"Without You"

Dr. Booker recently informed me that today, 15 July, marks the one year anniversary of Silvia's death. That's right. It's been exactly one year since the worst wedding ever, and the good Doc asked me to write something in memoriam of la pelirroja. Admittedly, I was hesitant to oblige her request. After all, I'm not a Silvialogist expert like Dr. Piper. But, I can never say no to a request by Dr. B, so here I am, making an attempt to put something together that is hopefully fitting and worthy of another great doctor: Silvia Castro Leon. And yes, I know she's not real, but this is PepSi U, so over here she's completely legit.


Given how much Silvia has been analyzed and discussed here at the uni - 65 Silvialogy lectures, roughly 8 Silvia-centric lectures by Dr. B, and an entire lecture series devoted solely to our favorite forensics inspector - I initially thought I made a huge mistake when I agreed to Dr. B's request (I still might have). I mean, what could I possibly say that hasn't already been said about Silvia? But inspiration struck as I was watching the World Cup semifinal match between Germany and Spain (Congrats to La Furia Roja by the way on winning their first World Cup!). One of the things the commentators focused on was the absence of German player Thomas Müller, who was forced to miss the game after acquiring a controversial 2nd yellow card in the quarterfinals match against Argentina. Much was said about how the German team would be affected by Müller's absence - what they would be losing without him on the pitch and what they would need to do to compensate for that loss. All of this got me thinking about Silvia and what LHdP lost without her on the show.

For PepSi fans, the loss was blatantly obvious - there was no more PepSi without the "Si" - and as I stated before, the uni faculty has already done an excellent job writing about Silvia's absence in that context. But if one were to examine the show at large, the ramifications of Silvia's death were much, much larger than Pepa's loss of her wife.

Silvia wasn't perfect. Her personal life was as crazy and neurotic as the rest of the Castro-Miranda family. But at work Silvia was very rational and professional, and she often brought some much-needed logic to balance out the wild and craziness that was Los hombres de Paco. Whatever problems she may have had with Lucas or Pepa, she (almost) never let it affect her professionally - her job was something she took very seriously. Perhaps it was because work was her escape, her safe haven from whatever personal issues she may have been dealing with at the time. Perhaps it was one of the few places where things always made sense or could be explained in black and white scientific terms, something she couldn't always find amongst her colorful family. Whatever the reason, Silvia's dedication to her job made her an excellent forensics inspector - the person the Pacos could turn to time and time again when they needed something concrete (and legitimate) to back up whatever far-fetched theory they concocted. And Silvia delivered every time.

Despite what you all may think about him, Deker was also a good forensics inspector. Whether you loved or hated his attitude (and his infatuation with Pepa), like Silvia, Deker was also good at his job. Now, before you all get your pitchforks out to attack me, I do have a "but". Deker was a good forensics inspector but he still couldn't fill the void left by Silvia's death, because he didn't have (and could never have) the one thing Silvia had from the start: her personal connection and history to Paco and the hombres.

Silvia grew up with Don Lorenzo as her father, so she knew all about his mannerisms and his mood swings. She knew how to talk to him to calm him down or to rationalize a point to him in order to gain his compliance. Silvia also spent a great deal of her life around Paco, and if he were to approach Silvia with the idea that Satan was killing people and only he could stop him, Silvia...well Silvia would've thought Paco was nutters. But, Silvia would have also tried to find a rational, scientific way to prove or disprove Paco's theory, and she would have talked to him in a way that would've been helpful and supportive (see Ep. 109). This is something that Deker could never accomplish no matter how good of a forensics inspector he was, because Deker didn't share a father-daughter bond with Don Lorenzo or a brother-sister bond with Paco. He was also never Sabina's godmother, nor did he spend years working alongside Pove, Curtis and Rita. This lack of a connection - the history that Silvia shared with the Pacos, both personal and professional - is what the show truly lost without her. And in some ways I think that when Silvia died, the personal connections between all the characters - the heart of the show - died as well.

Did life go on? Of course, and unfortunately we have 13 episodes to prove that. Every day until his retirement, Don Lorenzo woke up and tried his best to govern a bunch of crazy cops. Pove woke up every morning trying to overcome the daily fears that plagued his life. Curtis and Rita continued to scrounge around for some decent screentime. Aitor got up every day trying to find a new relationship he could ruin. Pepa continued to have the best job ever by getting paid without having to actually do any real police work. Paco continued to stumble his way through solving crimes. Okay, he stumbled his way through the stupidest scheme ever to get people to go to church, but there was (very minimal) police work involved. And for four months many of us continued to watch S9 against our better judgment. So sure, life went on, and the show went on. But the connections that made it great, the connections that helped make it a success? Many of those died exactly one year ago with Silvia. And eventually the show found that it couldn't go on, that it was dying without those relationships...without her.

kalike

*The title for this lecture is based on the song "Without You" from the Broadway musical Rent.

Piper's Commentary:

When Silvia died one year ago, many of us felt a visceral reaction, like someone real actually died.  I cried.  I don't know of many who didn't.  One year later, I am still flabbergasted at our collective grief over the death of a TV character.

There are some who started their Pepsilogy lessons at the end: their introduction was the death of Silvia on her wedding day, which in turn piqued their interest in this awesome love story. 

But there are also many of us who followed PepSi from the beginning.  Through the flirtations and smoldering looks, through the first kiss and the first love scene.  And I don't really know what it was, but we waited each week with bated breath for the next installment of this story.  It became more than a TV show.  Nope, we were more than mere spectators of this unfolding love story.  We claimed the pair for ourselves, like a prized secret affair that no one else in your real life knew about.  We shared their angsts, seductions, denials.  And when they fell in love, so did we.

And for some, *cough* Dr Piper *cough*, we watched the "Si" even before the "Pep" - and completely fell in love with this flawed person who was looking for redemption.  As KC said, we have an entire collection of Silvialogy lectures, beginning from when Silvia walked into the Comisaria (and into our hearts) for the first time wearing an oversized police uniform.  We watched her broken engagements, her blind devotion to Lucas, her very loving relationship with her older sister, her tepid involvement with Montoya.  We watched her get shot, we watched her finally freed from the demons of her past.  She was a study in contrast: vulnerable and brave, independent and obsessive, gentle and fierce.  And we loved her for it.

Is it any wonder then why the collective grief over the death of a TV character was so palpable? 

They say time heals all wounds.  I say time doesn't necessarily heal, it just allows you to get used to the idea of being wounded.  One year later, are still wounded.  We've just forgotten that we are.

Thank you, Marian, for giving us Silvia. 

21 comments:

Anonymous said...

excellent coulden't agree more =)

booker said...

Brilliant job Kalike! Thank you very much for your insight.
Silvia/Marian was a loss that they never recovered from. O the ones who dies that died, Silvia's absence was noticed the most. She was not replaceable.
The song choice is simply perfect.

Anonymous said...

Excellent analysis.
And RIP PepSi and LHDP.

APM

Scoopgirl said...

Tonight I had a Silvia Night planned with my woman but my computer is dead because of a virus. This so sucks. Thank you for your lecture. I adore how you think. It always seems to make sense. Off to read my book Eat, Pray, Love. Ciao attraversiamo.
Scoopgirl

Anonymous said...

What a great lecture that marks the sad anniversary in the PepSiverse. I didn't realize it was a year until I read your lecture - which marks just about a year since I became a PepSi fanatic. (It was the weekend after the S8 finale that I stayed up all night, watching all of PepSienglish's clips.)

As you point out so elloquently, the show, the characters and the fans lost a profound, sensitive character that was irreplacable in la pelirroja. I think the only positive thing that came from this character's death is the fans' renewed determinaton that we'd never forget Silvia Castro or what PepSi's story meant to so many.

Shay said...

Bravo! it has really been a year? well i came into the world of Pepsi late... but it makes your lecture no less fantastic and spot on. so thanks!

man i miss pepsi :/

Anonymous said...

K--That was beautiful and insightful and absolutely wonderful. I am shocked it's been one year since Silvia's death. Unbelievable. :( Thank you, makamaka.

--azwombat/Ann

Anonymous said...

K, you beat me to it! I was just about to write an LJ post on why Silvia's death was so bad for LHdP even apart from the fact that it was such a cruel and ill-timed end to the Pacos' lesbian supercouple (and probably one of the only convincingly-portrayed lesbian OTPs ever written). Great post. Thank you for saying all this.

And Dr. P's commentary is also spot-on. Silvia was such a wonderful, complex character. Forget lesbian/bi characters -- you don't often get female characters with that kind of complexity and subtlety to them. It was a joy to watch Silvia grow on screen, through her failed affairs with men and her sometimes-rocky but ultimately destined relationship with Pepa.

I have a few additional things to say on this topic, but I'll just post them over on my LJ.

Anonymous said...

Goodbye PEPSI. -_-'

Anonymous said...

Q18: Well kiss my gritz!!! K, awesome as usual. Seriously what a great couple and a beautiful talented actress. She did well before, during, and after. I may not have seen Silvia pre PepSi but why would I. I'm an arrogant american. :-p Still honored to have PepSiEnglish, LJ, and PepSiU to get that chance. It was a sad but great ride. Dueces

Anonymous said...

Q18: Also I agree 100% in what the poster above my first said too. Right on!

Anonymous said...

I'd just like to add one thing.

Pepaholics might not like what I have to say, but the reality is that Pepa as a character was not sufficiently developed to stand on her own without Silvia. That character was brought on LHdP *as* Silvia's love interest. Pepa was never developed as one of "Paco's men". She was primarily, on the show, Silvia's girlfriend. About 90% of Pepa's storylines involved chasing Silvia, seducing Silvia, supporting and taking care of Silvia, making out with Silvia, making up with Silvia, etc. etc.

So after Silvia died, it's clear to me that LHdP's producers/writers actually had no idea *what* to do with Pepa, as Pepa's main purpose for being on the show had been her love for Silvia. And that's why Silvia's death was always going to be an epic fail of an ending for the PepSi story arc.

I still can't believe LHdP's producers/writers did what they did. Given the above analysis of the dependence of Pepa's character on Silvia, the sensible thing to do would have been to let both Marian and Laura leave LHdP after giving PepSi a satisfying (if not entirely happy, given the violence) ending in the S8 finale. At least both actresses and their characters would have been saved from the 66.6 rubbish.

Anonymous said...

JessCC: Again, an awesome lecture from K and a great commentary from Dr. P. That hit the mark, all right. Can't believe it's been a year, that and the fact that I haven't reached my own year of first stumbling upon this little thing called PepSi. Without Silvia, LHdP was going nowhere, and S9 totally proved it. Granted, it's a TV show with an ensemble and one person may not be enough to save a show, but somehow, I think Silvia could. If only...

Shay said...

aye! can we get a new post here! every time i visit to check out the old clips i see "the event that did not happen" all up on the front page!

is the uni closed now? :(

kalike said...

Shay-

The uni isn't closed - we were just on "summer vacay" :) In fact, there is a new lecture series coming at you in the near future. And when I say "near future" I hope that means before the end of the year. hahaha. No seriously, I'm working on it as we speak.

Mccullum James said...

Great thing that you told about the continued to have the best job ever by getting paid without having to actually do any real police work,also the details and the information that you share about the fictions and story,is a great one to read,all of the details are awesome and the story looks brilliant and great.
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Anonymous said...

I'll borrow from your great lecture Kalike...
"Thank you, Marian, for giving us Silvia..."

JG

ilovepepsi said...

This is 2014 and I just discovered LHDP and Pepsi. Needless to say, I am crazy about them and can t move on yet as I want more...sadly, there is nothing more. Except Marian Aguilera, and Laura Sanchez.

ilovepepsi said...

Re-reading, one year addiction with no rehab possible. I console on the fact that so many also love Silvia Castro. I disagree with the analysis only that, in my eyes, she was NOT a flawed person looking for redemption, that analysis is probably Pepa, the impulsive nut with a heart of gold who left home and never looked back, 53 lovers laters, she finally found the love of her life, Silvia. How they--Marian too by leaving-- robbed us of wonderful and crazy moments. It's been 6 years since they went away somewhere, anywhere but death, they are now 38 year old and as crazy in love as ever and with an adopted little girl they adore. So I am crazy? Better than shedding tears.

ilovepepsi said...

My comment is about a bad scipt for their first Christmas after the masacre, Paco tells D.L. if he misses his daughters more and try to be happy. Paco was wrong because IF SARA was killed he would be really crazy.

ilovepepsi said...

And I don' t know about other people but there are hundreds still watching yt clips and new people asking WHO are they and where can they find the entire serie. I am just beginning to disconnect from Silvia Castro, I still love the character and time will tell. Getting to know, I mean MEET, NOT KNOW Marian in person helps to unplug the fictional Silvia, yet it is kind of difficult. Also watching her other work helps...but her Silvia...she will never be so good at making so many persons adore her.

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