![]() ![]() ![]() On Monday's episode, we also learn that Johnny's grandmother used to touch him in the bathtub. ![]() Stephen King, who authored the book 11.22.63, uses the clothespin theory to account for the psychosis of serial killer Ted Bundy.) Unfortunately for Johnny, the harsh punishment evidently turned into a fetish. (In the 1940s and '50s, it was apparently fairly commonplace for mothers to put clothespins on their sons' penises in order to discourage masturbation. In case you missed the passing reference in Episode 4, Sadie ( Sarah Gadon) tells Jake ( James Franco) that Johnny keeps a clothespin clipped to his penis to this day. Where it all came from, in Johnny's case, is physical and sexual abuse dating back to when he was a child. I think you've got to dig a lot deeper than that, and figure out where it all came from." hero kind of thing, I think that kind of black-and-white thinking, at least in my brain, is unhelpful. "I think he's a total tragedy," Knight tells. Knight) finally got what was coming to him on this week's episode of Hulu's 11.22.63 - or did he? According to Knight, the character was as much a victim as he is a sadistic villain. ![]()
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