Gaming the Thrones
People are impatient. They want EVERYTHING NOW. Even if, like, getting what you “want” will destroy what you are actually desiring.
In other words, GoT viewers need to be protected against themselves.Â
Snow Job
So here’s the dealio. . .
âGame of Thronesâ is taking a page from Arya Stark and the Faceless Men and using disguise and trickery to achieve their goals. And that goal for the eighth and final season of HBOâs fantasy epic is to keep the public spoiler-free.
âI know âGame of Thrones,â the ending, theyâre going to shoot multiple versions so that nobody really know what happens,â HBO president Casey Bloys said at Moravian College in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania recently, according to Morning Call. âYou have to do that on a long show. Because when youâre shooting something, people know. So theyâre going to shoot multiple versions so that thereâs no real definitive answer until the end.â
Itâs a strategy thatâs been employed before by other shows, including âThrones.â In a Vulture story that details how sites like Watchers on the Wall obtain and then double-checks spoilers, it was revealed that âGame of Thronesâ had shot a fake scene with Kit Harington and a small dragonâs head at one point, specifically to mislead fans. Over on AMC, âThe Walking Deadâ also shot multiple murders to confuse the identity of who Negan (Jefftrey Dean Morgan) actually killed.
âGame of Thrones,â which is arguably one of the most recognizable shows worldwide, was particularly prone to episode and script leaks this past season, and thanks to the internet, which is faster than even Gendry or a raven, most Season 7 details were available to the public in some form. Despite this, it was still the No. 1 watched show of the summer.
âGame of Thronesâ Season 8 will begin shooting around October through possibly as late as August 2018, according to The Hollywood Reporter. This means that the final season premiere would hit around 2019.
Patience, fans. Patience.