In You Season 4, Joe Goldberg's primary obsession shifts from a typical romantic target to Rhys Montrose, a charismatic politician, but this turns out to be a delusion where Rhys is his own split personality, representing his dark side, while he also develops genuine feelings for the wealthy Kate Lockwood. Joe is initially fixated on Rhys after reading his autobiography, leading to hallucinations and a battle with his own psyche, blurring the lines between his obsession with Rhys and his connection with Kate.
In the present, Joe lives under his new identity as "Jonathan Moore", a university English professor. He develops an interest in Kate Galvin, the girlfriend of his obnoxious fellow professor Malcolm Harding, who lives in the flat across from him.
joe is obsessed with rhys because he related to his story, somewhere deep down he wanted somewhere to belong-- especially after killing the one person he would ever meet who could accept him. it diverts us from his earlier obsessions; opens up a conversation. and that is exactly what the writers want.
Rhys Montrose, one of friends among the elite group, reveals he is the killer and Joe's stalker.
1. CANDACE STONE (Season 1-2) Joe's mysterious ex, who refused to stay dead earns the top spot not because they were good together, but because their relationship defined him. Candace was the origin story for Joe's pattern of obsession, stalking, and violence.
Joe looks for what to do with Benji's body, he says that dismembering it would be too intense, so he decides to burn it, and asks Paco to buy the necessary items to burn Benji's body, meanwhile, Joe tries to delay the Benji's decomposition in the basement of Mooney's, where he also pulls out Benji's teeth, so as not to ...
Georgia Miller
Gil was in a long-term relationship with Georgia, and together they had a son named Austin. Georgia initially falls in love with Gil when he seems to be a caring person, not only toward her but also her daughter, Ginny.
It's a surprise that leaves even Joe reeling — and his brain created “Rhys.” So you definitely deserve an explanation. At first, Rhys seems like a wonderful friend to the wealthy and London's political messiah. Then, in the Part 1 finale, Rhys reveals himself to Joe as the serial killer he's been hunting.
In the end when Joe revealed all of his wrongdoings and wishes to be held accountable out of his own free will in front of Love and Candace Stone, Love in turn kills Candace and reveals the truth to Joe, and that she's pregnant with his daughter. For the good of their child they choose to remain together.
At day, Rhys was an aspiring mayoral of London and at night, Rhys was an lunatic serial killer. He became the obsession of Joe Goldberg. Throughout the fourth season, Rhys However, like Joe, is a cold-blooded killer, and Joe is determined to catch him.
Bottom Line: Dexter is the more skilled killer, more efficient, and technically trained. In contrast, Joe is the better thinker, possessing broader intelligence, greater improvisation skills, unmatched manipulation tactics, and superior adaptability.
At the hospital, Peach tells Beck that she disapproves of Joe because of his lack of wealth, suggesting that she dates someone financial well-off.
Suddenly in episode seven, as Joe is torturing someone, he realizes he has been hallucinating. The show then attempts to portray Joe's behavior as the result of a psychotic break. Joe's astoundingly fictitious mental illness is used to fill so many plot holes it should have been paid a full writer's salary.
Kelly Scott, a therapist at Tribeca Therapy, told the publication that Joe exhibits symptoms of both antisocial personality disorder and narcissistic personality disorder (presumably among other more sinister conditions).
Chris and Tolu began as friends on Perfect Match season 2, but their connection quickly grew deeper. Despite facing complications, Chris realized Tolu was the best match for him on the show. After the season ended, Chris and Tolu decided to go their separate ways but remain friendly.
Well, except for a passionate love that consumes him completely. Enter: Bronte, an aspiring writer whose life could maybe use a little course-correcting. Naturally, Joe can't resist the siren call of a woman who needs the kind of “fixing” that he thinks only he can provide.
Cory had a tough time finding out that not only was Lauren pregnant, but also the baby wasn't his. "It was life-changing, but there was a lot of personal growth. After this episode, I really just grew up a lot," Cory tells Zap2it. "After loving somebody for so long...
In 2023, she and Jonas reached a temporary custody agreement that allowed their daughters to travel to the U.K. to be with Turner. Now, Jonas and Turner have a “great co-parenting relationship,” as he shared on “The School of Greatness” podcast in July.
Love Quinn is the main antagonist of the Netflix television series You.
"Connor's Wedding" features the death of Logan Roy, an event alluded to since the beginning of the series; Armstrong felt there was a "promise in the title" of the series that Logan's life as character was finite, and that someone would have to succeed him.
Unbeknownst to him, at some point in 1996 Christina crossed paths with Billy Loomis, and they had a secret sexual romance, which led to Christina getting pregnant with their daughter in August 1996, before he committed the Woodsboro Murders with Stu Macher a month later.
He imprisons and kills many people in cold blood, and he behaves in a consistently unhinged way because of his obsession with Beck. However, this side of Joe is completely undermined in season 2 because of the plot twist that his new obsession, Love, is actually a psychopathic obsessive killer just like him.
Did you miss this big cliff hanger moment? Ok, well, let's unpack it. Back in episode 7, Ginny has an abortion after getting pregnant from her laundry room moment with Wolfe. After the abortion, Ginny sits with her mother who explained all about her own pregnancy cravings when she was pregnant with Ginny and Austin.
When Ginny confronts Georgia about being a professional at lying, Georgia insists that she keeps secrets to keep her safe. Still, it then goes on to reveal that she was abused by her stepdad her whole childhood and was molested most nights while her mother was asleep in the next room, which is why she ran away at 14.
A character self-harms and is shown burning herself and even entering a bath tub with scolding hot water. There is also a scene where a character is being smothered with a pillow. Self-harm plays a major theme in Ginny & Georgia.