This season has been less about who is right or wrong in any argument and more about the tactics they use to fight each other. Just like Guerdy was totally right in her fight with Julia, especially after she threw water at her, but the tactics she used to publish Julia's texts made her behavior unseemly to the women.
By all accounts, Love Is Blind: UK season two is one of the most successful endings we've ever seen. All of the couples except for one are now married, and even the pair who didn't get married parted on an "it's not a no - it's when we're ready." No one's parents refused to show up out of spite, no one's brother started a fight with the groom, and even the couple who did not get married ended on an amicable note.
This week, the new wing-station controller finally comes in, much to the relief of our fearmongering captain, who cautioned that it might not be programmed correctly. Ultimately, it works out fine: The boat can run again. That's about it for things that are fixed - hell, for things that are fixable - on this yacht. There are only a couple of charters left, and if the middle of the season dragged through Solène's reign of chaos, its back half is plummeting toward complete destruction.
It was one of the very first gigs I went to. I was obsessed with R.E.M. I used to draw Michael Stipe on my walls, I was one of those teenagers. When they all came out on stage, I remember I excused myself from all my friends to have a private moment watching Michael Stipe.
Based on the black-box transcripts of downed flights, the root of the problem is the difficulty co-pilots have in asserting themselves in situations when the captain's decision-making needs to be questioned or even overruled.