What a sincere, beautiful episode. I think it may be my favorite of the entire series so far.
I loved the ending with one exception:
I wish Rachel had had the strength to actually leave Shane.
Officially five seasons in and still not an episode has gone by without making me tear up. I love this show—despite its corniness and contrived plot lines—for its focus on love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, faithfulness, grace, and friendship. :asterisk_symbol:A Million Little Things:asterisk_symbol: is the only show I know of that constantly reminds me how I want to live this life.
I laughed more this episode than in all of the previous episodes of this season combined. This felt like classic Curb.
This is what sci-fi is all about.
Oof. I’ve lost people very close to me (my best friend after seventeen years of best-friendship, for example), but never have I experienced loss due to cancer. My best friend died instantly in a freak accident. That’s just so very different from Gary’s long, slow battle. Anyway, I’m rambling. My point is that I’ve not experienced closely knowing someone dying of cancer, so seeing Gary’s face in this episode really hit me hard—like it probably would in real life. Oof.
I’m going to miss this found family.
This might be my favorite episode of this entire show so far??
Larry David has looked like an old man for decades.
Gosh, this episode was beautiful.
It’s always strawberries. From Shakespeare to Firefly to The Last of Us.
Good ol’ Neil Flynn. He’ll always be The Janitor from Scrubs to me.
The second episode without a theme song. :(
In this episode, Kelso claims to be the only one to never have seen Donna’s boobs. This isn’t true, however. In a previous episode, the whole gang went skinny dipping, had their clothes stolen, and sat naked in Eric’s car together.
A wild Larry David appears!
Wow. I almost forgot how amazing this show can be. What a beautiful, hilarious, deep episode.
Perhaps the best forty-five minutes of :asterisk_symbol:Star Wars:asterisk_symbol: I’ve ever experienced.
I hadn’t watched any of this final season of Better Call Saul yet as of this morning. But I just now accidentally started and finished what I thought was the season premiere and didn’t realize was actually episode six. Well, crap.
It’s a testament to the show and its creators that I had enough confidence in it and them to not feel incredibly lost and confused. I was totally along for the ride. Hahaha. Well, I guess it’s time for episode one.
No theme song on this one.
I love how they used Dean Cain’s character to display that even those who appear to be the “most vile” humans are actually still people and are more complex than our initial judgements give them credit for. I also love how the “ideal people” in the view of Emma Stone’s character always end up being the ones to let her down, as if to suggest that her image of an ideal person doesn’t exist and that life isn’t so black and white.
The theme song is back!
The first episode without a theme song? I miss it.
I’m ten minutes into this episode, and several things are making me feel like I accidentally skipped the one prior. But I didn’t. There are a few plot points (like Charlie being in the US and Regina working with some random political lady to distribute free food) that seem to have never been introduced or explained before. I’m quite confused.
This was the first episode of the entire series to not make me tear up. The product placement was cringey, and there just wasn’t much going on.
He’s here. He’s there. He’s every-fucking-where. Roy Kent!
That was so much fun. Wow.
Anyone else notice the cranked ISO and overexposed shots? What’s up with that?