#leverage analysis
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
anwarsayyed · 2 years ago
Text
Do you know Financial Analysis Essential Tools? Let's Decode
Introduction Financial analysis serves as a compass for businesses, guiding them through the complex landscape of economic decision-making. By scrutinizing a company’s financial data, financial analysis unveils critical insights about its fiscal health, paving the way for informed recommendations to enhance that health in the future. This article delves into the world of financial analysis,…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
mellosdrawings · 3 months ago
Note
what's Leverage (this is an invite to infodump)
Hohoho ok ok ok. Wiki-level infodump incoming!
So, Leverage is a 5 seasons TV show from the early 2010s that has come back in 2021 with a follow-up show called Leverage: Redemption. It is a Robin Hood kind of series in which a group of thieves help poor/honest citizens get back at the rich/powerful who wronged them/stole from them/abused them.
Despite most episodes following the same format, it manages to stay interesting and attention grabbing thanks to its peak attention to details. Everything you see in the episode is a hint for how they get the bad guy, which should be a staple of the police genre but which is particularly well done here.
It's a character focused series, with very interesting development and overarching themes and plots. It also does an amazing work at blurring the line between "good" people and "bad" people. Some good guys are absolute pieces of shit, some bad guys are just down on their luck. Several episodes have the main gang changing plans totally because the "bad" guy they were trying to scam ended up being just another victim, so instead they started offering their help to fight the actual bad guys. Many times the bad guy is a piece of shit but when there needs to be nuance, the job is done incredibly well.
There's also a very purposeful Found Family Trope that's just... great. It's awesome.
Now, I just said it's a very character focused show so I'll have to dive in more into the actual characters. I'll be trying to keep it to the very first episode and remain vague on the rest but there will be some spoilers ahead! Especially so since every single in-show introduction is a masterpiece that I must talk about.
The Mastermind: Nathan "Nate" Ford is the brain of the group. He's an ex-Insurance employee who got fucked over by said insurance company when they refused to pay for his son's medical fees (something I'm sure many US citizens can relate to). He ends up having to work with criminals he has previously hunted down before, which gives him a good overall knowledge of how they all work while his time in the insurance company explains why he knows so many scams.
Despite being the "token good guy" in the first season, I'd say he's the most interesting at first. He's a self destructive genius with a terrible alcohol problem, and that alcohol storyline is just so beautifully handled in the first 2 seasons, I was completely hooked. Starting season 3 the line between honest man and criminal blurs though, as it should considering his activities for the past couple years, so he lost my interest just a bit. Still a very strong character with amazing storylines and a terrible personality.
Among the Found Family Trope, he is the depressed alcoholic father who pushes his kids too far but would still do everything to make sure they come home safe. His arc is literally going from deadbeat dad to the dad that steps up.
The Hacker: Alec Hardison is an early 20 years old sassy chatty black kid who, not content of being one hell of a hacker, is also an amazing grifter who picks up skills on the fly. While the sassy chatty hacker who is the comic relief of the show is a common trope, he's one hell of a charming character who will weaponise everything he has underhand to get away with stuff. Absolute kudos to his actor who was also in his early 20s at the time who regularly offer some of the best performances ever seen on TV. I swear that guy is too good.
His introduction depicts all that in seconds. He's the first thief to appear, already talking his head off and giving his opinion on the technology he's been given for the job. His introductory flashback is interesting as it doesn't show him in the middle of hacking, but instead getting caught by police having fun in a hotel room he stole and giving a Star Wars reference. Just from both of those you flag him as a young easy-going guy who still messes up a bunch.
In the Found Family Trope, he is the youngest child who messes up a lot. He has the most obvious father/child undertone with Nate, and an equally obvious bigger/younger sibling undertone with Eliot.
The Hitter: Eliot Spencer is a thirty something years old man whose job is keeping the rest of the gang safe. When it comes to the hardened ex-military trope, you expect scary brooding man who always avoids being hit while getting rid of his opponents in seconds. That's not quite the case with Eliot. Yes, he gives off scary and brooding vibes, but he actually has the biggest heart of the gang. He's regularly shown being the one who worries the most for others, and there's an ongoing thing about him being the defacto person to go to get help help when you're 18 and under. Eliot has an incredible amount of screentime being soft and helping/protecting children.
Not only that, Eliot isn't some kind of super soldier. He gets hit. A lot. But the point is that he always gets back on his feet to continue the fight. His hitter prowesses come more from the fact that he has a lot of knowledge in the matter, rather than from being a perfect fighter. He also has an underlying theme with self-control and anger issues. Eliot is a character that is constantly annoyed/angry, and who uses fighting as a self-regulating tool.
On top of all that, he's also a good grifter who, when not there to hit people, is there to hit on girls. He's regularly used as eye candy to keep the attention away from the others. He's also (not so) surprisingly low key. Eliot is often described as "hiding his game well", his opponents often underestimating him.
Eliot is the second thief to appear on screen, being asked by Hardison what exactly was his job here and not answering, nailing in the "low key" aspect of him that confuses his opponents. It's reinforced by his introductory flashback which has him sipping coffee while having guns pointed at him, then cutting to the outside of the room so we don't see his skill in action, then back to the room where he's still sipping his coffee, unfazed, while everybody else is K.O. The last part of his introduction comes when he finally shows what he is capable of, appearing out of nowhere to put out of commission several guards who hold Hardison at gunpoint, to which he finally answer to Hardison earlier question of what exactly he was here for, with a smile. That's where you start getting a glimpse of his softer side that is entirely focused on keeping his team safe.
In the Found Family Trope, he is the eldest son. He bullies Hardison at least once per episode (and Hardison fucks him over about as many times too), and is the one who, with Sophie, keeps Nate in check so that he doesn't go overboard. Nate and Eliot have a lot in common and while they are rarely clashing, there is definitely a tension between them.
The Thief: Parker is a (most likely autistic (edit: she is indeed autistic, it's canon)) young woman who loves money and throwing herself off of buildings. She starts off as quirky/weird/off putting until we (and the main gang) start to understand her. She is both the most obvious and the most complex character of the bunch, who unabashedly loves what she does and has a lot of fun with her new partners, all the while having absolutely no idea how to handle interpersonal relationships.
She is the one that grows the most during the show, picking up skills left and right (fighting from Eliot, grifting from Sophie, etc), developing her interpersonal skills and empathy, learning to rely on others and falling in love. Her evolution is just the best and she never gives up her whimsy while developing.
She's the third thief to appear on screen, but she's actually the first one being mentioned! Nate tells his client that "Parker is crazy" before agreeing to take the job. She appears hanging upside down from a rafter, interrupting the boys to ask playfully if she can have an earpiece too, and finally jumping off the building with a joyful yell before Nate can give the go. Then in her introductory flashback, we see her as a young kid, with a terrible family situation, literally blowing up her house after her "father" dared her to become a better thief to get the bunny plushie she wanted. And so you know Parker is the wild card of the team who is actually pretty forthright once you've pinpointed her interests.
In the Found Family Trope, she's the middle child who has... whatever is going on with Hardison and Eliot. While the boys have more obvious family interactions with Nate (the father), Parker mainly has them with Sophie (the mom) who teaches her the most out of everybody. Nate still regularly is there to explain things to her when she's confused, and Eliot teaches her how to bully Hardison (lovingly of course).
The Grifter: Sophie Devereaux is an actress that the gang fetches when their client fucks them over. It's a bit hard to depict her personality like the others because her whole theme is that she has identity issues. As a grifter she has many identities, and she plays them so often that she comes to forget who she even is in the first place. She's a quick witted, caring person who helps tempering Nate and coming up with plans, she's a femme fatale who either seduces or instills fear in her preys, she's the one who puts at ease the clients who come ask the group for help, she's the one who comes up with on the spot solutions when something goes awry and needs an immediate fix, she's the one always at the forefront of the plans keeping the attention on her so the others can do their jobs, etc etc. Sophie is everything and nothing all at once, which makes her a fascinating character that is difficult to explain properly.
She's the last thief to appear on screen, being brought by Nate. She's introduced as a terrible actress, all three thieves being appalled by her prestation on stage while Nate is smiling wildly. Then we get a glimpse of the romantic tension between her and Nate when he asks her for help, and another glimpse at their closeness when the three thieves turn to her when Nate confuses them, only for Sophie to tell them he really hasn't changed. Her introductory flashback focuses on her stealing a painting, being intercepted by Nate, and them both firing at each other. Finally the last part of her introduction comes when she shows off her actual acting talents while grifting the bad guy, startling Hardison who was still worried about her acting skills.
Sophie is introduced with her acting skills and her relationship with Nate instead of her personality or quirks like the other (the only quirk here being that she's a terrible actress on stage but an excellent one when she's grifting), which keeps nailing down her identity crisis.
Since we're on Sophie, I'd like to point out how well the writing team handled the actress being pregnant and needing to stay away from the show for a while. Her reason for being away tapped into her identity crisis, but she still was there to give advices to the others, mainly the "kids". While it was obvious in one episode that they placed the characters and angled the camera to avoid showing she was pregnant, the rest was handled beautifully well.
The show seems very respectful of its actors, to the point it lets them showcase their skills in season 3 like Hardison and Eliot's actors' music prowesses. It also allows them to shine in the filler episodes by having them play other roles, to which they deliver amazing performances (especially Hardison's actor. I'll never shut up about him, he's just perfect).
And yes, that was the time when we still had filler episodes! And they are GREAT! Some of my favorite episodes are filler episodes, like one where the whole gang go over a theft they all accidentally did together years ago, constantly fucking each other over without realising, all from their own perspectives. There are jabs at each other, like Sophie's accent or Eliot being a ladykiller and a terrifying psychopath, but there's also an insane amount of details scattered. One of my favorite being that everybody else saw the head of security carrying a rifle while Eliot was the only one (save Nate) to see it as only a box. It's a minor background detail that the show doesn't even point out, but when I caught it I got super invested in the episode. At first I believed it was because Eliot hates guns and sees them as sticks to beat people up with, but with the last perspective being shown with the "truth", it turned out Eliot was the only one seeing it as a box because it was a box. Eliot would be attuned to the amount of danger the objects around him would pose, and so wouldn't mix up a box for a gun. Once more, it's a background detail but it just ended convincing me that the showrunners care a lot about this show.
Ok I'm officially out of fumes. I think I could go into more if I dove into the actual episodes but I don't want to spoil more than I already did. All in all, great show, handles heavy stuff like addiction and grief and neurodivergency incredibly well without being condescending, scratches a hitch by fucking over powerful people in the most horrendous ways, makes you aware of the kind of scams there are around, etc etc.
It's just one hell of a good show. 10/10 would recommend. I only wish the 5 seasons box set wasn't so expensive, I can't throw that much money in it ToT
ONE LAST THING! If you wanna watch, the seasons are all available on Youtube (US only, get your VPN ready if you're not from there) in the RIGHT ORDER! The first season was aired out of order by the network so you will probably find it in the wrong order online too. It's not much since each episode is mostly contained, but it did make me pause at one point because of consistency issues.
Season 1 link
Season 2 link
Season 3 link
Season 4 link (careful, the Playlist starts with the last episode and finishes with the first. You gotta reverse the order of the Playlist!)
Season 5 link (careful, the Playlist starts with the last episode and finishes with the first. You gotta reverse the order of the Playlist!)
Redemption S1 link (careful, the Playlist starts with the last episode and finishes with the first. You gotta reverse the order of the Playlist!)
You're welcome 😘
270 notes · View notes
thieves-never-say-die · 3 months ago
Text
Leverage Redemption Season 3 Trailer Breakdown/Analysis
I'm going insane over this trailer (if you haven't seen it yet) and wanted to break down all the little things we see (and also what we don't see)
It seems like the opening heist is just Parker, Hardison, Eliot, and Sophie in Paris. It's unclear if Breanna and Harry will join them there or if the team will meet up back in New Orleans.
I also noticed that the trailer heavily features Parker, Hardison, and Eliot. They get a lot more lines than any of the other characters (including Sophie!)
Based on the number of outfit changes we saw, I don't think Hardison is going to be in all of the episodes. I think he'll be in more than the previous two season, but I don't think he'll be in all 10.
Yes, I did count the number of outfits we saw per character. Give or take one in some cases where it's unclear if an outfit was a repeat, the totals are:
Sophie, Parker, and Eliot with 11. Harry with 9. Breanna with 6. Hardison with 4.
We have confirmation of scenes taking place in Paris and Mumbai.
The globe map of bad guys include locations of: Paris, France; Montreal, Canada; Karachi, Pakistan; and what looks like the Louisiana area. (If I am missing any other locations please let me know!)
Guest stars that have been confirmed include: Jack Coleman, Drew Powell (Hurley!!), Alex Boniello, Cedric Yarbrough, Mary Hollis Inboden, Sam Witwer, and Rachael Harris.
We also see Alexandra Park as Astrid in the trailer, and Noah Wyle has confirmed that his daughter Auden will return as Harry's daughter Becky.
This season will have 10 episodes, the first three dropping on April 17th and the rest airing weekly after that.
242 notes · View notes
vagueeyes · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
INSIDE NO. 9 | S6E2 "Simon Says"
18 notes · View notes
river-of-wine · 1 year ago
Text
Do you guys ever think about Molly laughing at Dutch in her final scene. Do you ever think about it. I think about it so much. I think about her even more
64 notes · View notes
akkpipitphattana · 5 months ago
Note
Even though we're mutuals I need to come on anon to ask what do you think about that Style mentioned his dog 'boonterm' at the grief counseling group therapy and in another scene we see Lily with Keen where keen mentions they're meeting someone named 'boonterm'. Another thing is when Keen visited the heart burger Style peeked from 'the toilet/kitchen room' and saw Keen's face. In EP 7 Keen and Style meet at the bathroom/toilet and Keen even talks to him but Style doesn't react strangely as if he saw him at the restaurant. I don't know if this somehow came up anywhere or even if you already talked about this and if yes, I'm sorry I must've missed it but been thinking about this a lot since I did my rewatch. Or do you think I'm just delusional and overthinking this
first of all dear mutual i love you and please reveal yourself
second of all, i honestly have no idea!!!!! like i've been thinking there will be more to style's involvement for a while now but the hints we have are so MINUTE that it's hard to build a real theory around it. cause like style did see keen at the restaurant and i didn't even think about that! i'm not shocked that he pretended like he didn't recognize him tho cause keen probably didn't realize style saw him that day and neither did fadel, not to mention he WAS trying to distract fadel in the bathroom from keen being there. and then there's also the fact that style was at the club the night that fadel and bison drugged that lady because he was dropping her car off to her! the hints are there, and they're purposeful, but i have no fucking clue what it means
like my best working theory is that style's dad is involved with lilly and/or ruerat but style himself has no idea, or at the very least a minimal idea. like he's aware of a number of the people but has no idea that they're actually like. criminals. cause i feel like if style actually knew more, some of that would have been given away by now. style is way too earnest to be hiding that he knows more than he's letting on, especially right now with trying to earn fadel's trust.
so yeah, i definitely don't think you're delusional or overthinking i just have no actual idea WHAT these things are pointing to in terms of style's involvement. i'm sure we'll find out soon enough tho!
17 notes · View notes
hobbitinnumenor · 21 days ago
Text
"The Thief in the Night", "The Hobbit" Ch 16, here we go!
Tumblr media
Shorter chapter, but still a few thoughts threaded! As always, thanks for reading if you do, and your thoughts always v welcome! 📚📖⛰️🐉💍💎⚔️
1. Thorin's demeanor really is getting frightening 😵‍💫😫 His desire for the Arkenstone, "I will be avenged on anyone who holds and finds it." I love Roäc's council...basically "you can't eat gold"...so so real. Bilbo "made up his mind" to do something about it. I love that decisiveness & foreshadowing.
2. Indeed he did, with the help of the Ring yet again (how different would this narrative be if he hadn't found it?!). "Personally I am tired of this whole affair"...I'm not sure if I would have Bilbo's courage & quick thinking, but wanting to be done with it all & not into the idea of a war: v me.
3. "It is as if a globe had been filled w/ moonlight & hung before them in a net woven of the glint of frosty stars.": more gorgeous poetry within prose in JRRT 💙🤩 That reveal, & then GANDALF! Been so long since I've taken this story in (book or films) that there are things like that I'd forgotten!
8 notes · View notes
coquelicoq · 10 months ago
Text
i canonly rewatch lever age when im sick because otherewise i get too frustterated. it's inconherent...these people loves cops more than any criminals i ever heard of
15 notes · View notes
ofpd · 7 months ago
Text
the other day i heard someone offhandedly suggest that the fact that people elsewhere think that israel is more unsafe to live in than is really the case is due to antisemitism and hm. much to unpack there
8 notes · View notes
griseldagimpel · 1 month ago
Text
I want to preface this by saying that in mainstream media, there's more at play than a lone artist's creative vision. There can be everything from legal censorship to the network/publisher/what-have-you being reluctant to allow for certain content. Sometimes creative types self-censor because they "know" (rightly or wrongly) that it's a battle with the higher ups they won't win. And with collaborative media, there can be different conflicting visions at play. Marvel and DC comics are probably the worst here, but with television series, you'll see it especially when the show runner changes, although you can also get it because of differing visions in the writer's room.
Anyway, when it comes to depicting queer characters and relationships, the writers can - sometimes - play coy, leaving it as subtext. Historically, this was often safer for creators.
But there are limits here. If you take something like, say, Star Wars: Rogue One, it's plausible to read Chirrut and Baze as being in a relationship with each other. It's also possible to read them as having a platonic friendship. But what's important here is that because it's a single movie where everyone dies at the end, the writers can get away with that ambiguity.
The longer a piece of media spans, the harder it is to maintain that ambiguity.
Because at some point, it either becomes clear to the audience that the characters are in a relationship OR the lack of that tells the audience that they characters are not, in fact, in a relationship.
Anyway, thinking of this in relation to Leverage: Redemption, which has a new show runner for the third season.
4 notes · View notes
vynegar · 1 month ago
Text
gonna be busy later this month so i won't have as much time for tot stuff, at least not immediately. so next is finishing up any marius posts, then reading luke's SSR (decide whether to pull for him or marius, and if getting either of their cards is a must for me), then finishing artem's story. probably won't even have time to ramble about luke's stuff (even though it would be so easy to compare w revisiting youth bc of tira's translation) let alone artem (maybe that's better left to the artem stans anyway).
if i'm still actively in tot brainrot mode in june/july, i think it would be really fun to go back to the beginning since i still have all the beta version stuff i haven't posted about and it could be for the game's (chn) 5th anniversary... what a milestone...
2 notes · View notes
hetheymerrill · 2 years ago
Text
Ngl I kinda love that Parker's brother never gets brought up again. Like in any other show it would piss me off that something like that would just get dropped into the middle of an ep and never addressed again but in Leverage it made sense. That's Parker's business. She doesn't want to talk about it, and she shouldn't have to.
21 notes · View notes
allaboutforexworld · 11 months ago
Text
Success and Failure in Forex Trading
Forex trading, or foreign exchange trading, is a challenging yet potentially rewarding endeavor. Traders enter the market with hopes of achieving financial success, but the path is often fraught with both triumphs and setbacks. Understanding the factors that contribute to success and failure in forex trading is crucial for any trader aiming to navigate this volatile market…
3 notes · View notes
colorisbyshe · 2 years ago
Text
a youtuber i hate and got into an argument with on twitter (and who blocked me!) got exposed as a hack, i win!
11 notes · View notes
oliviawaite · 2 years ago
Text
“The upfront fun of a con artist is the way they manipulate the social fabric. Prohibitive rules and unspoken undercurrents become navigational channels into locked spaces: Martin Bishop holding a cake and balloons so the guard has to open the security gate for him, Sophie Devereaux playing both a wealthy duchess and a nerdy art restorer to gain access to a locked gallery. It’s a game, a puzzle, a magic trick, and like all those things we automatically root for it to work.
But we also root for the con artist to get caught — not by the law, but by the social threads they so clearly understand. We want them to come to trust the partner they’re forced to work with, we want them to fall for the mark, to leave half the cash on the steps of the orphanage and get the real villain, the heartless villain, hauled away in cuffs. We’re always looking for the moment they start to see the con as a means of making people happy, rather than extracting wealth.”
13 notes · View notes
mouser26 · 2 years ago
Text
Look really the short answer is I don't know how to enjoy a TV show without it being something I watch obsessively for a while so yes
Tumblr media
mutuals do this
79K notes · View notes