ahead of the show's season finale tonight, kim renfro is with us. rtainment reporter for "insider" and author of "the unofficial guide to the game of thrones." thanks so much for being with us. kim: thank you for having me. geoff: so the series has had women directors, cinematograprs, female writers. we should mention, though, that the top line job titles, creator and showrunner, belong entirely to men. still, though, women are overrepresented behind the scenes as compared to "game of thrones." how does it stack up? and from a creative perspective, why does it matter? kim: absolutely. i think what matters the most in this case is that "house of the dragon" is an entirely different story that the showrunners needed to adapt from author george r.r. martin's writing. so with "game of thrones," they were pulling from these very long, very detailed point of view, character-driven novels. and with "fire and blood," which is the book upon which "house of the dragon" is based, an entire book was written by martin as a sort of fictional history, and that fict