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In reply to the discussion: Do you approve of hitting children to punish them, under certain conditions? [View all]JonLP24
(29,990 posts)In Model, the second of the first two season 4 episodes of Louie that premiered on FX Monday night, Louie meets a beautiful model (rather, a beautiful model pursues Louie), she takes him to her house, and they have sex. While in bed, the woman (Yvonne Strahovski) tickles Louie, despite his urgent warnings that he doesnt like being tickled. Losing control of his body, Louie then turns and, fully accidentally, hits the woman in the eye. She is taken to the hospital, and Louie is faced with a potential lawsuit from the womans family, the disdain of his friends for hitting a woman and the knowledge that her pupil is paralyzed.
In the past, Louie hasnt shied away from darker themes, tapping into uncomfortable conversations about existential loneliness, sexual assault and mental illness. In the run-up to the Louie premiere, FXs publicity obliquely asked that the detail of Louie hitting a woman and the aftermath not be shared in advance. So it seemed, perhaps, that the show was going to make us wrestle with some question of moral ambiguity around Louies actions anger problems, impulsivity, some weightier characterological question. But instead, Louie was the same island of perfect passivity as always just a normal guy to whom things happen. Even in the case of hitting a woman in the face, it literally happened to him more than it happened to her. (Once she gets punched, we never see the character again, just Louie muddling through a meeting with his lawyer and bemoaning how much money he is going to have to pay the girls family.)
http://www.salon.com/2014/05/06/louie_hits_a_woman_but_of_course_its_not_his_fault/`