to ensuring that women who fall outside of her tax bracket get basic medical care? Care that most likely doesn’t equate to the one that Moskowitz is afforded as a United States senator but which is still better than having nothing at all? And she’s a Democrat?! Eww.

Not much aggravates me more than a woman who is selectively for women’s rights.

As Mellie carries on with her reading of the various incomprehensible items that are include in the bill, we see that Olivia is in the Residence watching the situation unfold on TV. At some point during her viewing, Fitz joins her and is going on about how Mellie is trying to sink the bill not because she believes anything that she is saying, but because she is trying to use this to raise her profile and maybe pull a Sally Langston and switch parties.

Olivia says nothing to this as her eyes remain on the television. Her silence is remarked upon by Fitz who says to her that he’s talking about how Mellie is trying to undermine him and Olivia’s not even listening. Her eyes still locked on the TV, Olivia tells him that she heard everything he said, to which Fitz remarks that it was hard for him to tell.

I swear this man doesn’t know when he’s standing on a landmine and is set to be blown to bits. That’s the only reason why he was caught off guard when Olivia snapped back at his flippant remark with a “fool, not everything is about you.” That’s me paraphrasing, but that was pretty much Olivia’s message. Mellie standing for Planned Parenthood may not be about you, Fitzgerald. Ever think of that?

Whew. Olivia was in a mood and Fitz was not helping matters with his man pain bs.

Later we see Olivia meeting up with Mitchell to iron out details for the Cabinet holiday party. She wraps that up and sees Abby standing in the doorway as she turns to leave. Abby observes that Olivia is good at this FLOTUS business and Olivia replies as confidently as ever that she knows. Obviously. What would Olivia Pope not be good at?

This is a rhetorical question. Please don’t answer because…..yeah, I know.

As Olivia leaves the room, Aretha Franklin’s “Respect” starts to play. We next see Olivia delivering cookies to the office of Senator Harding that is to be given to his wife. The Olivia Pope is delivering cookies. To the wife of a senator. And she doesn’t even recall what type of cookies they are until the very last second. Snickerdoodles! That’s what they are!

Why in the world is Olivia subjecting herself to this mess? Did her move into the White House mean that she couldn’t continue to do her actual job where her mental engagement extended beyond decor, place settings and cookie recipes? Why is this happening?

On her way out of Harding’s office, Olivia is drawn back to the television where Noah Baker and another analyst is discussing Mellie’s filibuster and giving viewers details as to what can and cannot happen in order for the filibuster to be sustained and eventually successful. They are talking about how if another senator stepped in to briefly take over the filibuster, Mellie could duck out and take a quick bathroom break or even eat. Olivia’s white hat light bulb goes off in her head. Here is something that she can actually gladiate!

Flash over to the floor and Mellie is fanning herself like crazy as she continues to read from the bill. While she is doing her thing, a congressional page walks by and continues on to Senator Moskowitz. He hands her a note, which leads to Moskowitz exiting from chambers. Outside, she meets Olivia who is asking her to assist Mellie, but Moskowitz refuses. She says she is unwilling stay all night and watch a “sad, broken woman make a mockery of the US government.” Olivia is taken aback by this response and steps in Moskowitz’s path as she makes to exit.

“Wow. A liberal, female Democrat who thinks defending Planned Parenthood is a mockery?” -- Olivia Pope

Olivia, girl, you and I are looking at this chick all kinds of sideways. All kinds of sideways. This woman isn’t willing to attach herself to Mellie Grant because she didn’t want Mellie’s taint to pull her down. Ain’t that about a bitch…

But Olivia doesn’t give up. As she likes to say, she’s never out of options.

Over the Justice Department, Susan Ross arrives at David’s office. David was watching what was happening on Capitol Hill, but quickly turns off the TV upon Susan’s entry. She’s got a gift for him. Some nice scotch that she says he can add to his eggnog. After a moment, David tells her that he has a gift for her, too, and he goes and retrieves the bracelet that he had intended to give to Elizabeth. At least Susan would appreciate the gift, right? If only David knew how much. He clearly fails to see the heart eyes that Susan makes each time that she gazes up at him. She didn’t even blink it away when he looked up from hooking the bracelet around her wrist to point out that her phone was ringing.

Flash back over to Mellie and at this point, it is obvious that she is in some serious distress. She’s doing the pee-is-about-to-involuntarily-shoot-out-of-my-urethra dance that we all do when we’ve had too much to drink and make a mad dash for the ladies’ room only to discover that the line is as long as the Earth’s circumference. Mellie’s speech is slower, she’s sweating and she looks set to pass out. Her fellow senators suddenly perk up at this, likely believing that maybe the end is near. Finally this filibuster nightmare will be over!! These people are horrid.

Fitz is watching all of this on TV with Cyrus and he’s wondering why it is that Mellie won’t just stop. He looks to be truly confused and maybe even a tad concerned. Cyrus was all like Mellie’s always wanted to make history and she’s about to go down as the first person to piss themselves on the Senate floor. LOL! I hate Cyrus sometimes.

Just when you think Mellie is about to truly pass all the way out, the Vice President of the United States is announced. The doors to the chamber opens up and in walks a smiling Susan Ross, looking as innocent as she please. Now Fitz is having a real WTF moment as he wonders what is Susan doing there. Cyrus seems to be thinking on what may have led to this development.

Susan makes her way up to where the president pro tempore of the Senate is sitting and kicks him out. As Vice President, she is President of the Senate, so he needs to move over. He obliges and Susan takes a seat. She then asks Mellie if she would yield the floor to her and Mellie is like WHAT? Mellie must have thought that Susan was about to cut off her filibuster, but no, no. Susan intends to ask a lengthy question about the services that Planned Parenthood provides.

It is at this moment that Mellie realizes what is happening. Susan was there to give her a break! Mellie yields the floor for the question and then makes out of that room fast, but carefully. Running on a bladder ready to pop is torture and could very well lead to the whole unfavorable pee-involuntarily-shooting-out-of-the-urethra bit.

As Mellie exits, Susan tells the Senators that she won’t ask them about abortion since that only makes up 3% of the services that Planned Parenthood offers, so instead she’s going to ask about gonorrhea.

Susan to the rescue again.

When Mellie comes rushing out of her bathroom stall, she discovers Olivia waiting for her. She quickly makes the connect being Susan’s appearance and Olivia, and she thanks her for the intervention. She goes over to wash her hands and then says to Olivia that she doesn’t think that she can continue with the filibuster and that she doesn’t even understand why she’s doing this at all. She points out that she’s a Republican and that her main motivation was not liking Gibson telling her what she couldn’t do.

In encouraging Mellie to continue on with her stance, Olivia tells her that she’s the “biggest bitch” she knows and that as such, she can do this. She has just a couple more hours to go. Mellie asks if Olivia wishes to come watch, but Olivia says that she has to be somewhere. Mellie is like, oh yeah...the Cabinet dinner. Have fun with that.

Are they about to make Olivia and Mellie besties? There is a shift that has been happening with Olivia and Mellie that goes back to the end of 506 when Mellie referred to Olivia as her freedom. The manner by which Mellie believed Olivia would factor into her rise to the top was rendered null and void in the previous episode, but it would appear that Olivia will have some hand in helping Mellie find her own voice. How that will happen is beyond me, but this moment here looks to be the start of it.

Over at the White House, members of the Cabinet are seated and chit chatting with each other when Mitchell comes over to the President while checking his watch. He asks if dinner can start now. The cook is concerned about his ability to synchronize the courses if the dinner doesn’t start soon. Fitz glances over at the seat that is supposed to be occupied by Olivia and then tells Mitchell to give the cook to the go ahead to begin.

So where in the world is Olivia if she’s not at the Cabinet dinner?

Back over at the Capitol, Mellie is seconds away from having successfully filibustered the spending bill. She thanks the Vice President and the Women’s Caucus and the pages and all of the Senate staff. She acknowledges that many of them missed their holiday travel plans, but that because of their sacrifice, many women will enjoy their holiday without having to worry about whether they will have access to proper healthcare in the coming year.

Mellie then checks her watch and sees that she has succeeded! She wishes everybody in the room a Merry Christmas and then yields the floor. And the crowd goes wild.

Alright, Mellie. Show them how all how functional you can be. Be proud of what you did, mama.

And can y’all believe that Moskowitz had the gall to come up to Mellie with her hand out in congratulations? I’m so glad that Mellie swerved her behind. Now that Mellie made it to the very end, Moskowitz has no problem associating with her, huh? Girl bye.

Hard Decisions

Finally we get to see where Olivia disappeared off to. She is sitting in the lobby of a reproductive health clinic (as the pamphlets on the reception desk seem to indicate) watching the coverage of Mellie’s successful filibuster. I’m not sure if she’s really paying attention to what is being said or if it was serving as white noise for her at that moment. She appears to be in the grip of some internal turmoil, her face an outward display of heartbreak. She does manage a weak smile at the news that millions have rallied behind Mellie and have started the hashtag #IStandWithMellie. It is at this moment that a nurse comes out to ask Olivia if she’s ready.

Ready, I ask myself. Ready for what? And why’s she at a reproductive clinic at that time of the night? It was past midnight!

But it dawned on me too late, y’all. Next thing I know, Olivia is in a hospital gown and putting her legs up in stirrups. The doctor picks up some pointy tool and heads straight into… Then that suction instrument goes on and Olivia grips the bed rail. We see some in and out motion by the doctor as Olivia is shown staring up at the ceiling. Her face is devoid of any of the emotion that it displayed moments before when she was in the waiting room. She looked to have detached herself from what was going on.

I, on the other hand, was not okay. Olivia was getting an abortion! WHAT?! When did she discover that she was pregnant, let alone decide that she was going to terminate?

Abraham on the cross. Could this (partially) be why she had been uncharacteristically snippy with Fitz all episode? Hormones plus the stress of an unexpected pregnancy plus the change in her relationship with Fitz plus the change in her status at the White House plus her inability to gladiate makes for a really, really bad mix. How it all culminated to her being at that clinic has not yet been revealed, but we can speculate.

My immediate thought: Bad time. Wrong time. And completely unplanned.  If there is any other reason beyond that, I’m certainly hoping that Shonda and co enlighten us. This moment is no doubt the start of whatever bit of story that the writers intend to tell in the backend of the season and I’m looking forward to seeing what they do with it.

Back at the Residence, Fitz is sitting in wait on the sofa when Olivia finally returns. He’s still dressed in his tux from earlier in the evening when she bursts into the bedroom. She tosses her purse onto the bed and strips herself of her coat as she heads towards the closet. Fitz gets up and follows her. There, Olivia is searching about in in drawers and cabinets for something that isn’t immediately known. Fitz wants her to tell him what’s going on, but she’s too busy with her desperate search to pay him any mind. Fitz asks her of where she had been just as she finds what it is that she was looking for. Some of Mellie’s hillbilly hooch!

Ah snap. OIivia is about to imbibe on some hundred proof alcohol. Oh yeah. Her earlier moment of detachment is over. What was it that Mellie said to her about why she drank the hooch?

“Living here in this prison. That’s what makes you feel numb. This is what makes you feel alive.” -- Mellie Grant (503)

In Olivia’s case, living in the White House wasn’t the only thing that was making her feel numb in that moment. When Olivia triumphantly finds the stash of hooch, she grabs the jar and continues out of the closet. Fitz can’t believe what he’s seeing. Has the ghost of Mellie invaded his girlfriend?

He quickly follows her out of the closet and back into the bedroom. Olivia is unscrewing the jar of hooch and is heading for the exit when Fitz remarks that he’s trying to talk to her. Olivia turns around and tells him that she tried to make it to the dinner and thought that she would make it back in time, but…. But she ain’t got no answer because she’s lying through her teeth. She takes a sip of the hooch and Fitz sighs as he again asks her of where she had been. Olivia tells him that something came up and then THAT set Fitzgerald the hell off.

His order to her to not to lie to him ripped through the room like the crack of a whip! I tell ya, it had me sitting straight up. This fight has been brewing all episode. Matter of fact, it was poised to happen since episode 506. Lord have mercy.

Fitz’s anger succeeded in getting Olivia’s attention. She says to him that she doesn’t know what he wants her to tell him, and Fitz says that he wants her to admit that she was running. It doesn’t matter where she was tonight because she wasn’t there at the White House. He’s about to share with her why he thinks she didn’t make it to the Cabinet dinner, but Olivia cuts him off and says that it is because she didn’t want to go. Why would she want to go to that dinner when she would be relegated to sitting in the corner with the housewives while she is forced to watch him roll with the big dogs? Olivia then says, “Well, guess what? I am a big dog, so I didn’t want to go.”

Remember that landmine that I said Fitzgerald wasn’t aware that he was stepping on? Yeah, well, he’s just lifted his foot off the trigger.

In response to her statement, Fitz says that he knew that moving her into the White House in an attempt to give them a real shot would lead to this. Olivia doesn’t see him moving her in in the same light that he does. She feels like he’s been treating her like she’s some kind of hostage, that he moved her in as some kind of punishment for her releasing her father.  (Whoa. This was my initial thought during the live tweet of 508!)

Fitz is floored that she would even think this. He tries to tell her that him moving her in had nothing to do with her father, but she cuts him off and says that it does. She argues that she helped get Rowan released and tried to help and save him, but nah. Fitzgerald is like hole up, pahtna. You didn’t do any of that for me. You did that for yourself because you didn’t want to marry me.

Ah shit. Let me just hunker on down here for this because this should be good. Let’s rewind on back to that proposal fail.

Olivia is silent for a bit before asking Fitz what bothers him the most: her letting her father go or her asking him not to kill him. With deprecation, she asks him if she owes him now for his sacrifice and if she’s supposed to subject himself to cocktail parties and housewives and the cage that is the White House for him. She asks him to tell her what it is that she must do to show that she is forever indebted to him for saving Rowan’s life.

I’m going to pause right here to point out that Olivia Carolyn Pope is so far out of pocket here. The girl is straight tripping! Fitzgerald would have been more than justified in following through with his plan to have Rowan killed. More. Than. Justified. Fitz didn’t have to honor her request. Her father killed his child! Fitz didn’t even have to spring her ungrateful behind out of federal detention for her part in setting a criminal free, and yet here she is lamenting about being put in a cage. Girl bye. Her inability to communicate with Fitzgerald is the reason why she’s in that cage in the first place! And whoever said that she had to remain at the White House? He can’t force her to stay there. Fitz has hardly ever forced her to do anything.

Olivia tells him to think about everything that she’s been through and all that she’s told him, and figure out what why it is that running away from it all would be a tempting option. She then picks up her hooch and starts for the exit again, but it once more stopped when Fitz starts to speak. He asks her to try to understand what he’s telling her and why he moved her in. Fitzgerald makes the mistake of saying that he asked her to go all in because that sets Olivia off again. She’s like, asked me? WTF asked little ole me anything? To this, Fitz says that he tried to ask her when he proposed.

And this is me groaning. That proposal was him asking her to go all the way in on them? Really? Is Fitz experiencing selective memory syndrome? Does he forget the circumstance that led to him putting forth that lame ass proposal in the first place?

You ever been in a situation where no matter how rational you think you sound, you are always saying the wrong thing? That’s Fitzgerald right at this moment. Just be saying some dumb shit.

Olivia tells him that what he did that night on the balcony wasn’t a proposal. That was him trying to manipulate her into marriage. Fitz now comes back with accusations of her engaging in manipulations of her own, stating that she’s been strutting about the White House with her “power capes” and wielding her undue influence as if she runs the place.

Pause. Fitzgerald *le sigh* … she can only do what you allow her to do. Undue influence? Whose fault is that? You were basking in her glory when she was doing all of these things and on YOUR behalf and now you’re bringing that up as a weapon against her. Sir, have a seat.

Olivia had the best comeback for him tho.

You have no idea how loud I hollered! LMAOOOOO!!! This girl then goes on to call him an ain’t shit president, asking him if he’s suddenly realized how ineffectual he is at his job.

Damn, Livvie. Talk about aiming at his insecurities. She knows darn well that this man isn’t ineffectual. He might be a little obsessed with her and at times distracted by all that she is, but he does his job and for the most part does it well.

Now if you thought that was below the belt, they were both just getting start. In response to Olivia, Fitz remarks that she is worse than Mellie! Whaaaaaaaat. He says that unlike Olivia, he’s always known what Mellie was like. Then he says some sideways stuff about knowing where she came from, and Olivia jumped on him real quick. She was like, where I came from? In comparison to your ain’t shit father, I came from a gatdamn palace. Then she tops that off by saying that at least her daddy loved her.

Oh my damn. And Livvie, we’re gonna have to talk about your definition of this love that you say your daddy had for you. Quiet as it’s kept, Eli “Rowan” Pope has been as destructive to your life as Big Jerry was to Fitzgerald’s, but I’ma let you finish. You’re too busy cast barbs to recognize your own foolishness right now.

Fitz then comes back around to answering the question she posed to him about running. He tells her that someone capable of being in a relationship and being normal wouldn’t run the way the way that she does. YIIIIIIKES! Olivia hits back by saying that if he was someone capable of being alone, he wouldn’t have tried to suffocate her.

Pause again. Is Olivia seriously accusing Fitz of being incapable of being alone? She who has bounced between Fitz, Edison, Fitz, Jake, Fitz, Jake, Russell and then back to Fitz over the course of the last three seasons? She is accusing him of being incapable?

<img border="0" height="243" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-gdjv651TvT4/VjV1

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