Talk:Seddie/@comment-4284446-20111122010840/@comment-3247345-20111122065749

I don't think Sam liked Freddie at that point. I'd set iKiss as the earliest time she started liking him. I don't think it's a Seddie moment. I went back and looked and I noticed she did a have a sad look on her face, but she made the sad face first, and then looked at Freddie. While I don't think it's a Seddie moment, I do think it's a very important moment in Sam's character developement. I think the sad face was meant to show that she felt unloved in general. She really doesn't have anyone to rely on besides Carly, Spencer, and later, Freddie. As far as any form of love goes, she's been screwed over since before iPilot. Her dad walked out on her, the whole thing with the boyfriend in 5th grade didn't work out, Jonah used her to get to Carly, Pete only liked her when she dressed girly, and she didn't think her mother loved her until the end of iSam's Mom. Carly annoys me in that scene. She's acting like she has empathy for Gibby, when she doesn't know the first thing about what being unloved is like. She gets everything she needs and wants Rember iLook Alike? She threw a fit when Spencer didn't give her what she wanted. She's clearly used to getting what she wants when she wants it. She has the world's best guardian, she can get pretty much any boy she wants, she's the star of her own webshow, and she has an $82,000 room. Sam, on the other hand, knows the true meaning of pain. She's gone through more in her life than most people go through in a lifetime. Everyone seems to use her or walk out on her. The only reason she's not starving is because she can eat at Carly's. When Carly says that, she's seems completely oblivious to what Sam's gone through when she makes that comment about Gibby. Then of course they make reference to Freddie's creepy crush he had on Carly by Carly saying "sorry". Obviously that was meant for laughs (something Creddie shippers don't seem to get). What's more important is that sad face Sam made very briefly. While I don't think that was a Seddie moment, it was very important as far as getting the audience to know Sam better.