Who Watches the Rewatchers

S2E19: I Only Have Eyes for You – Ghosts, Regret, and the Forgiveness You Can't Give Yourself

58 min · 19. März 2026
Episode S2E19: I Only Have Eyes for You – Ghosts, Regret, and the Forgiveness You Can't Give Yourself Cover

Beschreibung

Sunnydale High is haunted — but not by just any ghost. In I Only Have Eyes for You, a lovesick student from 1955 keeps replaying the worst moment of his life, possessing anyone who wanders too close to his loop of regret. Alan and Jarrod unpack the parapsychology cold open (residual vs. intelligent hauntings — yes, it's a real field), debate whether the episode was too clever for its own good, and dig into why this Monster of the Week operates at its very best: fully integrated into the season's emotional mythology. We talk Buffy's telling hair and forlorn expression, the role reversal that reframes everything, Giles' desperate wish that the ghost is Jenny, Spike's secret recovery, and why Angel scrubbing himself raw after the climax is one of the most quietly devastating character beats in the season. Plus: the janitor from Winter's Bone, dog spit statistics, and the Sadie Hawkins dance as existential metaphor. #BuffyRewatch #IOnlyHaveEyesForYou #BtVSSeason2 #BuffyPodcast #ResidualHaunting #GhostOfRegret #RoleReversal #BuffyAndAngel #SpikeIsHealed #GilesAndJenny #MonsterOfTheWeek #SadieHawkinsDance #WhoWatchesTheWatchers #ParapsychologyNerds #ForgivenessIsHard #ScoobyGang

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Episode S3E3: Faith, Hope & Trick – Slick Vampires, Shadow Selves, and the Naked Angel Who Fell from the Sky Cover

S3E3: Faith, Hope & Trick – Slick Vampires, Shadow Selves, and the Naked Angel Who Fell from the Sky

A limo rolls up to a Sunnydale burger joint, the window slides down, and Mr. Trick steps in as one of the slickest vampire intros the show has ever pulled off. Alan and Jarrod take on "Faith, Hope and Trick" — the episode that drops the bad-girl Slayer into town and quietly sets up half of season three. They dig into the on-the-nose naming of Scott Hope (and why his apologetic, impatient energy lands so awkwardly), the deep-cut Johnny-Depp-as-Buster-Keaton-obsessive theory from Benny and Joon that might explain that strange pop-culture hook, and Trick playing political aide to a cloven-hoofed Kakistos while joking that Sunnydale makes DC look like Mayberry. From there it's into the meat of it: Buffy's prophetic Angel dreams turning from grief to almost-Freddy menace, the painful idea that even her most intimate moments play out performatively in front of passive friends, Joyce flexing some surprisingly sharp parenting against a cornered Principal Snyder, and Faith arriving as the shadow-self mirror — where Kendra was discipline and shame, Faith is the bad girl who gets under Buffy's skin. The guys puzzle over why the Watchers Council keeps Giles off the Cotswolds guest list, riff on Eliza Dushku carrying her own show (Dollhouse and that Oxford theology paper included), unpack the Single White Female and Martha Stewart references, and land on the freedom-versus-constraint theme before that final tag — a naked, sweaty Angel falling from the sky — pulls Buffy right back in. #WhoWatchesTheRewatchers #BuffyRewatch #FaithHopeAndTrick #BuffyS3E3 #BtVSSeason3 #BuffyPodcast #FaithTheSlayer #MrTrick #Kakistos #ScottHope #ShadowSelf #FiveByFive #AngelReturns #WatchersCouncil #ElizaDushku #Dollhouse #SingleWhiteFemale #PropheticDreams #SunnydaleHigh #JoyceSummers #PrincipalSnyder #JossWhedon #ScoobyGang #BuffyAndAngel

26. Juni 202659 min
Episode S3E2: Dead Man's Party — You Can't Just Bury Stuff Cover

S3E2: Dead Man's Party — You Can't Just Bury Stuff

Buffy's back from L.A., and now everyone has feelings about it. Alan and Jarrod dig into "Dead Man's Party" — the one where a Nigerian mask of dubious provenance raises the dead, the Scoobies throw the world's most ill-advised welcome-home party, and a milquetoast blond casserole-bearer named Pat proves the gang predicted the Karen years ahead of schedule. Along the way: Giles in full Ripper mode threatening Snyder, the joy of "do you like my mask?", Shatner lighting (and its inversion), an unexpected Pet Sematary detour, and whether the real metaphor is the zombies or the mask itself. Plus the eternal question — is it a gathering, a shindig, or a hootenanny? A serviceable transition episode with a muddy metaphor, sharp one-liners, and a whole lot of unburied resentment. #BuffyTheVampireSlayer #BTVS #DeadMansParty #BuffyRewatch #WhoWatchesTheReWatchers #BuffySummers #Scoobies #Giles #Whedonverse #RewatchPodcast #TVPodcast #90sTV #VampireSlayer #BuffyS3

19. Juni 202654 min
Episode S3E1: Anne – Helen's Kitchen, Reverse Baptisms, and "I'm Buffy. The Vampire Slayer." Cover

S3E1: Anne – Helen's Kitchen, Reverse Baptisms, and "I'm Buffy. The Vampire Slayer."

Buffy's gone. The Scoobies are slaying without her (poorly — "that never works"). And somewhere in LA, a waitress named Anne is wearing gingham at Helen's Kitchen, keeping her head down — until a street preacher with a sketchy flyer, a familiar face from "Lie to Me," and a vat of black baptismal sludge drag her into a literal hell dimension. Alan and Jarrod open Season 3 with the premiere that sets the whole year's identity theme in motion, and make the case Vox ranked this one (#56 of 144) way too low. We talk the visual motif Alan tracks across the entire episode (Buffy's face cropped, obscured, hair-curtained, shoulder-blocked — until she "becomes" herself again, with mirrors, reflective surfaces, and that black baptismal goo that pointedly doesn't reflect); Jarrod's reverse-baptism Exodus reading via St. Irenaeus of Lyon's "the glory of God is a human being fully alive" and the Hebrew Mitzrayim (Egypt as the narrow, constricted place); the Tony Alamo documentary Ministry of Evil and how cults and predators target the marginalized; the body-horror tattoo reveal that calls back to The Substance; Joyce's "I don't blame myself, I blame you" gut-punch to Giles; Cordelia and Xander's accidental-spike-explosion reunion makeout; the iconic "Who are you?" / "I'm Buffy. The Vampire Slayer. And you are?" moment that lives in the opening credits forever after; and Lily inheriting Buffy's discarded "Anne" identity — what that says, and doesn't say, about agency, baptism, and standing on your own account. Plus: kombucha as the only plausible Bronze beverage, Buffy reboot buzz (Sarah Michelle Gellar everywhere again), the prodigal-son return home to Joyce, the fight stance that becomes part of the opening credits, and why Season 3 is where this show really finds its legs. #BuffyRewatch #BuffyS3E1 #AnneEpisode #BtVSSeason3 #WhoWatchesTheWatchers #BuffyPodcast #IdentityArc #HelensKitchen #ReverseBaptism #StIrenaeus #FullyAlive #Mitzrayim #LilyChanterelle #ScoobyGang #JoyceAndGiles #CordeliaAndXander #BuffyReboot #SarahMichelleGellar #ImBuffyTheVampireSlayer #SeasonPremiere #JossWhedon

22. Mai 20261 h 2 min
Episode S2E22: Becoming, Part 2 – "Me": Identity, Sacrifice, and the Sword You Catch Bare-Handed Cover

S2E22: Becoming, Part 2 – "Me": Identity, Sacrifice, and the Sword You Catch Bare-Handed

Season two ends the way the best Buffy ends — with a kiss, a sword, and a school bus pulling out of town. Alan and Jarrod close the book on "Becoming, Part 2," the finale Vox ranks #4 of all 144 episodes, and dig into why a story this devastating is also the show operating at its absolute peak. They walk the wreckage left by Part 1 (Kendra dead, Giles kidnapped, Buffy arrested for murder), unpack the cop who "wouldn't shoot" as a relic of It's a Wonderful Life–era filmmaking, and follow Whistler — the neo-noir mentor demon — into a genuinely deep conversation about fate: Greek tragedy versus comedy, why the Resurrection scandalized the Greco-Roman idea of a balanced cosmos, and whether Angel's "destiny" implies a Calvinist god pulling cosmic strings. Then there's the theology of the blood sacrifice that closes Acathla's portal (Christus Victor, or the healing model?), and a tour through the vampire as religious figure — Bram Stoker's "Catholic" Dracula, Anne Rice's belief-optional "Protestant" vampires, and Buffy's postmodern melange of crosses and holy water that throws real shade at the church. At the center of it all: Buffy catching the sword bare-handed and answering Angelus's "what's left?" with the only word that matters — and what it means that she's finally claimed her identity with her mother, her friends, and her ex. Plus: Spike and Joyce's gloriously uncomfortable couch summit ("Get your hands off my daughter"), the "Kick his ass" line that launched a thousand anti-Xander posts, Drusilla seducing Giles while wearing Jenny Calendar's face, Anthony Stewart Head naming "Passion" as his favorite episode, Snyder phoning the Mayor to seed season three, Alan's road stories filming Sean Murphy draw a Batman Beyond cover, and Sarah McLachlan's "Full of Grace" carrying Buffy out of Sunnydale. #WhoWatchesTheRewatchers #BuffyRewatch #BecomingPart2 #BuffyS2E22 #BtVSSeason2 #BuffyPodcast #BuffyFinale #Acathla #Whistler #ChristusVictor #VampireTheology #BramStoker #AnneRice #FullOfGrace #SarahMcLachlan #SpikeAndJoyce #GetYourHandsOffMyDaughter #KickHisAss #PrincipalSnyder #MayorWilkins #DrusillaSwagger #JennyCalendar #SarahMichelleGellar #JossWhedon #ScoobyGang #BuffyAndAngel #IdentityAndSacrifice

15. Mai 20261 h 2 min
Episode S2E21: Becoming, Part 1 – Acathla, the Hero's Journey, and the Sweetest Slayer Blood Cover

S2E21: Becoming, Part 1 – Acathla, the Hero's Journey, and the Sweetest Slayer Blood

The world's about to end. Finals are still happening. And somewhere in 1996 Manhattan, a malnourished vampire is eating rats out of a dumpster while a demon in a porkpie hat tells him he needs a sense of purpose. Alan and Jarrod dig into "Becoming, Part 1" — the episode that took an already-shallow Angel and gave him a backstory big enough to launch his own series. We talk Acathla and the medieval-knight-stabbed-him-in-the-heart-but-not-really problem (the sword is over on the leftside, Joss), Drusilla's new post-recovery swagger and her cold, throat-slitting flex on Kendra ("the blood of a slayer"), Whistler as Angel's first mentor in textbook Joseph Campbell fashion, and Max Perlich's deep-cut résumé from Gleaming the Cube to Gilmore Girls. Plus: the Orb of Thessulah-as-paperweight running gag, the Darla flashback that retcons Angel's siring with full Anne Rice energy, the worm's-eye-view cinematography in the museum that briefly makes Buffy look like a real movie, the deja-vu floppy-disk recovery that puts the gypsy curse back on the table, Buffy's iffy LA Valley Girl flashback, and Sarah Michelle Gellar's slow-motion sprint to Kendra's body that's been burned into Alan's memory since 1998. We also unpack the central thematic gambit — that the Buffyverse uses beginnings (Angel's siring, his ensoulment, Buffy's call) to talk about endings (Buffy and Angel, the school year, the world) — and why the Vox and AV Club rankings have this two-parter as some of the finest hours the show ever produced. #WhoWatchesTheRewatchers #BuffyRewatch #BecomingPart1 #BuffyS2E21 #BtVSSeason2 #BuffyPodcast #Acathla #AngelOriginStory #Whistler #JosephCampbellHerosJourney #DrusillaSwagger #KendraTheVampireSlayer #MrPointy #OrbOfThessulah #DarlaTheVampire #JulieBenz #MaxPerlich #GleamingTheCube #SarahMichelleGellar #SunnydaleHigh #GypsyCurse #VampireMythology #ScoobyGang #BuffyAndAngel #SlowMotionRun

8. Mai 202644 min