American Gods (Recap) | Lemon Scented You (S1 E5)

by Devan Coogan | via Entertainment Weekly

You can’t have a war without an enemy, and in this episode, Shadow comes face to face with one powerful enemy.

Up until now, we’ve watched Mr. Wednesday gather his Old God allies in preparation for a battle. The New Gods, meanwhile, have kind of flitted around the edges: We’ve seen Shadow’s confrontation with Technical Boy and his brief conversation with Media/Lucy Ricardo, but really, we haven’t gotten a lot of clarity as to what Wednesday is battling against. But with “Lemon Scented You,” the New Gods take center stage, led by one scary Big Bad: Crispin Glover as Mr. World.

This episode, like several before it, opens with yet another “Coming to America” vignette, but this one is a bit different from the rest. For one, this sequence is entirely animated, all ice and pale grey skin. Notably, it tells the story of the oldest American god we’ve met so far… one of the oldest American gods, period.

The opening follows a group of people in 14,000 B.C., who’ve crossed the land bridge from Siberia into the yet-unnamed America. They’re led by a woman named Atsula, and they worship an ancient god named Nunyunnini, an enormous mammoth skull they carry into the new world. Under Nunyunnini’s guidance, they eventually find prosperity and hope in America, but as the years pass, Nunyunnini’s people are absorbed into other tribes, and eventually, the mammoth skull is entirely forgotten.

The story of Atsula and Nunyunnini is slightly longer and more detailed in Neil Gaiman’s novel, but here, it serves the same purpose: We’ve already heard Mr. Wednesday talk about how the only thing he fears is being forgotten, and Nunyunnini is just one example of a once-powerful god who’s completely passed out of memory. In the world of American Gods, deities are only as powerful as the people who believe in them, and as the battle between the Old Gods and the New comes into focus during this episode, the story of Nunyunnini illustrates just what’s at stake. For a god, to be forgotten is to die.

Back in the present, Shadow and his dead wife finally get to have their heart-to-heart. It’s a long time coming — not only is this Shadow and Laura’s first face-to-face conversation since his prison release, but it’s also their first conversation since, well, Laura’s death. To Shadow’s credit, he doesn’t run, scream, or pass out at the sight of her, but he does throw a pillow at her face to make sure she’s real. After all, the sudden reappearance of his dead wife isn’t exactly the weirdest thing that’s happened to him in the last week. “You rising from the dead, it’s about par for the f—ing course since I left prison,” he tells her.

He confronts her about Robbie; she apologizes. But even though she’s a dead woman walking, she’s drawn to him and still overcome with love — perhaps more love than she ever had for him when she was still alive. They briefly kiss, and for a moment, she can feel her heart beat in her chest again. “Sure, there are some things about our marriage that we’re going to have to work on,” she tells him.

Gillian Anderson as New God Media

“Like you being dead?” he replies.

But before they can agree to go to undead couple’s counseling to work out their many issues, Shadow and Mr. Wednesday are arrested. Turns out that someone sent footage of their little Chicago bank robbery to the local police. And it’s not the kind of local good Samaritan who spotted a license plate and called the cops. No, this is an organized, detailed report on Shadow, Wednesday, and the details of their crime. It’s almost like someone very powerful wants Mr. Wednesday locked up. Huh.

Mr. Wednesday refuses to cooperate with the police, once again putting on his delusional old man guise and babbling nonsense. (Although when he does tell the truth about what he was doing in Chicago, the police don’t believe him: “I was recruiting a tired but still vital god of death into a war against the New Gods, who very rightly fear him as much as they should fear me, but don’t… yet.”)

While Wednesday and Shadow are languishing in prison, we check in with good ol’ Technical Boy, who’s still vaping toad skins and being an overall insufferable jerk. To his annoyance, he’s sucked into a meeting with Media, who greets him in the form of… David Bowie? That’s right: Media doesn’t just come in the form of Lucy Ricardo. Like any good master manipulator, she takes the form of whatever she thinks will best get her message across — which means that we get to see Gillian Anderson tap into her inner Ziggy Stardust, right down to the dilated pupil. She even speaks in references to Bowie’s lyrics. (I caught references to “Oh You Pretty Things” and “Starman.”) What times we live in.

She’s there to scold Technical Boy for attacking Shadow. “Tasked with asking a few questions, you hang a black man from a tree,” she tells him. It’s clear that the two of them have a unique relationship, one that’s almost symbiotic. (She even uses his own technology to meet and speak with him.) After all, what use is media without technology? Or vice versa?

He reluctantly tells her to pass on his apologies to someone named Mr. World, and she informs him that he had better take that apology and give it to Wednesday and Shadow. Instead of defusing the situation, his attack on Shadow escalated it, making Wednesday all the more eager for war.

“Wednesday was suffocating,” Media tells Technical Boy. “The spark was smoldering. And then you came along, putting out fire with gasoline.”

He still doesn’t see Wednesday as a legitimate threat, telling her, “Wednesday’s collecting monsters! F—ing Pokemon!” Which is actually a pretty apt comparison. So far, Wednesday has recruited a leprechaun, a jinn, three fortunetelling sisters… And Czernobog does kinda sound like a Pokemon name, doesn’t it? American Gods: Gotta catch ‘em all!

To read the rest of the recap, “Lemon Scented You,” click HERE!!!

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