
That said, I am looking forward to this storyline because it will hopefully give Brady and Chloe something to do. Just because a guy Chloe was briefly involved with years ago expresses interest again, doesn’t mean she’s going to dump the man she’s loved for decades and with whom she just reunited.
#Female selfie collage free
While I can see how his plan to make Stefan love Chloe could keep Gabi free for himself, I don’t know how it will benefit Kristen. I’ve wanted to like Li since he was first introduced in Chad and Abby in Paris, but he’s never lived up to the ruthful power player the character was presented as. Li as a villain makes this character so much more interesting. More: Soaps’ all-time best villains ranked Johnny just got out of a love triangle with his sister, why not enter one with his dad next? Of course, it looks like he might have to contend with his son for her heart, assuming Johnny’s sympathy toward his “aunt” leads to something less platonic. I’d love to see Ava keep her edge (and stay out of the kitchen), allowing her and EJ to be all kinds of shady together. However, all their banter proves they have the makings of another of my favorite tropes: enemies to lovers. But then again, he kinda let her get the best of him when she called his bluff over ratting her out to Rafe. Where’s the fire and brimstone EJ is capable of raining down? And EJ simply blackmailing Kate and Chad for their DiMera shares over their role in setting him up was a bummer too. Not having Sami on the canvas was bad enough, but there was zero fallout between Lucas and EJ, which was never capitalized on. Lucas getting sentenced and going to prison for Sami’s kidnapping off-screen, while Sami herself was off-screen is one of the most anti-climactic endings to a storyline in some time.

Or was he projecting about the state of his own relationship with Will? Keeping It In the Family While I agree Alex needs to respect women more and maybe not wear such revealing briefs around the house where half his family lives (while we’re at it, Sloan could use some guest etiquette), Sonny’s rant to Alex about settling down and finding love felt like something out of his own sitcom in a longer ago decade. I am pleased that Days so far hasn’t written Alex’s sex partners as ditzy clichés, but instead intelligent, successful women who seem to enjoy a good one-night stand as much as he does. As they say, act like you’ve been here before, my friend. Drooling over the beautiful Gabi and biting his hand over Chanel and Allie making out like he’s Jack Tripper on Three’s Company makes me think he’s the one who never had a threesome. While I’m a sucker for a good player-turned-one-woman-man trope, I could do without all the fetishizing and objectifying. It’s nice to see Wilson play with new people and not be saddled with so much storyline baggage and angst. Which actually is most of the cast since Ben’s world didn’t extend much further than Ciara.

It helps that he’s been paired with people Ben didn’t interact with all that much. Robert Scott Wilson playing Alex mere weeks after he left the role of Ben is working for me way better than I expected. While possibility and intrigue is brewing in some parts of Salem, at least one story wrapped up this week in the most anti-climactic way. That’s due in part to changes in characters and actors. Days of Our Lives seems to be laying the groundwork for quite a few stories, while igniting renewed interest in others.
