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This installment discusses Xavier Thorpe and his relationship with Wednesday Addams in Wednesday.
Here is the character study:
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 1: Introduction
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 2: Ethnicity & Linguistics
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 3: An Outcast
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 4: Thoughts and Feelings
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 5: Relationships
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 6: Solitary Accomplishments
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 7: Trust and Betrayal
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 8: Connected Characters
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 9: Enid Sinclair
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 10: Eugene & Morticia
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 11: Thing
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 12: Tyler Galpin
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 13: Xavier Thorpe
See also:
Wednesday TV Series (The Addams Family) Overview
Xavier Thorpe
Xavier Thorpe is an artist, and also a psychic with the unusual ability to animate his art through a form of telekinesis. He repeatedly tries to impress Wednesday with these skills, but she seems more annoyed than impressed. Not even saving her life gets the reaction he's looking for. Trying to demand her admiration is just doomed to failure. His moody temper doesn't offer any contrast or balance, either. A tortured artist is not the best match for Wednesday, whether as friend or as boyfriend -- though she isn't much interested in either of those options.
I like that Wednesday feels entitled to ignore Xavier, because she is. Xavier and Tyler both act like they're entitled to her time, attention, and affection. She tells them plainly that she isn't interested, but they keep pestering her. Then they get all huffy when she acts exactly as she told them she would. She doesn't owe them anything, because they are not in a relationship. Wednesday barely knows either of the boys. Xavier has no right to complain about that. Breaking into his art workshop, sure, he's 100% entitled to be outraged by that offense. But if that's how he wanted to play it, then he wouldn't have kept chasing her. For a lot of women, Wednesday is a power fantasy because she actually gets to say the things that most people only wish they could but don't dare.
In Episode 4, Nevermore Academy holds a Rave'N dance, but Wednesday is not interested. She's too busy with her investigation, such as breaking into Xavier's art studio to spy on him because she has noticed scratches on his neck. When Xavier catches her snooping around, she asks him to the dance as cover. Or more precisely, she hints about it, and he demands that she ask him outright. This is not a great basis for a relationship. Unsurprisingly, Xavier figures out that she's just using him, and refuses to attend the dance with her. However, he can't stop thinking about her, which causes even more problems.
Over time, Wednesday comes to suspect that Xavier is the culprit because he always seems to be around when the monster attacks. She stalks him, trying to find out more. Xavier warns Dr. Kinbott that he foresaw her murder. The monster kills Dr. Kinbott. Due to Wednesday's investigation, Xavier gets arrested for the murder. But then she has a vision during a kiss, which reveals Tyler Galpin as the true Hyde.
Xavier Thorpe: You know what your problem is?
Wednesday Addams: I would love to hear your piercing insight.
Xavier Thorpe: You don’t know who your real friends are. I’ve been on your side since day one. I literally saved your life, I believed your theories when nobody else did, and what do I get in return? Just nothing but suspicion and lies.
Wednesday Addams: Fine. You want honesty? Here it is: Every time the monster's attacked, you've been right there. Starting with Rowan at the Harvest Festival. Then, on Outreach Day, you arrived just minutes after the monster disappeared, yet you say you didn't see it.
Xavier Thorpe: I didn't realize proximity was a crime.
Wednesday Addams: Then there's your drawing obsession. You have drawn the monster dozens of times, yet you've never seen it. Or so you claim. You even drew where it lived. Then, when Eugene went to investigate, you tried to kill him so he wouldn't spill your secret.
Xavier Thorpe: You think I would hurt Eugene?
Wednesday Addams: Let's not forget your oh-so-convenient appearance after Tyler had been attacked at the Gates mansion.
Xavier Thorpe: If I am the monster...then why haven't I killed you?
Wednesday Addams: [Hesitates] ...Because for some reason I cannot fathom or indulge, you seem to like me.
Xavier Thorpe: [coldly] What's to like?
-- Episode 7
In Episode 8, Wednesday violates Xavier's art studio again. This time she uses it as a place to interrogate and torture a captured Tyler Galpin, with the help of several other students. In the climactic battle at Nevermore Academy, Xavier shoots an arrow at the zombie Joseph Crackstone, who turns it back at him. However, Wednesday jumps between them. This seems surprising because she doesn't even particularly like him. After mistakenly accusing him and setting him up to get arrested in Episode 7, though, she feels bad not so much about harming him as about being wrong. That creates an uncomfortable imbalance in the relationship. So protecting him fixes that imbalance.
At the end of the episode, Xavier gives Wednesday a phone. Despite knowing her distaste for modern technology, he expects her to pay attention to him through it. What actually happens is that it gives a stalker access to her. However, imagine the fun if Wednesday sent Xavier gory pictures of her taxidermy hobby, or similar, when he was foolishly expecting romance. Seriously, Wednesday needs someone she can share her hobbies with ... maybe a nice Hispanic kid who makes calaveras. She shouldn't have to settle for all white suitors, let alone someone who thinks she needs a warning label.
Xavier Thorpe: When I was in the cell I said a lot of... things. Being your friend should come with a warning label. But... I don't know a lot of people who would take an arrow for me. So... Welcome to the 21st century, Addams. (gifts her a smartphone) My number's in there already.
Wednesday Addams: That's a bold move. I hope you're not expecting me to call.
Xavier Thorpe: No, never. I'd settle for a text, though.
This quote comes from a TV series ‘Wednesday’. The scene where this moment comes from is from Season 1 Episode 8, with the title of ‘A Murder of Woes’
Wednesday and Xavier are terrible for each other. Wednesday routinely betrays people, from breaking school rules to breaking into Xavier's art studio and eventually getting him arrested. Xavier unilaterally decides that Wednesday ought to like and admire him, that he's entitled to whatever he wants from her. There's not just an incident here or there; they spend most of the season violating each other in not-quite-sexual but really disturbing ways.
Now consider the petty jealousy and possessiveness between Tyler and Xavier over a girl neither of them is even close with. There is no excuse for that. It's not a bit cute. It's bad enough when a boyfriend treats his girlfriend like property. But until they both agree on a committed, exclusive relationship there is NO grounds for a boy to express jealousy or possessiveness over a girl who is not his in any way. She is free to do whatever she pleases, and if he doesn't like it, the only thing he has a right to do is decide he doesn't want a girlfriend who acts like that. Sadly, Xavier isn't that smart.
The best explanation for their relationship that I can come up with is this:
Xavier's Brain: "Dude, that girl is hazardous to your self-esteem, art career, and physical safety. Don't stick it in the crazy."
Xavier's Dick: "But she has a pussy and I want it."
Guess which wins.
"Because for some reason I cannot fathom or indulge, you seem to like me."
-- Wednesday to Xavier
Plenty of people have complained about the "love triangle" involving Wednesday, Tyler, and Xavier. Some just don't like that plot. Others feel that it fell flat because the boys had much less chemistry with Wednesday than Enid did. However, it's not really a triangle at all. While Tyler and Xavier both pursued Wednesday with the clumsy teen-boy enthusiasm of puppies tripping over their own huge feet, she never had any real interest in either of them. The closest she came was asking Xavier to the Rave'N dance to cover up her snooping, and that ended badly. She found their advances to be baffling at best and bothersome at worst -- like any girl being pestered by boys who are neither her type nor anywhere near her league. And it's not a love triangle unless all three people are trying to secure a partner for sex/romance. What we have here is a case of two guys fawning over someone who, in Enid's astute observation, "literally never had an eff to give." That's not the same thing at all, and it's obvious in how the dynamic plays out.
Enid Sinclair: Are you kidding me? I've learned so much from you. Part of it is admittedly criminal behavior, but... most people spend their entire lives pretending to give zero effs, and you literally never had an eff to give.
This quote comes from a TV series ‘Wednesday’. The scene where this moment comes from is from Season 1 Episode 8, with the title of ‘A Murder of Woes’
Note that the problems don't just occur between Xavier and Wednesday. Bianca used to be Xavier's girlfriend, and it ended badly. Neither of them could trust their feelings, because of Bianca's siren song, so they broke up. That was miserable enough, but then at the Rave'N dance, Xavier demanded that Bianca take off her magic-muffling amulet and enchant him to forget about Wednesday. He did this with no warmup, no offer of a return favor, and no consideration of the fact that he was asking Bianca to do something that he'd criticized her about before. Unsurprisingly, she blew up at him and refused. Shortly thereafter, Bianca talked about her siren issues with Wednesday, giving the two girls a rare and surprisingly deep moment of understanding. This kind of behavior does not speak well for Xavier's boyfriend skills.
Bianca Barclay: You don't know what it's like.
Wednesday Addams: Being beautiful and popular?
Bianca Barclay: Never knowing people's true feelings. If someone likes me for me.
Wednesday Addams: What about your amulet?
Bianca Barclay: It's not foolproof. It's a mild prophylactic, so to speak. That's why Xavier broke up with me. He could never fully trust me. The worst part is I could never trust his feelings either. I never knew if they were real or not.
This quote comes from a TV series ‘Wednesday’. The scene where this moment comes from is from Season 1 Episode 4, with the title of ‘Woe What a Night’
However, the relationship between Wednesday and Xavier offers some interesting opportunities that others don't. They both did some serious damage to each other, but by the end of Episode 8, they seemed to make up at least somewhat. So, what if after that they decided that they wanted to make friends, but in order to do so, they had to sit down and really talk out what went wrong and how they are going to change things to avoid a repetition? That would be uncommon for a teen show, but appears sometimes in fanfic, and offers lots of potential for personal growth as well as drama.
Wednesday/Xavier is one of the leading ships in this fandom. The ship name is "Wavier" but it doesn't have its own page yet, trailing far behind Wenclair and somewhat behind Wyler. If this really floats your boat, maybe you could make one. Canon supplies plenty to build on, despite the complications. Both Wednesday and Xavier are creative people, even though they prefer different expressions (writing and music vs art). Mutual live-saving can also create a very strong bond. Sometimes, learning from mistakes can draw people closer together. Alternatively, Wednesday and Xavier could decide that they work better as platonic friends than as romantic partners.
10 Most Popular Wednesday Ships
15 Top Signs A Guy Is Jealous And Likes You
22 Early Warning Signs of a Bad Boyfriend You Need to Leave ASAP
23 Early Signs of a Possessive Man & the Best Ways to Fix It ASAP
28 Signs of a Bad Girlfriend & How to Spot a Girl Who’s Bad For You
Betrayal: The Feeling of Being Broken ... and the Recovery
Can you be in a relationship with someone like Wednesday Addams?
Dealing with Betrayal
Dealing with Trust Issues: Weighing the Ethics of Spying on Your Partner
Do Wednesday and Xavier end up together in Wednesday on Netflix?
Does anyone hate others looking in their sketchbook without permission
Forget Tyler, Wednesday Fans Should Be Calling Out Xavier
How To Write Saucy Betrayals
How to Be Just Friends With a Guy When He Wants More
How to Restore Trust in a Relationship After Snooping:7 Ways
Men aren’t entitled to women's time or affection. But it's a hard lesson to learn
Relational Transgression
Sketchbook Etiquette
Unhealthy Relationship Behaviors Series: Jealousy
'Wednesday' Proves Love Triangles Have to Go -- The Everygirl
Wednesday Season 2 Can Explore Xavier's Family History (Now He's Not Suspect)
Wednesday Wasted Its Male Protagonists, And That's a Problem
Wednesday: Xavier Thorpe Hints At How The Addams Family Gained Wealth
Wednesday’s Lackluster Love Interests Have Fans Clamoring for Alternatives
WHAT CREATURE IS XAVIER IN WEDNESDAY? POWERS AND ABILITIES EXPLAINED
"What Women Owe Men:" Kate Manne Talks Male Entitlement, Women’s Electability Problem, and How to Feel About Kamala Harris
Who Is Wednesday Addams in Love With? -- CBR
Who Texted Wednesday? We Think It's This Missing Character
Why do guys get jealous even if they are not your boyfriend?
Why the Love Triangle Doesn't Work in Netflix's 'Wednesday'
Will Wednesday and Xavier be able to move on from that disastrous Nevermore semester?
Xavier, and why I think people are being unfairly critical of him
Here is the character study:
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 1: Introduction
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 2: Ethnicity & Linguistics
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 3: An Outcast
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 4: Thoughts and Feelings
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 5: Relationships
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 6: Solitary Accomplishments
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 7: Trust and Betrayal
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 8: Connected Characters
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 9: Enid Sinclair
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 10: Eugene & Morticia
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 11: Thing
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 12: Tyler Galpin
Meta: "Why I Love Wednesday Addams" Part 13: Xavier Thorpe
See also:
Wednesday TV Series (The Addams Family) Overview
Xavier Thorpe
Xavier Thorpe is an artist, and also a psychic with the unusual ability to animate his art through a form of telekinesis. He repeatedly tries to impress Wednesday with these skills, but she seems more annoyed than impressed. Not even saving her life gets the reaction he's looking for. Trying to demand her admiration is just doomed to failure. His moody temper doesn't offer any contrast or balance, either. A tortured artist is not the best match for Wednesday, whether as friend or as boyfriend -- though she isn't much interested in either of those options.
I like that Wednesday feels entitled to ignore Xavier, because she is. Xavier and Tyler both act like they're entitled to her time, attention, and affection. She tells them plainly that she isn't interested, but they keep pestering her. Then they get all huffy when she acts exactly as she told them she would. She doesn't owe them anything, because they are not in a relationship. Wednesday barely knows either of the boys. Xavier has no right to complain about that. Breaking into his art workshop, sure, he's 100% entitled to be outraged by that offense. But if that's how he wanted to play it, then he wouldn't have kept chasing her. For a lot of women, Wednesday is a power fantasy because she actually gets to say the things that most people only wish they could but don't dare.
In Episode 4, Nevermore Academy holds a Rave'N dance, but Wednesday is not interested. She's too busy with her investigation, such as breaking into Xavier's art studio to spy on him because she has noticed scratches on his neck. When Xavier catches her snooping around, she asks him to the dance as cover. Or more precisely, she hints about it, and he demands that she ask him outright. This is not a great basis for a relationship. Unsurprisingly, Xavier figures out that she's just using him, and refuses to attend the dance with her. However, he can't stop thinking about her, which causes even more problems.
Over time, Wednesday comes to suspect that Xavier is the culprit because he always seems to be around when the monster attacks. She stalks him, trying to find out more. Xavier warns Dr. Kinbott that he foresaw her murder. The monster kills Dr. Kinbott. Due to Wednesday's investigation, Xavier gets arrested for the murder. But then she has a vision during a kiss, which reveals Tyler Galpin as the true Hyde.
Xavier Thorpe: You know what your problem is?
Wednesday Addams: I would love to hear your piercing insight.
Xavier Thorpe: You don’t know who your real friends are. I’ve been on your side since day one. I literally saved your life, I believed your theories when nobody else did, and what do I get in return? Just nothing but suspicion and lies.
Wednesday Addams: Fine. You want honesty? Here it is: Every time the monster's attacked, you've been right there. Starting with Rowan at the Harvest Festival. Then, on Outreach Day, you arrived just minutes after the monster disappeared, yet you say you didn't see it.
Xavier Thorpe: I didn't realize proximity was a crime.
Wednesday Addams: Then there's your drawing obsession. You have drawn the monster dozens of times, yet you've never seen it. Or so you claim. You even drew where it lived. Then, when Eugene went to investigate, you tried to kill him so he wouldn't spill your secret.
Xavier Thorpe: You think I would hurt Eugene?
Wednesday Addams: Let's not forget your oh-so-convenient appearance after Tyler had been attacked at the Gates mansion.
Xavier Thorpe: If I am the monster...then why haven't I killed you?
Wednesday Addams: [Hesitates] ...Because for some reason I cannot fathom or indulge, you seem to like me.
Xavier Thorpe: [coldly] What's to like?
-- Episode 7
In Episode 8, Wednesday violates Xavier's art studio again. This time she uses it as a place to interrogate and torture a captured Tyler Galpin, with the help of several other students. In the climactic battle at Nevermore Academy, Xavier shoots an arrow at the zombie Joseph Crackstone, who turns it back at him. However, Wednesday jumps between them. This seems surprising because she doesn't even particularly like him. After mistakenly accusing him and setting him up to get arrested in Episode 7, though, she feels bad not so much about harming him as about being wrong. That creates an uncomfortable imbalance in the relationship. So protecting him fixes that imbalance.
At the end of the episode, Xavier gives Wednesday a phone. Despite knowing her distaste for modern technology, he expects her to pay attention to him through it. What actually happens is that it gives a stalker access to her. However, imagine the fun if Wednesday sent Xavier gory pictures of her taxidermy hobby, or similar, when he was foolishly expecting romance. Seriously, Wednesday needs someone she can share her hobbies with ... maybe a nice Hispanic kid who makes calaveras. She shouldn't have to settle for all white suitors, let alone someone who thinks she needs a warning label.
Xavier Thorpe: When I was in the cell I said a lot of... things. Being your friend should come with a warning label. But... I don't know a lot of people who would take an arrow for me. So... Welcome to the 21st century, Addams. (gifts her a smartphone) My number's in there already.
Wednesday Addams: That's a bold move. I hope you're not expecting me to call.
Xavier Thorpe: No, never. I'd settle for a text, though.
This quote comes from a TV series ‘Wednesday’. The scene where this moment comes from is from Season 1 Episode 8, with the title of ‘A Murder of Woes’
Wednesday and Xavier are terrible for each other. Wednesday routinely betrays people, from breaking school rules to breaking into Xavier's art studio and eventually getting him arrested. Xavier unilaterally decides that Wednesday ought to like and admire him, that he's entitled to whatever he wants from her. There's not just an incident here or there; they spend most of the season violating each other in not-quite-sexual but really disturbing ways.
Now consider the petty jealousy and possessiveness between Tyler and Xavier over a girl neither of them is even close with. There is no excuse for that. It's not a bit cute. It's bad enough when a boyfriend treats his girlfriend like property. But until they both agree on a committed, exclusive relationship there is NO grounds for a boy to express jealousy or possessiveness over a girl who is not his in any way. She is free to do whatever she pleases, and if he doesn't like it, the only thing he has a right to do is decide he doesn't want a girlfriend who acts like that. Sadly, Xavier isn't that smart.
The best explanation for their relationship that I can come up with is this:
Xavier's Brain: "Dude, that girl is hazardous to your self-esteem, art career, and physical safety. Don't stick it in the crazy."
Xavier's Dick: "But she has a pussy and I want it."
Guess which wins.
"Because for some reason I cannot fathom or indulge, you seem to like me."
-- Wednesday to Xavier
Plenty of people have complained about the "love triangle" involving Wednesday, Tyler, and Xavier. Some just don't like that plot. Others feel that it fell flat because the boys had much less chemistry with Wednesday than Enid did. However, it's not really a triangle at all. While Tyler and Xavier both pursued Wednesday with the clumsy teen-boy enthusiasm of puppies tripping over their own huge feet, she never had any real interest in either of them. The closest she came was asking Xavier to the Rave'N dance to cover up her snooping, and that ended badly. She found their advances to be baffling at best and bothersome at worst -- like any girl being pestered by boys who are neither her type nor anywhere near her league. And it's not a love triangle unless all three people are trying to secure a partner for sex/romance. What we have here is a case of two guys fawning over someone who, in Enid's astute observation, "literally never had an eff to give." That's not the same thing at all, and it's obvious in how the dynamic plays out.
Enid Sinclair: Are you kidding me? I've learned so much from you. Part of it is admittedly criminal behavior, but... most people spend their entire lives pretending to give zero effs, and you literally never had an eff to give.
This quote comes from a TV series ‘Wednesday’. The scene where this moment comes from is from Season 1 Episode 8, with the title of ‘A Murder of Woes’
Note that the problems don't just occur between Xavier and Wednesday. Bianca used to be Xavier's girlfriend, and it ended badly. Neither of them could trust their feelings, because of Bianca's siren song, so they broke up. That was miserable enough, but then at the Rave'N dance, Xavier demanded that Bianca take off her magic-muffling amulet and enchant him to forget about Wednesday. He did this with no warmup, no offer of a return favor, and no consideration of the fact that he was asking Bianca to do something that he'd criticized her about before. Unsurprisingly, she blew up at him and refused. Shortly thereafter, Bianca talked about her siren issues with Wednesday, giving the two girls a rare and surprisingly deep moment of understanding. This kind of behavior does not speak well for Xavier's boyfriend skills.
Bianca Barclay: You don't know what it's like.
Wednesday Addams: Being beautiful and popular?
Bianca Barclay: Never knowing people's true feelings. If someone likes me for me.
Wednesday Addams: What about your amulet?
Bianca Barclay: It's not foolproof. It's a mild prophylactic, so to speak. That's why Xavier broke up with me. He could never fully trust me. The worst part is I could never trust his feelings either. I never knew if they were real or not.
This quote comes from a TV series ‘Wednesday’. The scene where this moment comes from is from Season 1 Episode 4, with the title of ‘Woe What a Night’
However, the relationship between Wednesday and Xavier offers some interesting opportunities that others don't. They both did some serious damage to each other, but by the end of Episode 8, they seemed to make up at least somewhat. So, what if after that they decided that they wanted to make friends, but in order to do so, they had to sit down and really talk out what went wrong and how they are going to change things to avoid a repetition? That would be uncommon for a teen show, but appears sometimes in fanfic, and offers lots of potential for personal growth as well as drama.
Wednesday/Xavier is one of the leading ships in this fandom. The ship name is "Wavier" but it doesn't have its own page yet, trailing far behind Wenclair and somewhat behind Wyler. If this really floats your boat, maybe you could make one. Canon supplies plenty to build on, despite the complications. Both Wednesday and Xavier are creative people, even though they prefer different expressions (writing and music vs art). Mutual live-saving can also create a very strong bond. Sometimes, learning from mistakes can draw people closer together. Alternatively, Wednesday and Xavier could decide that they work better as platonic friends than as romantic partners.
10 Most Popular Wednesday Ships
15 Top Signs A Guy Is Jealous And Likes You
22 Early Warning Signs of a Bad Boyfriend You Need to Leave ASAP
23 Early Signs of a Possessive Man & the Best Ways to Fix It ASAP
28 Signs of a Bad Girlfriend & How to Spot a Girl Who’s Bad For You
Betrayal: The Feeling of Being Broken ... and the Recovery
Can you be in a relationship with someone like Wednesday Addams?
Dealing with Betrayal
Dealing with Trust Issues: Weighing the Ethics of Spying on Your Partner
Do Wednesday and Xavier end up together in Wednesday on Netflix?
Does anyone hate others looking in their sketchbook without permission
Forget Tyler, Wednesday Fans Should Be Calling Out Xavier
How To Write Saucy Betrayals
How to Be Just Friends With a Guy When He Wants More
How to Restore Trust in a Relationship After Snooping:7 Ways
Men aren’t entitled to women's time or affection. But it's a hard lesson to learn
Relational Transgression
Sketchbook Etiquette
Unhealthy Relationship Behaviors Series: Jealousy
'Wednesday' Proves Love Triangles Have to Go -- The Everygirl
Wednesday Season 2 Can Explore Xavier's Family History (Now He's Not Suspect)
Wednesday Wasted Its Male Protagonists, And That's a Problem
Wednesday: Xavier Thorpe Hints At How The Addams Family Gained Wealth
Wednesday’s Lackluster Love Interests Have Fans Clamoring for Alternatives
WHAT CREATURE IS XAVIER IN WEDNESDAY? POWERS AND ABILITIES EXPLAINED
"What Women Owe Men:" Kate Manne Talks Male Entitlement, Women’s Electability Problem, and How to Feel About Kamala Harris
Who Is Wednesday Addams in Love With? -- CBR
Who Texted Wednesday? We Think It's This Missing Character
Why do guys get jealous even if they are not your boyfriend?
Why the Love Triangle Doesn't Work in Netflix's 'Wednesday'
Will Wednesday and Xavier be able to move on from that disastrous Nevermore semester?
Xavier, and why I think people are being unfairly critical of him