DP. That’s because they assumed the audience was smart enough not to need a literal play-by-play.
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Oh my goodness. I feel exactly the opposite. I loved the opening scene where we’re supposed to think Rebecca and Ted slept together (wait, what?!?), only to have it turn hilarious with the revelation that there was merely a sleepover at Rebecca’s, Beard in a thong, etc. and then things proceed from there. I would have been so bored if every detail had been spelled out. |
NP. There’s an obvious difference between “smart enough to understand the story” and “input on what would have made the story better from my standpoint as a viewer.” The writers made some unusual and slightly baffling choices this season, and it’s possible to enjoy the show/finale and still question some of those decisions. |
Google Rolling Stone and Ted Lasso finale- they have take on season 3 that tracks what you say above |
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I loved the finale. I'm really glad Roy is the new head coach, I love him.
In my imagination Roy ends up with Keely and continues to try to change for the better including only using really bad language like the F word and the C word around adults. |
Yes, we went to a Man City game at Etihad and part of the ticket deal is that you have to agree not to wear colors of the opposing team. |
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Alcohol is also not allowed at your seats during Premier League games. Yes, there are reasons (tragedies) for this.
Do you think all the paid US youth travel soccer coaches are out there thinking, wow, I should be more like Ted Lasso? |
| Sometimes there was enough information to know what happened without seeing it. (Nate officially quit off scene—but he unofficially quit at that bar). But sometime there wasn’t. I still have no idea why Roy broke up with Keely. He didn’t think he deserved her? She worked too much? There was some weirdness in season 2? He flirted with the teacher? He couldn’t express himself? He hates himself? I can’t root for them to get back together if I don’t understand what happened. At least we know why Keely broke up with Jamie and can see that Jamie is no longer that person. |
lol. It’s not about smarts. It’s about enjoying the growth, the experience, the development along the way. Would you have valued it more if Nate had just told someone random Aw Jamie put in extra money this time and a few years ago he just chucked in his gum! Nope. Seeing it and enjoying it as a part of the show is part of why you watch it. The show really suffered without bill Lawrence who knew that the big emotional payout needs to be seen to be…. BELIEVED. That said I loved it all and will miss it! Even with its flaws. |
Heck yes!!! Sooooooo many missed opportunities to invite us in on these big plot twists- Roy and Keelah break up, Nate’s firing, being invited back to the club, sooooo much more. They blew it! And yes I still absolutely loved it. Both things can be true!! It’s not a game of thrones scorched earth scenario. It was still amaze. |
| I hated the bit with the opposing West Ham coach and his crotch shot when Rupert pushed him down. What a crass joke in the midst of real dramatic tension. |
This. I'm the PP above who was told I needed too much handholding. It's not that I need everything explained, it's that I had invested years in these characters and wanted to actually see them experience these things, not just hear about it later. It's a testament to the characters and the show that I was invested enough to be disappointed about all the stuff they randomly decided to have happen off screen this season. I'll never quite understand the time devoted to Jack, specifically. Just a whole character and relationship they decided to devote significant screen time to over multiple episodes, only to get rid of quickly and have her barely referenced again, much less playing a role in the way the Keeley's storyline wrapped up. She was 100% a plot device. I would have loved to simply find out via exposition that Keely's investor had pulled funding inexplicably and she was devastated, and then still get the stuff with her restarting up with funding from Rebecca and working with Barbara, which are the aspects of that story that were funny and interesting. And then there would have been time to maybe show Ted in therapy a bit, or show Ted and Beard discussing Ted wanting to go home or feeling conflicted about it. |
That whole sequence was tonally really weird. I think part of what they were doing there was trying to show that Rupert is still Rupert, but also to show that to some degree he's playing a role that is a response to how others view him and expect him to act. They definitely made an effort to create some empathy for him as the crowd starts changing "wanker" at him -- they cut to Ted and Rebecca both looking uncomfortable and probably recognizing how hard that would feel. But then with the joke about the coach's junk hanging out of his shorts and quickly returning to play, they didn't quite pull it off. I feel like they were trying to flesh out Rupert's character all season in this way, showing him sometimes being kind to Rebecca, or helping Nate find some confidence. But obviously he is also shown doing terrible things to both of them, and others. I think it was an interesting idea but not quite fully executed, which is how I feel about a bunch of stuff on the show this season. It's like they needed a few more episodes, honestly. |
| Given how weird the finale was getting, I was so afraid when Ted pulled that snow globe out of the bag, we were going to get a St. Elsewhere ending. Even before the present was opened, I had been thinking, “boy, I hope we don’t find out that this was all happening on a snow globe” |
The crotch shot was a callback to the first episode when Rebecca fired him. |