Later on we’ll see a fantasized family annihilation, but I wouldn’t be surprised if a lot of viewers feel the dinner-table argument between Laurie, Jaclyn, and Kate is the episode’s real bloodbath. Laurie tells Jaclyn she can’t be trusted, and hints that she maybe made a play for Kate’s perfect husband Dave back in the day. Jaclyn says all of Laurie’s unhappiness is her own fault, due to her own decisions: She could have hooked up with Valentin the night before, just as she could have gotten a different job or married a different guy, but she didn’t. She’s the one constant in all this misfortune.
Kate takes Jaclyn’s side, in brutal fashion. “The source of your disappointment changes,” she tells her quote-unquote friend, “but the constant is you’re always disappointed.” That’s when Laurie storms off, calling Jaclyn vain and selfish, telling Kate her perfect life is an obvious lie. Afterwards, a judgey Kate drives unfaithful-wife Jaclyn away fuming as well. The White Lotus has done this kind of emotional wetwork before, but never with such ruthlessness or effectiveness. Every blow lands.
I reviewed this week’s The White Lotus for Decider.
Tags: decider, the white lotus, TV, TV reviews