![]() The entire street is packed with reporters, some a lot more seasoned than Ben, yet he’s the one who notices Emma and is willing to bide his time. This is brilliantly illustrated when Emma Beesly, Jessica Collins, arrives at the Brewer house and he passes her his card. He is always in the right place and is able to sense a story before a story is even presented itself. ![]() Throughout the series we see a build up of Ben’s work and commitment to his job, for him this is really his calling. He has to fight and fight and fight to get a place at the table even though we, the humble viewer, know that he is actually cracking the case wide open. The struggle for Ben is the isolation he feels at work, sitting a his desk with headphones on listing to heavy base music and it is with this scene we get to understand Ben a little better. But by the time Episode 4 finished I was gripped and was willing to hold off ruining it so I made an espresso and got comfortable.īen Park is a gay Asian-American journalist who isn’t just good at his job he is brilliant at it. Sleepy, yes, but desperate to know what happens and I was almost willing to skip to the end and spoil it for myself, this is something I am afraid to admit I have done before. When we ask ourselves why representation means such and why representation in the Film/TV/Theatre is important moving forward I will point to Abraham Lim and his performance as Ben Park in CLICKBAIT.īy the time I had finished Episode 5: The Reporter it had gone past 3 am but I was in full binge-watching mode and there was no turning back. I had to watch Episode 5 of Netflix’s CLICKBAIT twice and was going to watch it a third time before starting this piece but decided against it as I’d never be able to finish writing it.
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