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Come and check out Leverage 1x4  "The Snow Job"- EP Sponsored Reaction - Available on the drive now!

Special thanks to Executive producer Delguy for sponsoring this reaction! 


FULL: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Ev1vRmwyd14XBffQm1VXbul1iZw7s73L/view?usp=sharing

Edited: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1t8aees01uPKVi0zYmxPxSx-C7iGVb_3l/view?usp=sharing

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Comments

DelGuy03 (edited)

Comment edits

2021-11-01 06:15:36 Thanks for another great reaction! I just knew this series would be the sort of thing you both go for. As for the situation at the start of this episode -- the way the company did shoddy repairs, dragged them out, and then were able to take the house -- I'm afraid it's actually a real thing that happens. The DVDs for the series have commentary on every episode, and one of the things they keep saying is "the research for this show can be really depressing." This story was inspired by one horrible contracting firm that was a whole family working together, which made homeowners trust them (unfortunately). One quote about the real-life contractor from the commentary is "we could never quite convey in the show how much we wanted to find this guy and beat him up." As you're seeing, it's never about getting money for the crew (they got enough for the rest of their lives back in episode 1). It's about getting it from the people who did the harm. The villains have to suffer, in proportion to the hurt they caused, and in the end they have to know they were outsmarted. I'm not giving anything away if I say that Nate's drinking is real. This case (like some others) triggered his memories of the loss of his son, and the series is a long journey for him in this respect. He's not always a nice person.
2021-10-31 22:49:38 Thanks for another great reaction! I just knew this series would be the sort of thing you both go for. As for the situation at the start of this episode -- the way the company did shoddy repairs, dragged them out, and then were able to take the house -- I'm afraid it's actually a real thing that happens. The DVDs for the series have commentary on every episode, and one of the things they keep saying is "the research for this show can be really depressing." This story was inspired by one horrible contracting firm that was a whole family working together, which made homeowners trust them (unfortunately). One quote about the real-life contractor from the commentary is "we could never quite convey in the show how much we wanted to find this guy and beat him up." As you're seeing, it's never about getting money for the crew (they got enough for the rest of their lives back in episode 1). It's about taking it from the people who did the harm, to give to their victims. The villains have to suffer, in proportion to the hurt they caused, and in the end they have to know they were outsmarted. I'm not giving anything away if I say that Nate's drinking is real. This case (like some others) triggered his memories of the loss of his son, and the series is a long journey for him in this respect. He's not always a nice person.

Thanks for another great reaction! I just knew this series would be the sort of thing you both go for. As for the situation at the start of this episode -- the way the company did shoddy repairs, dragged them out, and then were able to take the house -- I'm afraid it's actually a real thing that happens. The DVDs for the series have commentary on every episode, and one of the things they keep saying is "the research for this show can be really depressing." This story was inspired by one horrible contracting firm that was a whole family working together, which made homeowners trust them (unfortunately). One quote about the real-life contractor from the commentary is "we could never quite convey in the show how much we wanted to find this guy and beat him up." As you're seeing, it's never about getting money for the crew (they got enough for the rest of their lives back in episode 1). It's about taking it from the people who did the harm, to give to their victims. The villains have to suffer, in proportion to the hurt they caused, and in the end they have to know they were outsmarted. I'm not giving anything away if I say that Nate's drinking is real. This case (like some others) triggered his memories of the loss of his son, and the series is a long journey for him in this respect. He's not always a nice person.