^^ Yeah, if anything that's really a case of Foggy being put in a shitty situation because of Matt's choices, not the other way around.
Vanessa didn't set it up so much as legit have Foggy actually shanked in Matt's prison after Foggy visits him to make Matt suffer and hear him die.
Foggy was, in my memory, basically told in the ambulance that he was being put into witness protection for his own good. In fact, the next time you see Foggy after his supposed death, he's actually trying to contact Matt and escape witness protection because he's worried about Matt. (Despite the fact that Matt's outing just tanked their practice and led Foggy to be the one to decide perjuring themselves was worth it to protect his secret).
So yeah... I am actually impressed by that anon's ability to stubbornly blame Foggy for that one. That's kind of a fucked up interpretation of events.
Re: Matt deciding to kill Fisk vs deciding to kill the Punisher
SA - Just to add to the point... Foggy doesn't "let Matt think he's dead". Matt thinks Foggy is dead because he straight up dies in the ambulance following multiple shanking stab wounds incurred while looking out for Matt. To clarify.
Re: Matt deciding to kill Fisk vs deciding to kill the Punisher
Um, but going back into what orchestrated it, yes there were a lot of hands behind the scenes pulling strings to make things happen, so if that's true then I don't understand why people stubbornly selectively say Foggy's not to blame because it was orchestrated, buuuut... in the same breath they also say everything was Matt's fault and nevermind the orchestration? Foggy was seriously complicit in what went down, what got them to that point. When Matt was first accused, he was the one who wanted to come out and admit it, and it was Foggy who shot him down and told him to shut the hell up and they were going to fight it, they were going to straight up lie to all the papers and media and counter sue. Which is weird because in Waid's run they mentioned how that was all Matt's fault and Matt's decision and uh nope, (retcon is a thing and Matt makes a lot of bad life choices but I wish they'd let Foggy have at least that one important moment in Matt's history but then again Waid believed Foggy was a coward who needed very specific Matt-related motivation to be action-courageous and I kind of don't buy that) that was Foggy's decision and Matt agreed with it. But again, retcon; we can't even blame an unreliable narrator because Matt and Foggy had that whole argument over Matt coming out.
I do think Foggy had plans to stay gone and out of Matt's life when he was shanked in prison, he was scared to death and he was hoping Matt would forgive him, he didn't plan to go back until he was healing up and started worrying about Matt. Like, honestly, did he ever actually think he wasn't going to worry about Matt in witness protection? In what world does Foggy Nelson ever not worry about Matt Murdock? It was supposed to be his thing, his whole thing, in his own words it defined him as a person, at least until the most recent run I guess.
Re: Matt deciding to kill Fisk vs deciding to kill the Punisher
Yooo I don't know about the comic book whatever but I have noticed what you're saying that people here are real quick to forgive Foggy anything while blaming Matt for the same stuff and I don't get it? Matt and Foggy seemed pretty even in the loveable asshole olympics in season one, they both did heroic things, they're both stalkers who break the law for the greater good. They help people in different ways so why the low level rage in only Matt's direction? What did I miss?
Re: Matt deciding to kill Fisk vs deciding to kill the Punisher
Anon who originally made the point about it NOT being Foggy's fault -
Here's the thing. I don't think Foggy's a saint. I'm not absolving him of his involvement in being the one to tell Matt not to simply come out as Daredevil from the beginning. But I just think it's a bit much to blame him for the prison shanking and subsequent decision to temporarily stay in witness protection? Like, that's a crazy expectation for how someone would act to assume that he would do anything different or even had the power to do anything differently in that specific scenario, orchestrated or not.
I'm not saying it's 100% Matt's fault he's in jail, or that it's 100% Matt's fault he got shanked, but let's face facts - at the end of the day, the decision to BE DAREDEVIL, period, was Matt's to make despite the wide-reaching impact it had on Foggy's life. And Foggy has always stuck by him through almost all of that, so I don't think it's shitty of him to nearly die and then allow witness protection to look out for him for a bit. I also think that it was never a case of him wanting to be in witness protection, because the minute he's healed he's trying to contact Matt and figure out what's going on. He knew he was Matt's lawyer and what the stakes were for Matt.
And I'll agree with you that painting Foggy as a saint is unfair. I actually hate when people do that too. But there is also a tendency among Daredevil fans (especially those for the show) to similarly try and paint Matt as a cinnamon roll whose decision to be Daredevil is saintly and heroic and all about his wanting to do the right thing vs. Foggy being kind of a nag who just wants to be pissy with him about it. And both characterizations are ridiculous.
I called out the blaming Foggy in the particular scenario stated only because I thought that in that case specifically it was really reaching to blame Foggy and let Matt off the hook, not because I don't think Foggy's guilty of anything or Matt's always in the wrong. It seemed to me to be an attempt to absolve Matt of responsibility for all of the stuff that went down related to his outing and paint him as a victim rather than a person whose choices (made with agency and knowing full well what might happen at the time) caught up with him.
I agree with the above anons that really it's all about balancing both of them as characters who collectively together often make fucked up choices, including things like faking Foggy's death later on in Waid's run or the things that happened with relation to Milla. I'm not completing in the camp of either of them.
Re: Matt deciding to kill Fisk vs deciding to kill the Punisher
(Anonymous) 2016-02-28 01:09 pm (UTC)(link)Vanessa didn't set it up so much as legit have Foggy actually shanked in Matt's prison after Foggy visits him to make Matt suffer and hear him die.
Foggy was, in my memory, basically told in the ambulance that he was being put into witness protection for his own good. In fact, the next time you see Foggy after his supposed death, he's actually trying to contact Matt and escape witness protection because he's worried about Matt. (Despite the fact that Matt's outing just tanked their practice and led Foggy to be the one to decide perjuring themselves was worth it to protect his secret).
So yeah... I am actually impressed by that anon's ability to stubbornly blame Foggy for that one. That's kind of a fucked up interpretation of events.
Re: Matt deciding to kill Fisk vs deciding to kill the Punisher
(Anonymous) 2016-02-28 01:12 pm (UTC)(link)Re: Matt deciding to kill Fisk vs deciding to kill the Punisher
(Anonymous) 2016-02-29 07:00 am (UTC)(link)I do think Foggy had plans to stay gone and out of Matt's life when he was shanked in prison, he was scared to death and he was hoping Matt would forgive him, he didn't plan to go back until he was healing up and started worrying about Matt. Like, honestly, did he ever actually think he wasn't going to worry about Matt in witness protection? In what world does Foggy Nelson ever not worry about Matt Murdock? It was supposed to be his thing, his whole thing, in his own words it defined him as a person, at least until the most recent run I guess.
Re: Matt deciding to kill Fisk vs deciding to kill the Punisher
(Anonymous) 2016-02-29 08:51 am (UTC)(link)Re: Matt deciding to kill Fisk vs deciding to kill the Punisher
(Anonymous) 2016-03-01 04:55 pm (UTC)(link)Here's the thing. I don't think Foggy's a saint. I'm not absolving him of his involvement in being the one to tell Matt not to simply come out as Daredevil from the beginning. But I just think it's a bit much to blame him for the prison shanking and subsequent decision to temporarily stay in witness protection? Like, that's a crazy expectation for how someone would act to assume that he would do anything different or even had the power to do anything differently in that specific scenario, orchestrated or not.
I'm not saying it's 100% Matt's fault he's in jail, or that it's 100% Matt's fault he got shanked, but let's face facts - at the end of the day, the decision to BE DAREDEVIL, period, was Matt's to make despite the wide-reaching impact it had on Foggy's life. And Foggy has always stuck by him through almost all of that, so I don't think it's shitty of him to nearly die and then allow witness protection to look out for him for a bit. I also think that it was never a case of him wanting to be in witness protection, because the minute he's healed he's trying to contact Matt and figure out what's going on. He knew he was Matt's lawyer and what the stakes were for Matt.
And I'll agree with you that painting Foggy as a saint is unfair. I actually hate when people do that too. But there is also a tendency among Daredevil fans (especially those for the show) to similarly try and paint Matt as a cinnamon roll whose decision to be Daredevil is saintly and heroic and all about his wanting to do the right thing vs. Foggy being kind of a nag who just wants to be pissy with him about it. And both characterizations are ridiculous.
I called out the blaming Foggy in the particular scenario stated only because I thought that in that case specifically it was really reaching to blame Foggy and let Matt off the hook, not because I don't think Foggy's guilty of anything or Matt's always in the wrong. It seemed to me to be an attempt to absolve Matt of responsibility for all of the stuff that went down related to his outing and paint him as a victim rather than a person whose choices (made with agency and knowing full well what might happen at the time) caught up with him.
I agree with the above anons that really it's all about balancing both of them as characters who collectively together often make fucked up choices, including things like faking Foggy's death later on in Waid's run or the things that happened with relation to Milla. I'm not completing in the camp of either of them.