logo
Why Wasn't Anyone Traumatized in the ‘White Lotus' Finale?

Why Wasn't Anyone Traumatized in the ‘White Lotus' Finale?

New York Times10-04-2025

This article contains spoilers for the finale of the third season of 'The White Lotus.' Unless you're an employee or a guest at a White Lotus resort, in which case it appears that it is impossible for your day to be truly spoiled.
'The White Lotus' is a show about vacation. It deals with the dos and don'ts of vacationing: Do go out to party! (Do not engage in incestuous relations while partying.) Do sample the local cuisine! (Unless the fruit is poisonous, in which case please do not give it to your family.)
And it is a show about murders.
And apparently, based on Sunday's season finale, no one is traumatized by them. Hours after a mass shooting takes place at the pristine White Lotus resort in Thailand, characters who have just witnessed intense tragedy hop on a boat and seem to sail happily into the sunset, or simply show up for work as if nothing happened.
'Only in Hollywood,' Tracey Musarra Marchese, a professor at Syracuse University who specializes in trauma, said with a chuckle.
But some of the characters' reactions, which raised questions about their plausibility and prompted admiration for one character's athletic sprint, might be completely normal in the face of trauma, experts say.
'Sometimes what happens is in the moment because your system — physically, mentally, emotionally — you've been so overwhelmed that you might dissociate,' Marchese said.
Not everyone experiences acute stress, such as flashbacks, nightmares, anxiety or apprehension, after a traumatic event, Marchese said. Acute stress disorder, a precursor to post-traumatic stress disorder, is often diagnosed within days of a stressful event. A PTSD diagnosis comes weeks later at a minimum.
Trauma responses can include denial, fear, anger, confusion and anxiety, said Dr. Lorenzo Norris, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral health at George Washington University.
There is also the possibility of becoming emotionally detached as a protective mechanism in the aftermath of a traumatic situation.
'Basically, you start to become numb,' Norris said, adding that it could be the mind's attempt 'to slow things down and take you away from the emotional pain.'
Maybe that explains why the third season of 'The White Lotus' ends the way it does. Life goes on. Vacation continues.
In the finale, a brooding guest named Rick (Walton Goggins), who has traveled halfway around the world to confront the resort's owner (Scott Glenn) for killing his father, impulsively approaches him, steals his gun and fatally shoots him.
As he attempts an escape, Rick kills the resort owner's bodyguards and is then shot in the back by a security guard.
The gunshots send staff members and guests, including a trio of oft-bickering friends (Carrie Coon, Leslie Bibb and Michelle Monaghan), running away. Coon's character sprints with such urgency that it has become a meme.
('Look, I'm an American and I'm a New Yorker, and if you think I don't know where the exits are in any building I'm in, then you're not paying attention to the news,' Coon told Variety.)
Yet, minutes later, guests and resort employees appear generally undisturbed by what they have witnessed.
As guests leave the island by boat, only Monaghan's character, Jaclyn, seems melancholic, though the audience doesn't learn whether it's about the shooting, her devolving marriage or something else. Employees stand on the shore doing the traditional smile and wave to a now-rich Belinda (Natasha Rothwell) and her beaming son, Zion (Nicholas Duvernay). The season opened with Zion hearing the gunshots and hoping that his mother wasn't a victim. Within hours, that concern has completely disappeared. (One would think Belinda would be rushing to get out of there with her new riches — a $5 million payment to buy her silence about a murder from a previous 'White Lotus' season.)
It might just be that Hollywood wants a happy ending. Mike White, the show's creator, thought the armchair critics were being too literal, calling them the 'logic police' in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter.
'This isn't a police procedural, this is a rumination-type show,' he said. 'It makes me want to pull my hair out. Is this how you watch movies and TV shows?'
(The logic police showed up when the 'White Lotus' police apparently didn't.)
Experts said they would expect to see more variation in reactions to trauma.
'It would be highly unlikely that three people would have had that same experience where they were just like: 'Yeah, OK. We're fine; nothing happened,'' Marchese said, referring to the trio of friends, though she added that reactions can be delayed.
After the shooting, the partying continues around the resort as the guests make leisurely exits. Gaitok (Tayme Thapthimthong), the meek security guard who spent the whole season eschewing violence before shooting Rick in the back, appears to receive a promotion as a bodyguard to Sritala (Patravadi Mejudhon), the resort's co-owner, who seems unmoved after having recently witnessed her husband's death. Like the trio, she was aghast in the moment of Rick's attack. But if she was upset in the aftermath, the audience doesn't see it.
The shooting wasn't the only near-death experience. Lochlan Ratliff (Sam Nivola), a teenage scion of a well-to-do family from North Carolina, narrowly survives after ingesting poisonous fruit that his father, Tim (Jason Isaacs), unintentionally left out. Granted, Tim did almost kill his whole family the night before, but that's beside the point. On the boat ride off the resort, no one in the family seems concerned — the only tension point is Tim's oblique reference to an impending business scandal. It's almost as if the poisoning never happened.
This is a slight departure from previous seasons. At the end of Season 1, a hotel manager is stabbed after defecating in a guest's luggage (a spoiler of a different kind). But the audience sees glimpses of a police investigation and the staff's reactions. In Season 2, the events around the death of Tanya McQuoid-Hunt (Jennifer Coolidge) happen away from the resort, though concerned guests and staff members are briefly seen reacting to the discovery of her body.
For the most part, 'The White Lotus' in Thailand is not concerned with the lingering effects of trauma. Just vibes. Or maybe the lack of a response is a creative choice: Anyone who visits a White Lotus resort must know how to suppress their emotions.
'People have different ways of making sense of their reality,' Dr. Norris said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Aimee Lou Wood & Adam Long Spark Dating Rumors Following PDA in London
Aimee Lou Wood & Adam Long Spark Dating Rumors Following PDA in London

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Aimee Lou Wood & Adam Long Spark Dating Rumors Following PDA in London

Aimee Lou Wood, best known for her acting exploits, is making headlines once again, as photographs of her cozy outing with Adam Long surfaced online. They were spotted engaging in public displays of affection (PDA), sparking a wave of dating speculation among fans. Fans of The White Lotus star were quick to notice the chemistry between Aimee Lou Wood and Adam Long when the two were recently photographed enjoying a PDA-filled day in London. On Saturday, June 7, the 31-year-old actress and her 34-year-old Happy Valley co-star were seen kissing and embracing during a casual coffee date. The couple kept their attire laid-back. Long sported drawstring shorts and Levi's T-shirt, while Wood wore a trendy all-denim outfit paired with bold red flats. Their rumored romance began gaining traction while filming their upcoming BBC project Film Club, which Wood co-created. In the series, Wood plays Evie, who launches a film club with her best friend Noa. This new buzz around Aimee Lou Wood's personal life comes just after she and The White Lotus Season 3 co-star Walton Goggins denied speculation of an off-screen feud. In a recent interview with Variety, Goggins said, 'There is no feud. I adore, I love this woman madly, and she is so important to me… But she's special. She is love, and I know that I am that to her. We care about each other very deeply.' Wood echoed the sentiment, adding that she had grown tired of addressing baseless internet gossip. 'Eventually, I just started to sit back and watch these people making something out of absolutely nothing,' she stated. As of now, neither Aimee Lou Wood nor Adam Long has commented publicly on the rumored romance. The post Aimee Lou Wood & Adam Long Spark Dating Rumors Following PDA in London appeared first on - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More.

Two musical revolutionaries, Sly Stone and Brian Wilson, leave life's stage nearly simultaneously
Two musical revolutionaries, Sly Stone and Brian Wilson, leave life's stage nearly simultaneously

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

Two musical revolutionaries, Sly Stone and Brian Wilson, leave life's stage nearly simultaneously

Advertisement Brian Wilson captured the California sound With his late brothers Carl and Dennis, Beach Boys co-founder Wilson was the architect of the California sound that captured surfing and sun, beaches and girls. Yet for all the 'Fun, Fun, Fun,' there was something much deeper and darker in Brian's abilities as a composer. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up It was more than disposable music for teen-agers. He had an unparalleled melodic sense, hearing sounds in his mind that others couldn't. He could worm his way into your head and then break your heart with songs like 'In My Room' and 'God Only Knows.' The tour de force 'Good Vibrations' —- had anyone ever heard of the theremin before he employed its unearthly wail? — is a symphony both complex and easily accessible. 'He was our American Mozart,' musician Sean Ono Lennon wrote on social media. Advertisement The 1966 album 'Pet Sounds' was a peak. Wilson felt a keen sense of competition with the Beatles. But they had three writers, including Sean's dad, John Lennon. Wilson was largely alone, and he heard impatience and doubt from other Beach Boys, whose music he provided. He felt the pressure in trying to follow up 'Pet Sounds,' and 'Smile' became music's most famous unfinished album. Wilson, a damaged soul to begin with because of an abusive father, never reached the heights again. He descended into a well-chronicled period of darkness. Sly Stone helped assemble a new kind of musical landscape Rock star Sylvester "Sly" Stone of Sly and the Family Stone appears in April 1972. Uncredited/Associated Press Stone's skills came in creating a musical world that others only dreamed of at the time. The Family Stone was an integrated world — Black and white, men and women — and the music they created was a potent mixture of rock, soul and funk. It made you move, it made you think. For a period of time from 1967 to 1973, their music was inescapable — 'Dance to the Music,' 'Everybody is a Star,' 'Higher,' 'Hot Fun in the Summertime,' 'Sing a s Simple Song,' 'Family Affair,' 'Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin).' Their performance at Woodstock was a milestone. 'His songs weren't just about fighting injustice, they were about transforming the self to transform the world,' musician and documentarian Questlove, who lovingly tended to Stone's legacy, wrote this week. 'He dared to be simple in the most complex ways — using childlike joy, wordless cries and nursery rhyme cadences to express adult truths. His work looked straight at the brightest and darkest parts of life and demanded we do the same.' From his peak, the fall was hard. Years of drug abuse took its toll. Periodic comeback attempts deepened a sense of bewilderment and pity. Advertisement In a world where many musical icons died young, each endured Music is littered with stories of sudden, untimely and early deaths. Yet until this week, both men lived on, somewhat improbably passing average life expectancies. Wilson, by many measures, achieved some level of peace late in life. He had a happy marriage. He was able to see how his music was revered and appreciated and spent several years performing it again with a younger band that clearly worshiped him. It was a postscript not many knew, said journalist Jason Fine, who befriended Wilson and made the 2021 documentary, 'Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road.' 'That sort of simple message he really wanted to give people through his music going back to the '60s — a sense of warmth, a sense that it's going to be OK in the same way that music lifted him up from his darkness, he'd try to do for other people,' Fine told The Associated Press in an interview then. 'I think now, more than earlier in his career, he accepts that he does that and that's a great comfort to him.' Stone emerged to write an autobiography in 2023. But less is known about his later years, whether he found peace or died without the full knowledge of what his music meant to others. 'Yes, Sly battled addiction,' Questlove wrote. 'Yes, he disappeared from the spotlight. But he lived long enough to outlast many of his disciples, to feel the ripples of his genius return through hip-hop samples, documentaries and his memoir. Still, none of that replaces the raw beauty of his original work.' Did Sly Stone and Brian Wilson live lives of tragedy or triumph? It's hard to say now. One suspects it will become easier with the passage of time, when only the work remains. That sometimes brings clarity. Advertisement 'Millions of people had their lives changed by their music,' DeCurtis said. 'Not just enjoyed it, but had their lives transformed. That's quite an accomplishment.'

Carnie Wilson Mourns Dad Brian Wilson: ‘I've Never Felt This Kind of Pain Before'
Carnie Wilson Mourns Dad Brian Wilson: ‘I've Never Felt This Kind of Pain Before'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Carnie Wilson Mourns Dad Brian Wilson: ‘I've Never Felt This Kind of Pain Before'

Following the death of Beach Boys frontman and legendary songwriter Brian Wilson at 82, his daughter Carnie Wilson shared a moving tribute to him on social media. 'I have no words to express the sadness I feel right now,' Carnie wrote alongside a photo of her, Brian and sister Wendie. 'My Father @brianwilsonlive was every fiber of my body. He will be remembered by millions and millions until the world ends.' More from Rolling Stone Al Jardine Pays Tribute to Beach Boys Bandmate Brian Wilson: 'My Brother in Spirit' Elton John Calls Late Brian Wilson 'The Biggest Influence on My Songwriting' Elton John, Carole King, More Remember Brian Wilson: 'His Cherished Music Will Live Forever' She continued, saying she was 'lucky to have been his daughter and had a soul connection with him that will live on always.' 'I've never felt this kind of pain before, but I know he's resting up there in heaven … or maybe playing the piano for Grandma Audree his Mom,' she wrote. At the end of her tribute, she said that she 'will post something else soon but this is all my hands will let me type,' adding, 'I love you Daddy….I miss you so much already.' Brian formed the Beach boys with his younger brothers Dennis and Carl in 1961 with their cousin Mike Love and friend Al Jardine. His prolific legacy includes dozens of ubiquitous hit singles with the Beach Boys, including three Number One tracks ('I Get Around,' 'Help Me, Rhonda,' and 'Good Vibrations'). His family announced his death in a statement Wednesday. 'We are heartbroken to announce that our beloved father Brian Wilson has passed away. We are at a loss for words right now,' his family wrote on social media. 'Please respect our privacy at this time as our family is grieving. We realize that we are sharing our grief with the world.' Wilson's family did not provide a cause of death, but it was revealed in February 2024 that the Beach Boys member was battling dementia. 'The world mourns a genius today, and we grieve for the loss of our cousin, our friend, and our partner in a great musical adventure,' the band wrote in a statement. 'Brian Wilson wasn't just the heart of the Beach Boys — he was the soul of our sound. The melodies he dreamed up and the emotions he poured into every note changed the course of music forever. His unparalleled talent and unique spirit created the soundtrack of so many lives around the globe, including our own. Together, we gave the world the American dream of optimism, joy, and a sense of freedom — music that made people feel good, made them believe in summer and endless possibilities. 'We are heartbroken by his passing,' the group continued. 'We will continue to cherish the timeless music we made together and the joy he brought to millions over the decades. And while we will miss him deeply, his legacy will live on through his songs and in our memories.' 'Brian Wilson, my friend, my classmate, my football teammate, my Beach Boy bandmate and my brother in spirit, I will always feel blessed that you were in our lives for as long as you were,' Jardine said in a separate statement to Rolling Stone. 'I think the most comforting thought right now is that you are reunited with Carl and Dennis, singing those beautiful harmonies again. You were a humble giant who always made me laugh and we will celebrate your music forever.' Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store