8:00 Kit Walker (main protagonist) arrives home where his wife
Alma waits for him as she is about to prepare dinner for
him. Kit then puts on his wedding ring that he intentionally left at home and then he tells his wife Lets tell everyone where he is referring to his marriage that they have kept a secret due to the fact that his wife is African American. He wants to let all his family and friends know of their marriage but his wife disapproves of his idea.
Observations:
10:1 While Alma goes to the kitchen, he remains smoking in
0 his bed while the radio is playing music. Radio static
begins abruptly and he sees bright white lights shine
through his doors. He then retrieves a rifle and proceeds with caution ordering Alma to stay in the kitchen. As he walks outside the door with his rifle in hand, a bright white light flashes over him as he hears Alma screaming for help. He then goes inside the house searching for her as all the furniture has been scattered all around the house while the series of bright lights continues until an unbearable noise has him on the ground covering his ears. As the noise and lights come to a sudden stop, Kit notices that the objects surrounding him are rising to the ceiling as he follows behind and drops back to the ground and flips over on his back. The scene then changes and he is seen without clothes in an empty room filled with bright white lights that illuminate throughout the setting where he is struggling to move and ends with a bizarre hand appearing before him.
Episode One Welcome to Briarcliff
11:3 The scene begins with Lana Winters arriving at the
0 mental institution called Briar Cliff who claims shes
writing a story on the bakery there. As she is walking up
towards the entrance, a patient by the name of Pepper gives her a rose asking Lana to play with me. Then a nun who works at the ward proceeds to guide Lana to Sister Judes office who is the head of the institution. Both ladies walk in to find Sister Jude attempting to shave off the hair of a patient named Shelly, who Sister Jude claims is a victim of her own lust or rather a nymphomaniac. As Sister Jude is explaining the story behind the bakery which was an idea that she purposed based off of the philosophies of the visionary of the institution, the Monsignor Timothy Howard. The bakery was basically a place for productivity and the purifications of the patients at the ward. Her assistant interrupts the interview and informs her that the killer nicknamed Bloody Face will arrive at the institution any minute. Lana then begs