Anonymous wrote:Things I could have done without:
Beard getting off the plane - why couldn't they have just shown Beard and Ted having a heart to heart where Beard says he's staying?
Nate - the entire season
While I loved the show, and loved the ending, I think this season they tried to jam in too much and added so many more storylines of the secondary characters so it all got diluted. I would have preferred more Sam, more Beard, more Rebecca. Less Nate, less Colin and less Keely and her love life.
Anonymous wrote:Really the worst storyline this season was Zava. Why was that even necessary??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One thing that always amazed me is how these actual soccer players were also really good actors.
I didn’t know they were actual soccer players! I just assumed they used extras for the game scenes!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One thing that always amazed me is how these actual soccer players were also really good actors.
I didn’t know they were actual soccer players! I just assumed they used extras for the game scenes!
Anonymous wrote:One thing that always amazed me is how these actual soccer players were also really good actors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really the worst storyline this season was Zava. Why was that even necessary??
It made sense thematically, as the show spent quite bit of time looking at power imbalances in relationships this season— the Zava episodes were heavy on Nate/Rupert, Keeley/Jack, and Michelle’s choice to start dating her and Ted’s former marriage therapist. All relationships where one person has significantly more power and can be considered to be exploiting it. Zava’s presence on the team represented a different kind of power imbalances, where there is one superstar and a host of acolytes, and how that, too, is destabilizing.
But then Nate quits Rupert’s team, Keeley stands up to Jack pressuring her to apologize, and it appears Michelle may be beginning to sour on the therapist. And Zava leaves the team, plus Ted invents/discovers “Total Football,” a style of play that is anti-superstar and celebrates the equality and interconnectedness of the entire team, a truly Lassoan approach.
All of which I loved, but seemed to be kind of dropped as a theme in the last couple episodes, and certainly isn’t emphasized in the finale. I think that’s part of what gave this Season such a disjointed feel, the lack of thematic throughline. That’s why now you look back and think “why’d we spend so much time on Zava and Jack?” It made sense in context, but the show didn’t make sure those themes echoed consistently through the season so it fails to hold together.
Anonymous wrote:I really enjoyed this season and the finale. And I’m still reading through everyone’s comments on the finale. I know there was a lot of inferred storyline with Ted telling Rebecca that he was leaving that we didn’t see in episode But I still don’t get why Beard had to leave with Ted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this season is so good so far. Every episode is a delight from start to finish.
+1 loved it
So many callbacks to season 1 - I think if you watch it in that context, it all makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:Really the worst storyline this season was Zava. Why was that even necessary??