National Spelling Bee champions say it set them up for success: 'You attain a level of mastery'New Foto - National Spelling Bee champions say it set them up for success: 'You attain a level of mastery'

Joanne Lagatta arrived at the University of Wisconsin in 1995 with a flawless academic record and an achievement on her resumé that she didn't like to talk about — but that no other undergrad on the sprawling Madison campus could claim: Scripps National Spelling Bee champion. The bee winner in 1991 at age 13, Lagatta nonetheless struggled adjusting to life outside her rural hometown of Clintonville, Wisconsin — until she got a push from a professor who was a devoted spelling-bee fan. "I went in thinking I was a smart kid who had won a National Spelling Bee, and I must be able to compete with the highest-level academic kids. I signed up for a bunch of advanced classes I clearly had no place being in. I thought I was going to fail my chemistry class," Lagatta says. "I went to my professor. He stared me down and said, 'I know who you are. I know what you're capable of. You are not failing my class.' He pushed me through that class. I certainly didn't get an A, but I didn't fail." Lagatta, now 47, turned out fine. She's a neonatologist at Children's Wisconsin, a hospital in Milwaukee. And like many former champions of the National Spelling Bee — which celebrates its 100th anniversary when it starts Tuesday at a convention center outside Washington — she says the competition changed her life for the better because it taught her she could do hard things. Winners of the spelling bee aren't celebrities, exactly. Those who competed before it was televised by ESPN — it now airs on Scripps-owned ION — aren't often recognized by strangers. But they have to accept being known forever for something they accomplished in middle school. Google any past bee champion, and it's one of the first things that pops up. Many past champions have remained involved with the bee. Jacques Bailly, the 1980 champion, is the bee's longtime pronouncer. Paige Kimble, who won a year later, ran the bee as executive director from 1996-2020. Vanya Shivashankar, the 2015 co-champ, returns each spring as master of ceremonies, and her older sister, Kavya, is one of several former champs onthe panel that selects wordsfor the competition. Even for those former champs who've moved on entirely, the competition has remained a cornerstone of their lives. The Associated Press spoke to seven champs about their membership in this exclusive club. The surgeon Anamika Veeramani, the 2010 champion, graduated from Yale in three years and got her medical degree at Harvard. A resident in plastic and reconstructive surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, she is training to become a craniofacial surgeon, and the focused and disciplined approach that led her to the spelling bee title has been a throughline in her life since. "You attain a level of mastery over a subject that you wouldn't have otherwise, and that feeling of mastery is very similar across fields," the 29-year-old Veeramani says. "Once you know a subject well enough, you're able to really just play with that subject and and come up with things, and there's just a joy and delight in what you're doing. ... I'm going to spend the rest of my career in surgery chasing that." The journalist Molly Baker was never uncomfortable about her past as the 1982 spelling-bee champion, and in the right context, she's happy to bring it up — as an icebreaker or a standout line on her resumé. "Oh, I was never cool," Baker says. "I knew people who were state tennis champs, and they were, you know, in their own way equally as nerdy. I would always joke about it, that I was queen of the dorks." Baker, 55, worked as a staff writer at the Wall Street Journal and wrote a book, "High Flying Adventures in the Stock Market." She's now a freelance journalist, and she says there's no question her spelling bee title helped her career. "One summer in college I was an intern at, it was called 'Real Life with Jane Pauley.' It was an evening magazine TV news show," Baker says. "And that, I'm sure, was partly a result of having been interviewed on the 'Today' show by Jane Pauley in 1982. I was not shy about saying that when I applied." The advocate Jon Pennington knew he was socially awkward when he won the bee in 1986. He even wore his mother's bulky sunglasses on the bee stage because the bright lights bothered him. When he was 40, he was diagnosed with autism, a condition he proudly embraces. "I did not win the National Spelling Bee in spite of my autism. I did not win the National Spelling Bee by triumphing over my autism. I won the National Spelling Bee because of my autism," the 53-year-old Pennington says. "For me, it almost felt like if you hear a chord played on a piano but there's a dissonant note in that chord, that's what it felt like when you came across a misspelling." Pennington, who lives in Minneapolis with his wife and dog, worked for years in corporate human resources and is now working as a writer, collaborating on an as-yet unpublished biography of songwriter Eden Ahbez. He still loves academic competitions and word games, and he has had crossword puzzles published by the Atlantic, The Wall Street Journal and the Los Angeles Times. The superstar Even among spelling champions, Nupur Lala's name inspires reverence and awe. Her victory in 1999 was later chronicled in a documentary, "Spellbound," and she kicked offa quarter-century of Indian Americans dominating the bee. That doesn't mean it was easy to be known for her linguistic brilliance. "One thing that really stood out about John (Masko), my very soon-to-be husband: Every man I had dated before never wanted to play any sort of word game with me. They would avoid doing the crossword puzzle, refused to play Scrabble," the 40-year-old Lala says. "I realized this man was special among so many reasons because he was the first man who was willing to play Scrabble with me consistently, and now I would say we're pretty even in Scrabble ability." At this point, Masko chimes in via speakerphone: "She's still much better at crossword puzzles!" Lala works as a neuro-oncologist at Dartmouth Health in Lebanon, New Hampshire. She prescribes chemotherapy and coordinates management of brain and spine tumors. And she has a theory about why spelling champions pursue medicine or neuroscience — because they're already intrigued by how the brain works. "One thing I was really fascinated by after participating in spelling bees is eidetic memory. Things you've seen in the past flash as pictures in your head, and that occurred for me during the spelling bee," Lala says. "When I went to medical school, I didn't expect this at all, I picked neurology because I was so interested in preserving faculties like language that really make people who they are." The marathoner Kerry Close Guaragno won the 2006 bee in her fifth appearance at nationals and learned plenty about perseverance along the way. "Looking at these kids who seemed so smart and so experienced, it seemed almost incomprehensible that I could win the competition one day," said the 32-year-old Guaragno, who works for Group Gordon, a New York City-based public relations firm. "I'm an endurance runner now. I do half marathons and marathons, and I qualified for the Boston Marathon earlier this year," she says. "Starting out running marathons and not being able to break four hours, and now qualifying for Boston, I learned the mindset and process of how to do that from the spelling bee." The purist Of the many perks that came with winning the bee, 16-year-old Dev Shah,the victor two years ago, is most proud that he got an op-ed published in The Washington Post about howthe bee taught him to take risksand accept the results. During the 2023 bee, Shah spelled "rommack," a word with an unknown language of origin that he had never seen before. "The 40 seconds I spent spelling 'rommack' exhibited the traits of a champion rather than a good speller," Shah says. "That's what makes the spelling bee very special. It tests way more than just spelling. It tests critical thinking, risk-taking and poise." Because he passed those tests, Shah says he's at peace with being forever recognized as a spelling champion, but adds: "I really hope that it's not the only thing I'm known as for the rest of my life." ___ Ben Nuckols has covered the Scripps National Spelling Bee since 2012. Follow his workhere.

National Spelling Bee champions say it set them up for success: 'You attain a level of mastery'

National Spelling Bee champions say it set them up for success: 'You attain a level of mastery' Joanne Lagatta arrived at the Univer...
King Charles III visit to Canada underscores Canada's sovereignty to TrumpNew Foto - King Charles III visit to Canada underscores Canada's sovereignty to Trump

OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — King Charles III arrives in Ottawa this week to underscore Canada's sovereignty to U.S. PresidentDonald Trump. Trump's repeated suggestion that the U.S.annex its northern neighborprompted Prime Minister Mark Carney to invite Charles to give the speech from the throne that will outline his government's agenda for the new Parliament. The king is thehead of statein Canada, which is a member of the British Commonwealth of former colonies. "His Majesty King Charles III will read the speech from the throne and thus present the plan of our government, our priorities, as Canada is facing a pivotal moment in its history, the biggest transformation of the global trading system since the fall of the Berlin Wall," Carney told his caucus Sunday. Carney said "Canada has a steadfast defender in the sovereign" when he announced the visit earlier this month. It is rare for the monarch to deliver what's called the speech from the throne in Canada. Charles' mother, Queen Elizabeth II, did it twice in her 70-year reign. The last time was in 1977. Canadians are largely indifferent to the monarchy, but Carney has been eager to show the differences between Canada and the U.S. and he said that the king's visit clearly underscores the sovereignty of Canada. The Americans had a revolution to gain independence from Britain. Canada remained a colony until 1867 and continued thereafter as a constitutional monarchy with a British-style parliamentary system. "We are different and the king illustrates that," former Quebec Premier Jean Charest said. "If you look at why King Charles is reading the speech from the throne than you have to then acknowledge Canada's story." But new U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra said sending messages isn't necessary and Canadians should move on from the 51st state talk, telling the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that if there's a message to be sent there's easier ways to do that like calling him or calling the president. Royal historian Carolyn Harris expects Trump to notice the visit because the president has repeatedly spoken about his admiration for the royal family. Harris said Trump might see how different Canada is from the U.S. "It is a very distinctive history that goes back to the waves of loyalists who settled here after the American revolution," Harris said. "And we're going to seeing the king in a Canadian context, escorted by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, surrounded by Canadian symbolism. This is very much King Charles III in his role as King of Canada." The speech, which will be delivered Tuesday, is not written by the king or his advisers in the U.K., as the king serves as a nonpartisan head of state. The king will read what is put before him by Canada's government. "Charles can only act with the consent and with the advice of his prime minister. But at the same time he cannot act in a way that would throw any of the other 14 Commonwealth realms under the bus. So it is finest tightrope to walk," said Justin Vovk, a Canadian royal historian. Canadians were not happy when U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer extended a state visit invitation to Trump on behalf of the king during a time when Trump threatened Canada's sovereignty. "To be frank," Carney told Britain's Sky News. "They weren't impressed by that gesture, quite simply, given the circumstance. It was a time when we were quite clear ... about the issues around sovereignty." The king has more recently been showing support for Canada, including displaying Canadian military medals on his chest during a visit to a British aircraft carrier. After he arrives on Monday he will drop the ceremonial first puck or ball during a street hockey game. He will also attend a community event and meet with Carney and Canada's governor general, his representative as head of state. The king will return to the U.K. after Tuesday's speech and a visit to Canada's National War Memorial.

King Charles III visit to Canada underscores Canada's sovereignty to Trump

King Charles III visit to Canada underscores Canada's sovereignty to Trump OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — King Charles III arrives in Ottawa thi...
Scripps National Spelling Bee guide: How to watch, who the notable spellers are, rules and prizesNew Foto - Scripps National Spelling Bee guide: How to watch, who the notable spellers are, rules and prizes

The best young spellers in the English language are set to compete at theScripps National Spelling Bee, which celebrates its100th anniversary this year. The first bee was held in 1925, when the Louisville Courier-Journal invited other newspapers to host spelling bees and send their champions to Washington. The bee is now held just outside the nation's capital, at a convention center on the banks of the Potomac River in Oxon Hill, Maryland. It starts Tuesday and concludes Thursday night. This will be the 97th bee; it was canceled from 1943 to 1945 because of World War II and again in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic. This year's champion will be the 110th, because the bee ended in a two-way tie several times and an eight-way tie in 2019. How can I watch the Scripps National Spelling Bee? The bee is broadcast and streamed on channels and platforms owned by Scripps, a Cincinnati-based media company. — Tuesday, May 27: Preliminary rounds streamed on Bounce XL, Grit Xtra, Laff More andspellingbee.comfrom 8 a.m. to 4:40 p.m. EDT. — Wednesday, May 28: Quarterfinals streamed on Bounce XL, Grit Xtra, Laff More and spellingbee.com from 8 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. Semifinals streamed on Bounce XL, Grit Xtra, Laff More and spellingbee.com from 2:30 to 6:30 p.m. Semifinals broadcast on ION on tape-delay from 8-10 p.m. — Thursday, May 29: Finals broadcast on ION from 8-10 p.m. Who is competing at the Scripps National Spelling Bee? The bee features 243 spellers, with at least one from each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia; as well as spellers from U.S. territories Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and the Northern Mariana Islands; and from Canada, the Bahamas, Germany, Ghana, Kuwait and Nigeria. Faizan Zaki, last year's runner-up, is back after losing to Bruhat Soma in a lightning-round tiebreaker known as a "spell-off." He's a 13-year-old seventh-grader from Allen, Texas. If he falls short again, he would have one more year of eligibility. He has won several online bees that top spellers compete in as preparation, including the Words of Wisdom Spelling Bee and the South Asian Spelling Bee. Other possible contenders: — Aishwarya Kallakuri, a 14-year-old eighth-grader from Concord, North Carolina, and winner of the SpellPundit National Spelling Bee. — Avinav Prem Anand, a 14-year-old eighth-grader from Columbus, Ohio, who finished second to Faizan in the Words of Wisdom bee. — Vedanth Raju, a 12-year-old seventh-grader from Aurora, Colorado, and the younger brother of2022 runner-up Vikram Raju. What are the rules of the Scripps National Spelling Bee? Spellers qualify by advancing through regional bees hosted by sponsors around the country. In order to compete, spellers must not have advanced beyond the eighth grade or be older than 15. Spellers must get through two preliminary rounds, quizzing them on words from a list provided in advance: one spelling round and one multiple-choice vocabulary round. Those who make it through the preliminaries sit for a written spelling and vocabulary test, with the top 100 or so finishers advancing to the quarterfinals. The words for the test, and for all subsequent rounds, are taken from the Merriam-Webster Unabridged dictionary. Throughout the quarterfinals and semifinals, spellers are eliminated at the microphone through oral spelling or vocabulary questions. About a dozen spellers advance to the finals. When only two spellers remain, Scripps has the option to use a lightning-round tiebreaker known as a "spell-off" to determine the champion. However, Scripps hastaken away the requirementthat the spell-off begin at a specific time, giving bee judges more discretion to let the competition play out. What are the prizes for the Scripps National Spelling Bee champion? The winner receives a custom trophy and more than $50,000 in cash and prizes. Here are the prize payouts: — First place: $52,500 in cash, reference works from Encyclopedia Britannica and Merriam-Webster, and a $1,000 contribution to a school of the champion's choice. — Second place: $25,000. — Third place: $15,000. — Fourth place: $10,000. — Fifth place: $5,000. — Sixth place: $2,500. — All other finalists: $2,000. Stories of note — National Spelling Bee winners reflect on how it changed their lives —Scripps National Spelling Bee tweaks its rules to make 'spell-off' tiebreaker less likely —Bruhat Soma wins the National Spelling Bee after a slow night concludes with a sudden tiebreaker —National Spelling Bee reflects the economic success and cultural impact of immigrants from India —Exclusive secrets of the National Spelling Bee: Picking the words to identify a champion ___ Ben Nuckols has covered the Scripps National Spelling Bee since 2012. Follow his workhere.

Scripps National Spelling Bee guide: How to watch, who the notable spellers are, rules and prizes

Scripps National Spelling Bee guide: How to watch, who the notable spellers are, rules and prizes The best young spellers in the English lan...
Endurance swimmer closes in circumnavigation of Martha's Vineyard ahead of 'Jaws' 50thNew Foto - Endurance swimmer closes in circumnavigation of Martha's Vineyard ahead of 'Jaws' 50th

VINEYARD HAVEN, Mass. (AP) — A British-South African endurance athlete is closing in on the finish line of his62-mile (100-kilometer) multi-day swimaround Martha's Vineyard on Monday, aiming to become the first becoming the first person to swim all the way around the island. Lewis Pugh began swimming multiple hours a day in the 47-degree (8-degree Celsius) water on May 15 to raise awareness about the plight of sharks as the film "Jaws" nears its 50th birthday. He wants to change public perceptions and encourage protections for the at-risk animals — which he said the film maligned as "villains, as cold-blooded killers." "It was a film about sharks attacking humans and for 50 years, we have been attacking sharks," he said before plunging into the ocean near the Edgartown Lighthouse. "It's completely unsustainable. It's madness. We need to respect them." Pugh, 55, said this would be among his most difficult endurance swims, which says a lot for someone who has swum near glaciers and volcanoes, and among hippos, crocodiles and polar bears. Pugh was the first athlete to swim across the North Pole and complete a long-distance swim in every one of the world's oceans. But Pugh, who often swims to raise awareness for environmental causes — he's been named a United Nations Patron of the Oceans — said no swim is without risk, and that drastic measures are needed to get his message across: Around 274,000 sharks are killed globally each day — a rate of nearly 100 million every year, according to the American Association for the Advancement of Science. "Jaws," which was filmed in Edgartown, renamed Amity Island for the movie, created Hollywood's blockbuster culture when it was released in summer 1975, setting new box office records and earning three Academy Awards. The movie would shape views of the ocean for decades to come. Both director Steven Spielberg and author Peter Benchley expressed regret that viewers of the film became so afraid of sharks, and both later contributed to conservation efforts as their populations declined, largely due to commercial fishing. Day after day, Pugh has entered the island's frigid waters wearing just trunks, a cap and goggles, enduring foul weather as a nor'easter dumped 7 inches (18 centimeters) of rain on parts of New England and flooded streets on Martha's Vineyard. Pugh's endeavor also coincides with the New England Aquarium's first confirmed sighting this season of a white shark, off the nearby island of Nantucket. Just in case, he's accompanied by safety personnel in a boat and a kayak, whose paddler is using a "Shark Shield" device to create a low-intensity electric field in the water to deter sharks without harming them. ___ See an AP photo gallery from around Martha's Vineyard and the start of Pugh's swimhere.

Endurance swimmer closes in circumnavigation of Martha’s Vineyard ahead of ‘Jaws’ 50th

Endurance swimmer closes in circumnavigation of Martha's Vineyard ahead of 'Jaws' 50th VINEYARD HAVEN, Mass. (AP) — A British-So...
Are You Ready to Discuss the Twist at the End of 'The Last of Us' Season 2?New Foto - Are You Ready to Discuss the Twist at the End of 'The Last of Us' Season 2?

At last, Ellie's revenge mission has reached its apex. In tonight's finale episode, the scrappy 19-year-old finally encounters Abby again, though not in the way she planned. In fact, not much of her foray to Seattle has gone according to plan, and it's clearer with each passing scene that Ellieknowsshe's in too deep. Still, a sunk cost fallacy prevents her from considering any other path than the one right in front of her: She's come this far. Shehasto kill Abby and avenge Joel. To what end? She's not thinking that far ahead. The end might not even matter. To steal a line from another Pedro Pascal-starring sci-fi franchise, "This is the way." The finale opens on Jesse removing the crossbow bolt from Dina's leg as Ellie returns fromhunting down Nora. When Dina awakens to wipe the blood from Ellie's scratches and bruises, Ellie stares into the middle distance, dazed. "I made her talk," she admits. "I thought it would be harder to do. But it wasn't. It was easy." Dina posits that Nora got what she deserved. But Ellie isn't so certain anymore. "Maybe she didn't," she says. She then proceeds to tell Dina about what Joel actuallydid—about the cure that might have been, about all those dead Fireflies, and about Abby's father. The admission of such a terrible secret visibly rattles Dina, who, for the first time since they left Jackson, seems to question her faith in Ellie. "We need to go home," she says. At least in the moment, Ellie seems to agree. But they can't leave without Tommy. The next morning, Ellie and Jesse set out to meet Joel's baby brother at a predetermined rendezvous point, an abandoned bookstore. Their hike over allows them both plenty of time to catch up. Jesse is none too thrilled with his former patrol partner—for the obvious reasons, as well as more complicated ones. He's inferred from Dina's behavior that his ex-girlfriend is pregnant with his kid. She refused alcohol to soothe the pain of her leg wound, and she insisted shecouldn'tdie, not that she didn'twantto die. "I'm gonna be a father," he tells Ellie. "Which meansIcan't die. But, because of you, we're stuck in a war zone. So how about we skip the apologies and just go find Tommy so I can get us and my kid the fuck out of Seattle?" This is a decidedly different attitude than the one Jesse presents in the game. InThe Last of Us: Part II, Jesse has his issues with Ellie's occasionally cavalier approach to violence, but he treats her with mutual respect, even affection. They high five after escaping near-death encounters; they joke about the fact that Joel once believed Ellie had a crush on Jesse. He swears he would have come with Ellie and Dina to Seattle had they asked him. "I looked up to Joel," he says. "What happened to him was messed up. I would've come." Even when he learns Dina is pregnant,Part IIJesse reacts not with anger but with empathy. "I get why you came out here," he tells Ellie. "But we gotta take her back." It's only when Ellie lies to him about her intentions for finding Tommy that he (temporarily) turns away from her. By comparison, in the show, Jesse treats Ellie much more like a frustrated, overburdened older brother might a petulant younger sister. When the two find temporary shelter from the downpour in a parking garage, they witness the capture of a Seraphite boy. Ellie tries to run out and help him, but Jesse yanks her back. "I'm not dying out here. Not for any of them. This is not our war," he insists. At the bookstore rendezvous point, they discover some soggy old paperbacks and children's books about monsters (a little on the nose there, HBO)... but no Tommy. Glad for a moment of rest, Jesse sits beneath a mural that reads: "Everything's got a moral if only you can find it." (Again, the messaging here is heavy-handed, to say the least.) He admits he loves Dina, but not the way Ellie does. Still, he's disappointed in her actions. Years ago, he, too, fell in love with someone: a girl who came through Jackson. But he refused to leave with her. He wouldn't abandon his community. He didn't feel like hecouldabandon his community. "Because I was taught to put other people first," he finishes. "Okay, got it. So you're Saint Jesse of Wyoming, and everyone else is a fucking asshole," Ellie concludes. I mean, sure. Before they can get any deeper into this petty squabble, their WLF radios fritz with gunfire, coming from a sniper they can only assume must be Tommy. They race up to the roof to get a better look at the Seattle skyline, from which Ellie spots a Ferris wheel near the far-off aquarium—with a whale emblazoned on the side of the building. "Whale wheel" were the two words Nora managed to get out as Ellie beat her to a bloody pulplast episode. Alas, it dawns on Ellie: Abby is holing up at the aquarium. As she does in the game, Ellie abandons all pretense of rescuing Tommy, and refocuses instead on tracking down Abby. Exasperated, Jesse reveals that he voted "no" during theJackson referendum on avenging Joel. Why? "Because everything you do, you do for you," he tells his friend and ally.Ouch. Ellie might be stung, but she knows a hypocrite when she sees one. "You let a kid die today, Jesse," she retorts. "Why? Because he wasn't in your community?"Joelwas Ellie's community. She's acting as Jesse would in her shoes, or so she's convinced herself. She's doing right by her community. Jesse can't argue with her any further. "I really hope you make it," he tells her, and they go their separate ways. As Ellie cuts through the detritus of a bombed and waterlogged Seattle to reach the aquarium, the WLF top brass are preoccupied with their own vendettas. We watch as the sergeantfrom episode 5, Elise Park, informs Isaac that the storm is only going to grow. Her soldiers are set for the coming battle, even if the "rank and file are a little scared." Isaac doesn't blame them. But he's too distracted to ruminate on his own fears. "Any word on Abby?" he asks. We've heard a lot about Abby since episode 2, but we've yet to see her in Washington. Apparently, Joel's killer is MIA, which is bad news for Isaac, who—surprise, surprise—had considered her the nexthim. In the (increasingly likely) event of his death, Abby would step up to lead the WLF. "Who secures our future?" he asks Elise. "It was supposed to be her." This is a hint to viewers that Abby hasn't been sitting around watching oldCurtis and ViperDVDs while Ellie and Dina have ripped a hole through the city. Abby's had her own story arc taking place during this same time period, and while we can't yet know what's happened, we know it's changed her relationship with her fellow soldiers. And that matters, because as Isaac laments Abby's shifting loyalties, the WLF are converging on the nearby Seraphite island base. The same base where Ellie washes ashore when her boat is shipwrecked. But thanks to the WLF's impending military operation, Ellie narrowly escapes disembowelment by the Scars. They flee into the forest as the Wolves ambush the island, and Ellie sprints back to her boat, hightailing it, at last, to the aquarium. There, she finds some bloodied surgical tools—a story tease we'll have to wait for season 3 to fulfill—and a path of wet footprints leading directly to where Owen and Mel stand, arguing about (who else?) Abby. Ellie sneaks up on them and trains her gun on Owen's head, then pulls an old tactic of Joel's out of her back pocket. She demands Owen and Mel both circle Abby's location on a map; if their circles don't match up, Ellie will kill them both. Mel is willing to give up Abby if it means saving their unborn child. But Owen is not so eager to forsake his ex-girlfriend. As he appears to reach for the map on the table, he instead lunges for his pistol. Ellie's reaction is immediate, practically subconscious. She fires, hitting Owen right at the base of his throat. He collapses immediately, dead within seconds. But the bullet unintentionally passes through Owen and grazes Mel's own throat, which starts gushing blood as she unzips her jacket to reveal her pregnant belly. Ellie, who knew nothing of Mel's condition, is horrified. Mel begs Ellie to cut the baby out with a knife before she dies (and the fetus with her), but Ellie is too scared, too traumatized, and too helpless to act quickly. She can only sit and watch, sobbing, as all three of them—Owen, Mel, and their unborn child—succumb to their injuries. It's a gruesome, dismal scene, one that clearly alarms Tommy and Jesse when they arrive to rescue Ellie. They escort her back to the theater, where they enjoy a brief period of peace before they begin their route home. Ellie thanks Jesse for coming back for her, for being "a good person." He finally admits to a sort of truce between them: "If I were out there somewhere, lost and in trouble, you would set the world on fire to save me." Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, their reconciliation is short-lived. They hear Tommy struggling out in the theater lobby, and as they burst through the doors to save him, someone—but, really, who else could it be?—shoots him in the head. Jesse's death is as shocking and immediate as it was in the game. There's no time to anticipate it, and even less time to grieve it. Finally, we see Abby again. She's a little worse for wear since her time in Jackson: Bruises bloom on her neck, and her braid sits in a limp, wet twist. She points her gun down at Tommy while Ellie pleads for her to let him live. It'sherAbby wants, right?Shekilled Mel and Owen. Joel murdered Abby's father because ofher. Abby can't believe it's come to this. "We let you live," she says, adjusting her aim to rest, instead, on Ellie. "And youwastedit." A gun shot cracks through the air, but the screen cuts to black before we can see where it lands. Instead,The Last of Ustransports us back in time, reintroducing us to the Abby of three days prior. We watch her awaken inside the WLF compound in the fictional SoundView Stadium, based on the real-life NFL football arena Lumen Field. There, the Wolves have built a self-sustaining community almost eerily (and, you can bet, intentionally) like Jackson. As Abby surveys this small kingdom, a lower third informs us we have arrived back at Seattle Day One. So, what does that mean for our battle-scarred survivors? It implies that, next season, Kaitlyn Dever will take center stage as our lead protagonist, with Ellie's story temporarily sidelined in favor of Abby's perspective. That's the same narrative strategy thePart IIgame employed so artfully, though not without tremendous controversy, and I suspect the fan reaction to this choice will be similarly split when season 3 rolls around. But, unlike players of the game, fans of the show will have the luxury of some time to process. In the game, the leap between Ellie's perspective and Abby's is immediate, with no time to adjust unless you're keen to pause for a bathroom break. In the case of the HBO adaptation, viewers have months before season 3 delivers Abby's side of the saga. So grieve Jesse's death—and process Ellie's choices—while you can. It's only going to get more complicated from here. You Might Also Like The 15 Best Organic And Clean Shampoos For Any And All Hair Types 100 Gifts That Are $50 Or Under (And Look Way More Expensive Than They Actually Are)

Are You Ready to Discuss the Twist at the End of 'The Last of Us' Season 2?

Are You Ready to Discuss the Twist at the End of 'The Last of Us' Season 2? At last, Ellie's revenge mission has reached its ape...

 

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