“It was amazing!”

“I really loved the idea of the Battle of the Bastards.

And I was loving the idea of Jon killing Ramsay.

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Credit: Helen Sloan/HBO

But then I was like, no, Sansa needs her first kill and it has to be Ramsay.

No one else but her.

And when he basically says, He’s yours.'

I’m like, Yes!'

She leaves him for dead, walks away doesn’t even watch him die.

“Definitely,” she says.

“It shows when she sees him in this scene.

With Joffrey it was different.

He was a little boy and he was so angry at her all the time.

He just gets under her skin, and he violated her in such a terrible way.

He’s imprinted on her, mentally and physically.

She can never get that part of her back again.”

“Jon doesn’t listen to her,” Turner notes.

“She can actually formulate a plan behind his back and they need it.

So she does save the day.

But she doesn’t really gets her thanks.

Her reward is killing Ramsay.”

Separately, Sapochnik also weighed in onstaging Ramsay’s final scenes.