From the DVD commentary, episode 3:
Neil: I kind of wound up having to write this as a love story, and part of the joy of writing a love story is the break-up, because you can’t get back together again unless you’ve broken up. So this is the break-up.
Douglas: I think you can say it’s two actors working at peak.
Neil: They really are. I mean they’re so good. And I remember watching this being shot, knowing how good it was.
…
Douglas: We landed on that location kind of by mistake through scheduling, and I’m so glad we did it that way in the end.
Neil: Oh yeah, it was origially set in-
Douglas: It was set at night, wasn’t it?
Neil: It was set at night in St. James’s Park.
Douglas: But the Queen wouldn’t let us put on lights in St. James’s Park at night.
Neil: Bless.
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Anyway, third episode of the first season has Ed striding onto the Revenge to find Stede bleeding out on deck, after which Ed sits over him and talks quietly until he comes back to life.
Third episode of the second season has Stede climbing onto the Revenge to find Ed dead in the hold, after which he sits over him and talks until he comes back to life.
They keep surviving to the sound of each other's voices.
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Transcript of tweets below the cut but in short: calling makes the biggest impact, focus on DEI, you can call more than once, and you do not need to be in the US or have a Max subscription to call.
Everyone, I just talked on the phone to an absolute ally at Max, and they gave me extremely useful information! We need to be calling WAY more. It's a higher impact that most other things we can do. Here's the phone number: (855) 442-6629. But read on if you want to know WHY.
Every time Max receives a customer feedback call, that information is logged in the system. The info, *including all the details* is pushed to a server that relays it to the higher ups. They don't just get a tally of calls and general opinions—they get the full feedback.
And it's not just higher-ups at Max. Per the service rep, "it's actually read by the higher ups who are in charge of what happens within Warner Media/ Discovery."
The rep also suggested that particular types of feedback, especially those around DEI, might bear extra weight. They had to be a bit cryptic for job reasons, but they made this very clear.
They ask for an email but don't triage based on whether that email has a subscription. E.g., if you're outside the US and watch elsewhere, you can still call, and your feedback will still go up the chain.
In fact, the rep was very clear to encourage ALL people with feedback to call individually. And to keep calling! I asked whether multiple calls from the same person make a difference, and the answer was a clear yes bc the feedback gets shared as it comes in, not batched.
It's also worth noting that phone calls in general are always higher-impact than letters, online engagements, etc. This is true for political campaigns, and it's true here. There's a real cost to having people answering phones. It takes time, which equals $$.
So: Call. I know it sucks; I hate the phone too. If you have phone anxiety, you can also delegate to a friend and have them provide your name and email. If you *don't* hate making phone calls, ask friend for permission to call on their behalf!
I'll put together a little phone script shortly and add it to this thread.
Source
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So many people do not understand the relationship between climate change and cold weather.
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My husband had a vision and I had no choice but to make it a reality.
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Don't go calling after ghosts.
I am here - flesh, blood, bone
and devotion.
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“Funny if we both got it wrong, eh? If I did the good thing and you did the bad one?”
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