“Never apologize,” Kai Anderson (Evan Peters) advises Ally. Ally becomes the very poster child of everything she used to disdain, an her wife, Ivy (Alison Pill) still has to go to work. The woman who considers herself the least prejudiced person on the planet has to cross “No justice/No peace” picket lines as she is hailed as the lesbian George Zimmerman. But that’s white privilege in small town America. This is a little off as the other person Ally actually killed was the person Pedro is accused of killing. Pedro Morales was already a person of interest in another related killing, so the local police have one less crime to solve. Under the stand your ground law, she was perfectly within her rights to kill the man bringing her a box of essentials for a blackout. They were so close to being cured.Īlly Mayfair-Richards (Sarah Paulson) has chalked up her second kill on the show, but nothing’s gong to happen to her.
They are introduced into the series just to die. The wonderful, loving couple is buried in white coffins with red cloth by the home invading clowns. She herself is getting better since she freed herself by watching the closing of her father’s coffin lid. The good doctor reminds his patient that trauma lingers in the blood long after it’s passed. The series has been ferreting out multiple phobias that sit on the fringe of accepted disorders.
It is an exit phobia that’s specifically the fear of getting locked in a cupboard, whether old mother Hubbard keeps it stocked it or not. The woman’s childhood trauma led her to a bad case of ferretrophobia, which sounds like a made up name for someone afraid of M*A*S*H’s Frank Burns. That is where the deals are made and the bodies are buried. American Horror Story loves it when everything goes dark. Then I close my eyes and everything goes black,” she says. “I lie down on my bed, look in his eyes and he kisses me. Rudy Vincent’s (Cheyenne Jackson) apparently long-term patients is in therapy with her supportive husband encouraging her nightmares to come alive. “The fear is always the same,” we hear in the opening. Even if they were able to finally evict their “Neighbors from Hell.” American Horror Story: Cult, season 7, episode 3, ensures there won’t be any block party thrown on Ally and Ivy’s street for a very long time. This American Horror Story: Cult review contains spoilers.