The lack of logic is a distraction At the end of the episode, it turns out you were looking at a video game all along. Nothing actually happened.
So that's why it's fine that so many things happened that didn't make any sense at all.
And then one last thing happens just before the end credits that doesn't make sense now that we've established nothing you saw in the episode actually happened.
But, before you know it's not real, you think you're watching an actual story. And within this story, so many things don't add up. So much, that I was simply nothing more than distracted while watching it.
A woman running into Dylan McDermott, but he's actually in the house and everything from the fictional tv series really happened to him. And apart from the woman saying a few vague words about recognizing him, she quickly drops that to have a normal talk with him.
She gets killed. She doesn't see her son again until next Halloween when her ghost can roam the Earth. Her son sees her - not just his mother, but an actual ghost! - and he immediately starts whining about what she did with her life.
Sure, here's the ghost of your dead mother, and you pick up your teenager argument that you left where it was a year ago.
The Murder House apparently is exactly the same on the inside as it is on tv. It wasn't a set in a studio at all.
And there's more. So much doesn't make sense. Is that the only thing? No. The dialogue is awful, written like a bad soap opera. There are two character for who you're supposed to feel bad. But they're awful people. Sociopaths.
The musical background score doesn't fit, like I felt was the case with all episodes in this series.
It's not all bad. The actors aren't complete amateurs. The cinematography, set design, sound. The usual stuff. The people from those departments did a good job.
It's the writing that ruined everything. I probably won't watch anything from the next season, and intend to skip the next regular American Horror Story as well (which had an unbelievably bad previous season).