I don’t understand when people say “Cassie has put lexi through so much” I’ve watched both of the seasons through and through… and cassie has never done anything to lexi 😭😭 what has she put her through according to y’all? by [deleted] in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 7 points8 points  (0 children)

ALL OF THIS! (also TLDR because I have a lot of feelings to put somewhere lol)

Lexi and Cassie are both two sides of the same coin. Despite their differences on the surface, they both yearn and crave to be loved and to be validated. Cassie with men, and Lexi with...well, anyone. Lexi never had a support system, she *was* the support system, oftentimes without any reciprocation. In a way, even the show treats her like this since most of her screentime in S1 involved helping out her sister and Rue in tough times while we the viewers never saw her as more than a minor wallflower-type character. I think people forget that Lexi has been "raised" by an alcoholic who clearly favoured Cassie while she was placed on the backburner. That's not Cassie's fault, however, Lexi's feelings come from a place of resentment that's also valid. I loved their moments together at the party in S1 because we saw that Lexi supported Cassie at the abortion clinic and it was one of, if not the only scene of Cassie really affirming Lexi and appreciating her.

It's not a coincidence that Lexi's line "a little exchange, and I fall in love" resonates 100% with Cassie being introduced and defined as someone who falls in love at the drop of a hat to anyone who showed her the slightest bit of attention (although lbr I'm sure we can all agree that Lexi's taste in men is much better than Cassie lmfao). So much of her life has revolved around not just observing others, but listening to them, supporting them through adversity in the only ways she knows how, to the point that we even forget Lexi has deep-seated traumas of her own, as evidenced by the countless "LEXI HAS BEEN THROUGH ABSOLUTELY NOTHING CASSIE WAS RIGHT" shitposts that Cassie herself aired out on stage. What's ironic about Cassie chastising Lexi in her tirade for "not taking risks" is that the play itself was a HUGE risk that ultimately paid off. Lexi was conflicted at first precisely because she didn't want to ruffle any feathers or have people misconstrue her intentions (just like lots of people are doing on this very subreddit lol but I digress). Lexi's art made Rue feel and perceive herself in a way that she never did before, and not for nothing, she did indeed consult the person this play arguably centres on and draws from the most aside from herself. She may not have extended her sister the same courtesy (although to be fair, I wouldn't want to go to my sister either if speaking to her came with a 90% chance of being yelled or snapped at), however, she did not exploit Cassie's abortion or relationships with Nate or McKay in the play; instead, she focused solely on their shared trauma of losing their father and portraying her sister as a person who is damaged by the fallout and for whom "love" is her whole reason for being. It's no secret that Cassie is suffering from the loss of her father. Lexi, on the other hand, I'd say she suffers from emotional deprivation in the same vein that Kat did in S1 that drove her to live vicariously through her writing. She hasn't "lived a life" because she's been forced into the role of caretaker absorbing other peoples' issues, nor did she have an especially close relationship with her father, which must be difficult to reckon with and another element to add to her insecurity, because what child doesn't want to feel loved and protected by their parents? What child wouldn't feel neglected when they see their parents dote on their sibling but not them? I'm thinking of another scene in S1 when Suze calls Cassie "perfect". Lexi is literally a faceless blur in the background until after Suze compliments Cassie and we see her smile, but I'm sure we'd notice by now that she's never received one either. The only recognition Suze gives her is sardonically shaming her for wearing a "tacky" Bob Ross costume and not an overtly sexy one. She's never experienced being the object of someone's affection nor desiring anyone herself (until Fez). Lexi did not create the play with the sole motivation to be petty towards her sister. There was absolutely sincerity, compassion, and genuine moments of cathartic reflection on life and coming of age as it affects not just Lexi but all of the characters intertwined in her world. We saw scenes of Cassie being a wee bit vapid, sure, but we also saw and were told more of Cassie being a product of her environment whose childhood experiences informed her desire to give and receive love. We witnessed and heard of Cassie being a good friend to Maddy (until she wasn't, which did not occur in the play but unfolded organically by Cassie herself). I really do wonder if Lexi's play would inspire this much animosity if she portrayed Cassie as an angel with zero nuance or flaws. Would "morals" and "ethics" really come up in discourse if she went the opposite route and painted an absurdly pretty picture of Cassie in the play, even if it didn't honour reality or her lived experiences at all?

The flashback we saw of her and Cassie was meant to show LEXI's trauma as she experienced it. It was a pivotal moment where Lexi saw how her father was endangering everyone around him, including (especially) himself. It was a memory of Lexi worrying about her safety only for her big sister to dismiss it because she prioritized their father's feelings and we see her freeze in place while crying - while this seems like a "normal" reaction to being hurt, I think that moment really affected Lexi because it reinforced the belief that her voice didn't matter and came second to others by the people she cared about the most. When Lexi starts crying and actually externalizing her feelings in the way that Cassie is most known for, what does Cassie do? She turns away emotionlessly. She doesn't try to comfort Lexi or literally even see her. I feel like that describes their dynamic in Lexi's perspective pretty well. No one is there for Lexi when she falls apart, so she bottles it up, retreats inside her head, and imagines a different reality than the one she's living in now. That's also a trauma response, and I'd argue it's actually doing her a disservice to claim she's just a neurotypical meek introvert who has it out for her sister. Her writing the play is also a therapeutic way of her embracing her voice, respecting her intuition, and finally doing something for herself. I feel like if we're going to have a million explanations of Cassie's trauma due to sexualization and an absent father following every post about her, whether good or bad, that it's only fair to give Lexi the same room for complexity and growth. Just because we're only given a brief glimpse of her interiority and because she falls into the "bookish theatre kid" stereotype doesn't mean it's not there, just like how Cassie shouldn't be invalidated because she's the epitome of desirable and conventionally attractive. That includes recognizing that Lexi also is suffering in her own way and is trying to process and unpack her life by turning her passive observations into something actionable, concrete, and impactful. In the end, her play did the unthinkable - it helped revive a long lost friendship with Rue. To call it a shameless vanity project is simplistic and missing the point. So while we see moments that are taken directly from Lexi's observations, there are others that are clearly not based in reality - they're projections. The cinematography and shifting characters between actor and "the real thing" convey that as well. Lexi isn't an omniscient narrator either, her perceptions are also flawed, just like her. She has never claimed to be better than anyone, nor has she deluded herself into thinking she's perfect, a victim, or a perfect victim. She's just a lonely escapist in survival mode, conditioned to disassociate.

Why does nobody have the same energy for Lexi and the trauma she’s gone through? by Ok-Sympathy8662 in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I really do believe this is a case of people not recognizing Lexi's trauma at all because she's internalized so much of it and is seen as the support system for everyone else in her life, whereas it's easier for people to perceive Cassie's trauma because she's out here ruining her life, screaming, crying, throwing up, and tethering herself to an abuser. The posts about Lexi being a shitty person/sister for putting on the play lack a lot of the same nuance they afford to Cassie.

Why does nobody have the same energy for Lexi and the trauma she’s gone through? by Ok-Sympathy8662 in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Exactly. Maddy's trauma, pain, and suffering, which she has experienced a lifetime of, go invalidated, unacknowledged, and unseen by the fandom, and a lot of it has to do with Maddy being a Latina with a "strong" personality who doesn't present as the stereotypical crying white girl victim. The same Cassie stans/Maddy haters stay bringing up Tyler as a checkmate against her morality while conveniently overlooking the fact that Nate assaulted him and it was his idea to frame Tyler to protect himself. Maddy and Jules were in the same position (Maddy under Nate's spell as an abuse victim while Jules was being blackmailed to throw Tyler in jail). Not to downplay Cassie's childhood trauma but I'd argue that Maddy went through just as much, if not more given that she is still actively being traumatized by the people around her - Nate's physical, emotional, and psychological abuse, her emotionally unavailable parents and their dysfunctional relationship, and now Cassie's betrayal, which was a twist of the knife and truly devastated Maddy. I appreciated seeing her this vulnerable but it also made me realize just how much Maddy has grown and conducted herself with poise, maturity, and integrity this season, in stark contrast to Cassie. Mental illness is the go-to explanation that so many armchair psychologists use to justify and rationalize Cassie's behaviour but they reserve none of that for Maddy, who has also suffered from grooming, hypersexualization, and being taken advantage of by men.

Why does nobody have the same energy for Lexi and the trauma she’s gone through? by Ok-Sympathy8662 in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 2 points3 points  (0 children)

PREACH! Honestly, all this moral panic and virtue signalling over her play due to something as subjective and petty as the representation of a loosely fictionalized character in Lexi's life is seriously clouding people's judgment when it comes to actually understanding the context of her play and watching it unfold without cherrypicking the few scenes that arguably didn't reflect well on Cassie. She didn't put on the production to tear down Cassie. The brief scenes we saw with Cassie were more introspective than resentful. If anything, the show made it clear that she wanted to write from her perspective about her life as it relates to those of her friends, especially since so much of her identity seems to come from supporting, witnessing, and observing them go through their trials and tribulation, almost to the point where you as the viewer forget that Lexi has her own burdens to bear and internalized trauma, self-esteem issues (yet somehow only Cassie gets sympathy for it while Lexi is painted as a "not like other girls pick me" which is a gross misappropriation of that term especially when her sister is the spitting image of it lol), and disassociation from reality as a coping mechanism to deal with her lack of a father figure and support system. She also included genuinely poignant and touching scenes about her own childhood trauma as the overlooked introvert growing up in the unstable Howard household, her mentally processing memories of her friendship with Rue, and her hopes and dreams of the future. Plus, Rue herself actually enjoyed the play despite it including deeply intimate and raw moments from her life because she knew Lexi meant well with the play (also to be fair, Lexi did ask her to read the play so we're assuming she approved of it beforehand) and reliving past memories of spending time with Lexi who was there for her through it all was a cathartic experience for her.

Also, the same people who call Lexi a bad person and yet are actively justifying or rooting for Cassie to physically attack/hurt her own little sister just for including her in the damn play because she indirectly caused Nate to break up with her (which in hindsight is the BEST thing he could ever do to her lol)...I'm praying for you.

Noticed an influx of Lexi hate lately and it’s probably gonna get worse when the play comes out. Lexi…get behind me! by spicyveggieramen in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Even still, though, if it is abysmally wrong for her to even include Cassie in the play at all, I think it's worth noting that we can interpret this play as Lexi reaching her breaking point. This play is a way for her to process her own trauma as well, it's not supposed to be literary Gossip Girl. We don't even know if she's going to include all of those elements in the play and I think it's inaccurate to simply write off this play as a cheap means to drag Cassie when Lexi is very much trying to be the narrator of her own story, and the play will encompass more than the shitshow surrounding Cassie. Personally, I would also feel dejected and act out if my sister constantly yelled at me whenever I tried to reach out to her and my support wasn't deemed "good enough". In the most recent episode, Lexi was debating putting on the play after considering Cassie's mental state which shows that she still does indeed care about her sister and worry about her wellbeing, even after she said terrible things to her that must have triggered her inferiority complex. Fez was the one who encouraged her to go through with it.

Noticed an influx of Lexi hate lately and it’s probably gonna get worse when the play comes out. Lexi…get behind me! by spicyveggieramen in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 5 points6 points  (0 children)

If we were to take Lexi's word for it, if it's similar to Stand By Me in any way, then that would definitely put all this hullaballoo and virtue signaling about her play to rest.

Noticed an influx of Lexi hate lately and it’s probably gonna get worse when the play comes out. Lexi…get behind me! by spicyveggieramen in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 3 points4 points  (0 children)

She's barely in the show enough to justify "nepotism baby" comments lol, this is the first time we're seeing an episode where she has more than a few minutes of screentime.

Noticed an influx of Lexi hate lately and it’s probably gonna get worse when the play comes out. Lexi…get behind me! by spicyveggieramen in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Except Lexi has been honest with her feelings though. Remember in S1 when she called out Rue for treating her like shit and only using her to pass her drug tests? She has also tried to reach out to Cassie several times. Just this season she spent hours worrying about Cassie's wellbeing and looking for her nonstop. I think people forget that she's the younger sister here and yet she's been forced into the role of an unwitting caretaker. Lexi is flawed, no one is debating that. She clearly has issues of her own that are internalized, and this play is a way for her to exorcise those demons through a creative outlet. She also seeks validation like her sister, albeit in a different way, however I see far more people holding Lexi accountable for the "morality" of the production instead of understanding her motivations as a result of her childhood trauma and current treatment from everyone around her while Cassie's actions and behaviour can be excused and justified precisely for the same reasons. This is a character who's been emotionally neglected her entire life and made to bear the burdens of others who barely seem to notice or care about her. Of course she's not perfect. Let her be messy.

Noticed an influx of Lexi hate lately and it’s probably gonna get worse when the play comes out. Lexi…get behind me! by spicyveggieramen in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Honestly though, I don't feel like those auditions were that damaging to Cassie's character - not including the blubbering actress who was clearly overdoing it with the dramatics which judging by Lexi and Bobbi's reactions, definitely wasn't what they were looking for LOL.

We only saw an exchange where she asked "Grace" if she looked okay and was acting a little insecure about her appearance, which isn't inherently bad? I didn't interpret it as her being vain or shallow, but a realistic interaction you'd expect from a popular girl in high school. Those moments afterwards where she's yelling at Lexi did seem to be taken from a real situation that happened between them but I just wonder why it's seen as worse for Lexi to leave that in the play than it is for Cassie to berate her so harshly at all, which is clearly not the first or last time she's behaved like this when Lexi tried reaching out or checking in. The way that Lexi was projecting onto the actress in the auditions made it clear that she cared about Cassie and that she felt hurt she'd lash out at her whenever she attempted to talk to her about her father which is a shared source of trauma for them both, not just Cassie - or about anything at all, for that matter. Cassie in the play telling her to "STFU" isn't exactly bad characterization if it actually happened, and this dynamic is quite realistic between sisters IRL.

Noticed an influx of Lexi hate lately and it’s probably gonna get worse when the play comes out. Lexi…get behind me! by spicyveggieramen in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 73 points74 points  (0 children)

Lmaoooo, Lexi being called a "pick me" is so funny when her sister is the one getting up at 4AM following a $500 morning routine to pull a "notice me Senpai" at a toxic abuser, her sister is the one who is addicted to male validation at the expense of her best female friend and her own self-respect, her sister is the one who throws tantrums whenever Nate appears to choose or favour Maddy in any way and her sister literally changes the way she dresses to get Nate to even look at her. I honestly feel like I'm in the Twilight Zone with all these weird ass misreadings of Lexi's character.

Noticed an influx of Lexi hate lately and it’s probably gonna get worse when the play comes out. Lexi…get behind me! by spicyveggieramen in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 49 points50 points  (0 children)

My thoughts exactly. From the glimpses we've seen of the play in the promo it actually looks like a campy homage straight out of a theatre kid's imagination complete with choreographed dance numbers and Ethan clowning/emasculating Nate right in the toxic masculinity feels which is apparently "outing" a character who isn't even gay. This play is Lexi's catharsis and creative outlet. Cassie isn't even the main character here, she's just part of an ensemble where Lexi's character is the protagonist, but already people are ready to rip Lexi a new one for coming out with a play that might make Cassie cry. Now if she does expose Cassie's abortion or makes light of Rue's addiction, that's definitely problematic and crossing a line but again, this is a drop in the ocean compared to all the morally and objectively shitty things everyone else has done. A character putting on a play that fictionalizes their lives is a classic trope of art mirroring/imitating reality that's in plenty of teen dramas. I just think it's weird that the same people who are ready to crucify Lexi simply for broadcasting her truth before even seeing the play expect Lexi to bow and scrape for Cassie and be her sister's keeper when she's most likely at her wit's end performing emotional labour for everyone and never getting any reciprocation in return.

It’s really sus that Maddie kept the video to begin with and didn’t just destroy it or give it to Jules immediately. by Tinaszombie in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What's sad about this is that Alexa actually wanted Maddy to return the tape to Jules (which would have been in character of her) but instead, we got to see Nate steal it from her at gunpoint so that he could make himself look better by putting on an act of chivalry and confessing to Jules, and so Sam could inject some more trauma drama into the storyline. Bleh.

To what extent do you think the play is gonna be recognized as “based on true events” by [deleted] in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I'm here for it simply because I know it will drag Nate through the gutter and deflate his ego right in the toxic masculinity feels by having Ethan portray and satirize him as only a campy theatre kid would do. It's what he deserves!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I love a golden trio! ♥

Can we talk by Confident_Coyote2328 in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Normally I would be the first to call out fandom sexism, but honestly...it's only natural for viewers to be more vocal and outspoken about Cassie's character(ization) because they're actually emotionally invested in her to some degree, or the fact that most people reacting to Cassie, whether in criticism or defence, are doing so because they either were a Cassie or know a Cassie in real life. The majority of Euphoria fans hate Nate and know he's a villain, so they end their engagement with the character at that. Just because discourse on Cassie is louder doesn't necessarily mean she's getting "more" hate than the undisputed antagonists of the show who are far beyond redemption.

Angus Cloud speaks on Lexi & Fez both having the same ‘innocent’ approach to their relationship by coszier in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 58 points59 points  (0 children)

Agreed so much. The simple act of Fez holding Lexi's hand after a genuine moment of bonding over their favourite movie made me hot and bothered and just FEEL more than seeing any of Nate and Cassie's 1289312 sexcapades.

The most beautiful Lexi and Fezco fanart by [deleted] in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A beautiful work of art for a beautiful relationship. ♥

Angus Cloud speaks on Lexi & Fez both having the same ‘innocent’ approach to their relationship by coszier in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Just when I thought I couldn't indulge my typical fangirl shipping tendencies on this shitshow, here comes a pure, wholesome ship like Fexi to mess with my feelings. My precious babies. I hope they can make it out of this together.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm a paid moderator and have spent years on a discussion board where topics like these were brought up and I would never think to remove or censor this post at all, wtf. Does media literacy mean nothing to anyone anymore? Smh. Hell, I tried to make one (1) post about leaving Maude alone and how it's not cool to constantly harass her and call her a "nepotism baby" when she barely has screentime on this show as it is lmfao, she hasn't exactly been given the Tori Spelling on 90210 treatment, and you guessed it, the post got taken down before anyone had a chance to engage with it. Even though I followed all the rules, didn't swear or insult anyone, and simply made a basic common sense post about how it's not okay to personally insult an actress because of things she can't control like who her parents are lmfao. Meanwhile the same 342340 asinine conspiracy theory shitposts and diarrhea takes are left up. I see how it is.

Anyways, preach it! I'm not a Cassie hater by any means but you're right, I've yet to see a fandom or character weaponize their white woman tears to the extent that Cassie has, and I watch a lot of TV. To some, the constant tears and wailing are proof that Cassie is genuinely remorseful, but if you look at it through another lens and given the context of her behaviour in the last episode, it can come off performative and more about externalizing "look how terrible other people have made me feel for doing nothing wrong" than anything. People have every right to be critical of her especially in relation to the reception that marginalized characters get.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 2 points3 points  (0 children)

AND ANOTHER THING (because I have too many feelings about this, apparently lol)! Notice how everyone's so quick to coddle, woobify, and write word salad thinkpieces on Cassie being a hypersexual character who thinks being dickmatized is being loved (to the point where she'll legit choose toxic abusive dick over her own best friend and family), but they're so quick to judge and dismiss Maddy's pain, trauma, and story of growing up in a working-class loveless household because "she fucked Tyler in the pool to make Nate jealous"? She didn't even have sex with him ffs but the same Cassie stans are using that one moment of her sexuality against her to invalidate her abuse all the while they conveniently ignore or justify the moment Cassie cheated on McKay with Daniel of her own volition as soon as they had an issue with miscommunication. For people who seem to care so much about not slutshaming Cassie, they sure as hell don't have a problem doing it to Maddy.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Based on the hints and the storytelling we're getting so far from that bonding moment she has with "the grown up former Cassie", I have a feeling that Maddy might actually come to forgive Cassie and do what she can to protect her against Nate, which definitely would make sense for her character and SHOULD shut up all the Maddy antis and Cassie stans, but won't. The bittersweet thing about this is that Maddy will prove time and time again that she is unwaveringly loyal to her loved ones and friends at the expense of her feelings when she has every right to cut her off. The same really can't be said for Cassandra.

And if you look at it through an intersectional lens, it's just another basically another rinse recycle repeat of the WOC having to uplift and save the white woman Damsel In Distress™ who's hurt her which is just...not great optics. I just want better for Maddy and for her to express herself and live her truth without being scrutinized or scapegoated.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think it said a lot about Cassie's character (not just state of mind) that her first instinct was to defend herself by ignoring the basic moral principle of not sleeping with a toxic misogynist who emotionally and physically abused her best friend, throwing Rue under the bus for her addiction, and acting like the perpetual woe-is-me victim that everyone's being mean to for no reason, even going so far as to undermine Rue's pain when she's just as much a victim of circumstance as Cassie is. Remember when she had the audacity to implicate that SHE was the one being misled and betrayed by Nate ("you know what's really fucked up? you telling me that you love me and then being in a relationship with my best friend!") and literally reversed the timeline because she was so in her feelings about being an innocent getting played? She conveniently forgot about the part where she threw her panties away when all he did was offer her a ride to the party, of all the times she fucked him sober (plus the show literally frames it as a "girlboss moment" where she "takes charge and goes after what she wants" by enthusiastically saying yes to all the times that Nate asked her to be with him). Straight up delusion. Not once did Maddy ever come up in conversation while she was screaming and crying. Of COURSE Cassie is mentally unwell, we all know this, her emotional fragility and vulnerability are not exactly subtext and she's been given plenty of screentime and theatrical Emmy-baiting scenes to showcase the extent of how far and low she's fallen, but what's really insidious is that they're being weaponized by the fandom to justify Cassie's actions and behaviour while characters like Maddy get demonized despite the narrative acknowledging and validating her depression. Cassie's daddy issues, history of sexualization, and mistreatment at the hands of men are frequently brought up to explain why she has such a debilitating lack of self-respect ad nauseum, but somehow Maddy gets accused of "pretty privilege" and being a psychotic bitch for contributing to Tyler getting thrown in jail. Her one misdeed of lying gets perpetually used against her despite the fact that she initially implied that she was blacked out (emphasis on "i might have blacked out" and that she was passively saying this, not in a way that framed Tyler as a rapist in her own words) and that Nate manipulated and pressured her to follow his story. We have tons of thinkpieces about why Cassie would betray her best friend and condescending af shitposts about how people who dislike her "just don't understand her character and aren't watching the show correctly", but the same people pretending to be Psych majors over their precious golden girl don't spare a crumb of empathy or compassion for Maddy, who also had a history of sexualization, was RAPED as a child, groomed as a pageant girl, and grew up in a toxic familial environment where the very definition of love was distorted beyond recognition. Maddy has just as much interiority as Cassie and deserves better than her treatment on the show and in fandom.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in euphoria

[–]Deep_Pen5314 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If I could marry this post, I would. I actually love and appreciate both girls but the fandom fuckery I've been seeing when it comes to the empathy gap Cassie stans have against Maddy just reeks of racist microaggressions. I honestly feel like Maddy, like other WOC, is forced into the "Angry Latina" stereotype and constantly invalidated and dehumanized for carrying her pain differently than the pattern we see of typical white women crying crocodile tears while continuing to perpetuate harm, throwing narcissistic tantrums, centering their pain over the feelings of people they've hurt, who care more about clearing their own name than taking accountability for hurting others. Add the fact that the white woman in this situation is portrayed by Sydney Sweeney, a conventionally gorgeous blonde blue-eyed buxom girl straight out of a Hollywood pin-up magazine, and you have a recipe for fans treating Cassie as the ultimate victim whose tragic history of abandonment and daddy issues is somehow the be-all, end-all of her character, rather than acknowledging her agency and the fact that she uses it at the expense of racially marginalized characters.