The First Lady: Season 1/ Episode 10 “Victory Dance” [Finale] – Recap/ Review (with Spoilers)
As things wrap up with each First Lady’s greatest, post-First Lady, accomplishment, we’re reminded why they were the focus of this mini-series.
As things wrap up with each First Lady’s greatest, post-First Lady, accomplishment, we’re reminded why they were the focus of this mini-series.
As Michelle is tasked to do for Hillary as she did for Barack, Eleanor deals with the US prepping for World War II and Betty with multiple interventions.
As Gerald Ford’s administration ends, Michelle faces the murders of Black kids by vigilantes and cops, and Eleanor the inaction of her husband against Nazis.
Another day, another series of events that remind the First Ladies that their husbands’ desire to win elections likely matters more than why they decided to be President.
The different presidents are forced to remember who they married, as their wives take on unpopular, if not outright damaging causes or positions.
It’s one battle after another as we watch the First Lady deal with the administration and how they wish to control what the First Lady says.
It’s time to focus on the marital struggles of the ladies, which existed even before their husbands became president.
Before they were first ladies, they were simply independent women and not necessarily looking for a beau. Yet, then these wonderful men walked into their lives.
As each First Lady enters the White House, they find themselves being managed and downplayed, despite how necessary to their husbands they are.
In The First Lady, we are shown the ever-evolving role of being the first lady, especially in a country where the role was never meant to be an equal but rather one of many supporters.
While Bird Box certainly contains some emotional high points, it overstays its welcome.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.
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