 Man, I gotta tell you, these first three episodes of television of Zoro have been so well done. One topping off the other, expanding the world that Episode 4 called Revenge makes complete sense in is fantastic storytelling. What do they do in Episode 4? They literally take Don Diego out of the game. Okay, we'd say that it ended on a cliffhanger, that three, you can check out that playlist anytime, guys. What they did is they almost kill him off. This is full spoiler talk, full spoiler talk. So he's basically convalescing the entire episode till the end. So what does that mean? You give spotlight to all these co-starring characters that have been over the last three episodes. The first three episodes introduced and there's a lot. Okay, let's break it down. So there's the other Zoro, Nalim, who has taken over and she's the one who guts him at the beginning of the episode, thinking he's dead. He's not. She goes on a warpath in this episode. It's basically her revenge. We say revenge, it's hers, the main one, but there's other ones. Nalim takes on the Zoro mask and basically, and not his, it's her own kind of configuration of it, which I think is interesting as well. I'll get to that in a second. It's Civil War she's trying to create with the governor and the Mexican-Spanish units there that run LA. Very cool, very interesting. To where some of the indigenous population of her tribe are following her, some aren't, they are torn, okay? So that is very interesting. But what's different about her Zoro and his, she's killing fools. Exactly. Our Zoro, Don Diego does not. So I find that very, very, very pivotal. A lot of these co-starring characters and what they're doing is going to be pivotal. I see this for the rest of the season. The governor. The governor is an all out evil dude, fantastically played by this actor. And what he is doing is he's testing the loyalty and the limits of the captain. Who's Enrique, who is a good dude and has been established is engaged to Lolita. And Lolita believes he's a good man as well, but we see the captain's limits and him crossing those lines all in the sake of his duty to the governor. And you can see it slowly eating at him during this episode. And yet what he does is a lot of unforgivable shit to the indigenous population. What him and the governor do is really heavy duty. So that I found, I find that absolutely great drama, great conflict for our hero to come on through. In fact, he hears about what's going on and he tries to get out of his bed to stop this. And he can. He can. He's not. He's not there yet. There is some good comedy happening with Bernardo and May. May is one who in fact saves Dundiego initially and helps convalesce him. He's healing. She doesn't know where to go. She doesn't know what's going on. All she knows as a, as a, as a, as a concubine, I guess that's the best word maybe to put it is to please, you know, the, the master I want to say or whoever owns her at the time. So there's a scene where she's lying in bed with him. He's asleep. She's just lying in bed with him. I guess waiting to wake up, he does and she's, he's like, what are you doing in my bed? And she doesn't understand that she doesn't have to sleep with him. So there, you know, it's, it's a funny scene and it ends up to where he employs, he employs her to be, to be a cook, but at the house, you know, housekeeper cook along with Bernardo. But I'm getting a feeling she's going to end up being part of his fighting team towards the end. This kind of feeling, you know, that may is someone not to mess with. At this moment, it's been established that she's been traumatized. She's been saved. And now she's working for Don Diego. I like that moment. Okay. Lolita. I would say out of any of the characters, Lolita has been a little, a little too contemporary, which can be kind of, which can just take you out of the story. And that continues a little bit until she is saved by Don, her and her dad are saved by Don Diego, who's still not 100% but he's, he's able to write off to and save her. And the look she has on her face when he's, when she sees that it was Don Diego saving her is like, Oh my God, I love this guy. There's a scene that follows where she's helping him convalesce in the bed as well. And it's a fantastic scene. She still loves him. She is in conflict because she's still, she does think that Enrique is a good dude. And Don Diego, he can be impulsive and stubborn, but he's also in her eyes, which she says a hero, fantastic stuff. There's a lot to be said about a, a star's charm and looks and Renata Nothney is so well cast in this. She's beautiful, she, she, she can be tough and now she can be vulnerable that you're just buy it. Whereas she was kind of like this one dimensional annoying Tom girl, you know, you know, like the girl power of the, of the series. She still has that dignity, but she's torn now. She's torn and she goes and kind of cries in her mother's arms about what am I going to do? You know, I'm, I'm almost loving both great stuff, great stuff that's going to pay dividends again in later episodes with these sto co-starring characters. So what was kind of a little problematic for me is now solved. I get, I get her conflict. She's got something to do as a character now and hats off to the writers and the directors. Really. These guys are knocking it out of the park with a lot of these characters. Now there's some, there's some tertiary characters that will, will come into play as well. The van der Veen people out of New York trying to come and steal the land. He's hired Hitman. Then there's Don Diego's uncle. What was his name again? Let's get his name. Monasterio. He's coming into town. He's going to try to claim the, the inheritance as well from his dead father, his dead brother. Then there's a woman that we saw for a second with the white hat. She has not appeared at all Cecilia Suarez since that cemetery scene. Now at the end of this episode, there's a ring of fire Zoro fighting Zoro. It is so cool. It is so well done. I love it. And it is, it adds to many layers of what they're trying to, to, to say about what's going on in early California. You got the Spanish Mexican occupation, right? You got OPE. You got outside invaders trying to come in and buy land resources. You got the indigenous. You got the Mexicans. And, you know, Don Diego, as Zoro is just fighting for these poor indigenous people in injustice, that this is getting a little complex, a little heavy. And we're going to see how it, how it, how it all comes out. But, you know, really fast. This episode of revenge called, called revenge episode four. It is wonderful because it, it, it takes what we were giving these last, these first three episodes and it, it, it digs deeper with all the other characters. Fantastic. I mean, and that, that really is kind of some bold vision because two and three are so like pro Zoro, Don Diego, I'm a hero now. Let's do it. Then he gets taken out for an episode of convalesce. Fantastic. But Zoro is back. Our Zoro is back at the end of this episode. So I am looking forward, they're leveling up on the, the, you know, the, the killings, the drama, the, the, the governor just being a total, you know, just he has no conscious when it comes to the indigenous people and when it comes to taking out a Zoro. Great stuff. And this is a, this is an eight out of 10. These shows have been eight, eight point fives out of 10. I'm, I'm, I'm reserving that nine, that nine point five, that 10 out of 10. You know, I'm reserving that, but this is so entertaining. So entertaining. Zoro lives. Let's give you right now. Let's give you the Zoro watch party that I recently did with Midnight's Edge Espanyol. We do talk in Spanish and English, but it was such a fun time talking about episode one Zoro watch party. There you go. Right now, wherever you're at, keep that slant. Muy fuerte. Zoro lives.