#all media with cops is innately copaganda in its own right but it feels like they were doing what they could with the canon they had
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perpetuallyfive · 17 hours ago
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Yes, exactly!
Also:
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The emphasis on Caitlyn's rebellious nature is a really important point I didn't touch on, but I think that's one of the driving motivators behind Maddie's comments about leadership. More than once we see her emphasize that Ambessa isn't their real leader, Caitlyn is, and I think those very comments are what some people are finding hard to reconcile with Maddie being a traitor.
But if you consider them in the context of Cait's constant rebellion, it makes perfect sense. Caitlyn's driven to rebel against whoever is in charge, so it would be her natural inclination to go against what Ambessa says, especially over a long enough timeline.
Except Maddie is always there to remind her, no actually, you are the one in charge, everyone sees you as leader, there isn't anyone for you to rebel against because this all ends at your say so. The illusion of choice! They played her so, so well.
My wife also pointed out something I wanted to touch on further: I definitely think Maddie is a citizen of Piltover, not someone installed from outside. To me that's why her betrayal is so valuable from a storytelling and thematic perspective.
She's not some outsider invading; she's a part of the system of power that was already there, eager to align herself with fascism to protect her own place and status within the oppressor class. The idea we all easily bought into — because it's such a common cliche in copaganda — of her being a naive well meaning cop who doesn't realize she's doing a war crime was always a deliberate illusion and that participating in oppression always involves opting in.
God, I'm so happy with what they did with Maddie Nolen.
I'm sure there will be plenty of people mad because obviously there was a weird backlash over a character who has sex with one half a ship, so I'm sure some people worry this will lead those people to feel justified in their initial response.
But ignoring people who can't emotionally regulate for a second, because those childish impulses aren't worth dictating the fun things a narrative can do: Maddie is SO INTERESTING as a character and she fills in a lot of the questions people seemed to have about the rest of the season.
Consider for a moment that it wasn't Caitlyn who convinced Vi to be an Enforcer. It was Maddie.
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I know that some people took this line to be about Zaunites, a sort of obvious connection to the very racist idea of "one of the good ones," but since Maddie is talking about Marcus and his betrayal of the Enforcers just before this, I'm pretty sure her framing here is something else. The point she's making is specifically targeted at Vi's own beliefs and weaknesses, her desire to protect. That seems clear to me now with all we know about Maddie's capacity for manipulation.
She's not saying, "You're good, for a poor."
She's saying, "Wow, I agree with you, the Enforcers are really bad; it's so upsetting. I think you might be the only one who can change it, but only if you join us." This is what convinces Vi to do something she never thought she would.
Well, this and the fact that Caitlyn believes in her so much which, again, is information she gets fed to her directly from Maddie. It even seems like Maddie seeks her out just to say this, which on first viewing felt oddly convenient. Wow, Vi just happens to meet this naive girl who just happens to say exactly what she needs to hear to do something so out of character.
Except obviously none of it was coincidence. Everyone already knew how much Vi meant to Caitlyn and getting Caitlyn under control would require either controlling Vi or removing her from the equation. This was a push in that direction.
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Then there's her more obvious role as the spy in Caitlyn's bed, there to reassure her that the Noxians are only trying to keep all of them safe. Then when Caitlyn expresses larger doubts, she's immediately ready to lay out an alternative. You could just give up, Maddie seems to whisper gently in her ear. Just reestablish things as they were before.
But she knows Caitlyn isn't going to go for that. She's not going to go back to the council as it was, because it's only going to remind her of the empty place her mother left behind. Maddie knows that Caitlyn isn't going to take this offer, which is precisely why she suggests it. She frames quitting as the only clear alternative to going along with everything Ambessa wants because she knows that Caitlyn will refuse, which leads her right back into alignment with Ambessa. She makes continued obedience into an active choice that Caitlyn affirms she's making.
Even Maddie's comments that suggest direct opposition to Ambessa — "you're our leader... I follow you" — are designed to frame herself and her true leader in direct opposition, just as Ambessa's own warning about entanglements is there to further that point. They both make a point of reminding Caitlyn that they are her true ally, isolating her further from anyone who isn't the devil and (other) devil on her shoulders.
This way Maddie and Ambessa can both tug at Caitlyn, pulling in what feels to her like opposite directions, all so that she lands precisely where they wanted her all along but with the illusion of active agency.
And look, I'm not saying my read on her is gospel, because I think they intentionally gave us enough room to really speculate and wonder about her, someone who could have been just a background nothing character but ends up being such a huge part of the second season. That's so interesting!
I especially love that she comes across as really naive and innocent, just some poor little thing swept up in the fervor, when in reality she's a true believer who has been manipulating things to go her way from the start.
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