Season finale tonight, thoughts?
Haven't finished it yet, but the feel is different from the other episodes, I think it's because they cut out most of the background on the audio. 
Edit: Finished it now. 
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First off, I'd like some kind of discussion with whoever's up for it on the symbology of Gene as God (if that's even the right metaphor/connection/allusion) and the whole thing with the Lord trying to shut him down and that whole Braveheart moment with the coppers. It felt like an allusion to something else, but my sleep-starved brain can't connect it to anything, so I'm going to wake up in the (EST) morning and rewatch it. 
The her dad as the killer thing wasn't entirely surprising, we didn't see him a lot and it only really made sense for the clown to be somehow intimately connected to the case. I wonder if he shows up next season. And what else she needs to learn. 
Ok, my brain's near dead, so I'll just 
link to the Guardian review and return in the morning. 
Edit the second: I reserve the right to say this was all some sort of mental trip brought on by lack of sleep and fatigue, and beg you all to never mention it again. 
 Thinking about it, Hunt actually seems a lot more like an Angel of Death to me, but letting her come to terms with her reality so she can find peace in death. I think in those terms we could see the Lord coming in was him wanting to wrap up the amount of energy being spent on this one dead soul, and Gene reasserting his authority (Authority?) in his guiding her to final rest (if that's where this is headed). Her mother issue is resolved, now it seems the issue to be resolved in season two is probably going to be letting go of her daughter/coming to terms with her powerlessness. Maybe the 'Genie' nickname for Hunt is a clue for the Gene Hunt as Guardian Protector of the Dead, along with the whole "I'm everywhere Bolly, I was needed and I was there" bit. If that's what the writers are going at, then Tyler's suicide is simply the result of him no longer having anything to resolve. All he needed he had in coma/death, but not in reality. 
The Clown symbology with her father works like this — The Clown/Father as the sad, broken man putting on a literal different face to cover his emotions. Plus they're scary. 
I'd argue the need for the more primitive system of policing that Gene embodies as opposed to the Stats/Rights/Rules-driven modern policing is a metaphor for going back to some sort of primal self to be at peace/just (echoed in that nice little bit with Gene rejecting the wine for the beer)
Anyone have any ideas on the using of the ceiling? 
Hopefully I won't be too embarrassed by this come morning.