CowtownAg06 said:
Added another unrealistic thing:
Is Jamie smart or dumb? They go back and forth him pretty severely.
Jamie is smart but had everything handed to him and he didn't have to think.
He falls back into old patterns at times.
CowtownAg06 said:
Added another unrealistic thing:
Is Jamie smart or dumb? They go back and forth him pretty severely.
HollywoodBQ said:
Now that the Keeley / Jack relationship appears to have run its course, I'll say that I'm glad it's over and the ending was not really a surprise.
When I lived in Australia, I wound up coaching women's softball for several years. I'm Puerto Rican so I love beisbol but I can only deal with so much drama. Women in their 30s and older who wind up experimenting in Lesbianism usually create so much drama that they ruin the entire team. I could deal with coaching under 10 girls, even girls aged 13-18 (which was pretty difficult). After a few years of coaching the Over 35 Women, I had to call it quits because I just couldn't deal with the fallout from the lesbian relationships.
But what's funny is, softball wasn't nearly as bad as O35 women's soccer. By this age, there were a fair number of women who were open to experimenting and there were also a few women who there's not other way to say it but to say that they were recruiting.
My wife wound up playing on a soccer team with several couples and a few new recruits among them. Several of the women were married with boys aged between 7-15 or so. It was almost like a stereotype.
There was one lady who came on really hard to my wife. She was 6 feet tall and gorgeous but she was only interested in speaking to me as a gateway to get to my wife. It was really strange.
I watched several of these relationships come and go and almost every one of them wound up in a death spiral with nuclear fallout. The only one that really lasted were two women about 55 years old. There were plenty of explosions between those two - frequently on the field, sometimes during a game.
So, when Jack acted controlling and chastised Keely about the pix, that relationship was over.
Zombie Jon Snow said:
Interesting side note I just found out - not a spoiler. And I had no clue.
This episode was written by Keeley Hazell who plays Rupert's 2nd wife Bex.
Keeley was a page 3 model and actress who has had a sex tape leaked publicly. So it is obviously very personal to her.
She also used to date Jason Sudeikis for about a year during I think the first season of Ted Lasso. they had met back on Horrible Bosses 2 in which she had a role. And Jason apparently had a crush on her for a long time (back before Olivia Wilde). they dated just after Olivia Wilde and Jason broke up but it was said to be "not serious".
Anyway I think the tie-ins there are interesting. Obviously Keeley Hazell was the inspiration for Keeley Jones. And now it has come full circle as Keeley Hazell's life is directly reflected in this last episode. It doesn't make it any better though, but maybe it's why it is being told.
Forgot to mention she is writing a memoir as well called "Everyone's Seen My Tits."
you didn't imagine it...i couldn't tell for sure, but i just assumed they were the same matches from Sam's restaurantjrrhouston98 said:
Did anyone else notice the green matches Ted had in his hand in the bar at the beginning of the episode? In the bar with the ex and the therapist just before they get their food.
Or did I imagine this?
DrZ said:
My first thought was Jack was behind the photo leak. May still be.
DrZ said:
Granted Its a stretch. She had her fun. Wanted a way out and a reason to fire her. Maybe not.
Agreed. I did like the Ted interaction though during the diamond dogs meetingAverage Joe said:
Keeley and Roy were both better characters when they were together. Now we get way too much Keeley in a boring relationship and not enough Roy at all.
Bill Lawrence shows have not tended to have overly smarmy endings., though I mainly am referencing Scrubs. He will give characters happy endings, but it would be more likely to be something like the wife and the therapist breaking up, Ted and her having a good relationship as parents but not getting remarried...and Ted being ok with that.deadbq03 said:Been thinking about this and yes, to some extent I agree.Complete Idiot said:
The show is completely saccharine so all happy endings that can be imagined will probably happen.
But I'd offer that the show is uncomfortably aspirationally saccharine. It paints an optimistic picture of what humanity ought to be like, yet makes us confront the cynicism in our own hearts that perhaps doesn't really want things to be that good.
Take Ted for example. The ex-wife and Nate storylines bother us. Why doesn't he fight back? We would fight back! And yet if the shoe were on the other foot, we would absolutely want a Ted on the other side who forgives us unconditionally. It's an internal conflict we all struggle with - we frequently treat others the exact opposite of the way we'd like to be treated.
So I predict, that yes, the show will have a "happy" ending - and probably in an overly contrived and fake way… but I think that's the point, because it will leave us with a bit of lament that the world doesn't actually work this way.
And now that I'm done preaching, I'll state that I totally hope they end it in a Sandlot style recap of what happens to everyone.
Since they cannot score it would be appropriate!Chuck Cunningham said:
Nate is going to replace Ted at Richmond.
Ted goes back to Kansas to coach Sporting KC.
Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus. It applies to straight and gay couples.Kampfers said:HollywoodBQ said:
Now that the Keeley / Jack relationship appears to have run its course, I'll say that I'm glad it's over and the ending was not really a surprise.
When I lived in Australia, I wound up coaching women's softball for several years. I'm Puerto Rican so I love beisbol but I can only deal with so much drama. Women in their 30s and older who wind up experimenting in Lesbianism usually create so much drama that they ruin the entire team. I could deal with coaching under 10 girls, even girls aged 13-18 (which was pretty difficult). After a few years of coaching the Over 35 Women, I had to call it quits because I just couldn't deal with the fallout from the lesbian relationships.
But what's funny is, softball wasn't nearly as bad as O35 women's soccer. By this age, there were a fair number of women who were open to experimenting and there were also a few women who there's not other way to say it but to say that they were recruiting.
My wife wound up playing on a soccer team with several couples and a few new recruits among them. Several of the women were married with boys aged between 7-15 or so. It was almost like a stereotype.
There was one lady who came on really hard to my wife. She was 6 feet tall and gorgeous but she was only interested in speaking to me as a gateway to get to my wife. It was really strange.
I watched several of these relationships come and go and almost every one of them wound up in a death spiral with nuclear fallout. The only one that really lasted were two women about 55 years old. There were plenty of explosions between those two - frequently on the field, sometimes during a game.
So, when Jack acted controlling and chastised Keely about the pix, that relationship was over.
Lmao wtf is this ***** Lesbians and bi women aren't from some different plane of existence or something, they are normal human beings just like everyone else. Some are going to handle relationships better than others, just like straight people. Do you know how many horny ass straight men and women act exactly like the lesbian women you described in your post? Who put getting laid over maintaining their interpersonal relationships at work/community groups/church/whatever? A whole lot, but it apparently doesn't cross your mind because that's "normal". Lesbians and bi women are "normal" too - and surprise! - they act like other normal people.
Jack was controlling and ultimately cared more about how Keeley made her look than about how Keeley felt. She showed some red flags (like love bombing) that Keeley ignored because it felt good in the moment.
Jack could have been a man and that story plays out in the exact same fashion. You don't think Keeley breaks up with Roy had they still been dating and he reacted in the same way Jack did? That was a cold and unempathetic reaction - any significant other that acts like that is getting dropped like a bad habit. But apparently because they are lesbians they are fundamentally incapable of having a stable relationship. This board can't see the forest for the trees sometimes.
But then what would texags complain about (other than our football program) if there wasn't some sort of culture war boogeyman threatening to upend their lives.
Also generally a whole lot of bi erasure in this thread but I'm not surprised on that front. "Omg Keeley is a lesbian now" - did she stop liking men or something?
Average Joe said:
After thinking about it, I think my biggest issue is that Keeley is now so far separated from the club, outside of attending a match every few episodes, that it doesn't even feel like she's in the same show anymore. I would care a lot more about her relationship with Jack if it involved anyone or anything central to the plot of the entire series other than just Keeley.
I think it would have been much better to just have Roy and Keeley struggle and work past them both being busy with the club and the PR firm.
He wouldn't have said anything if it didn't mean something. Or just would said "I've got some lint and a matchbook" or "no change". He specifically mentioned the matchbook and its color.Capstone said:
I noticed this, too - when Ted emptied his pockets trying to find change for Henry to play the pinball machine.
Not sure if it's a red herring (likely) or if there is going to be a deeper meaning later.
Quote:
As it's racked up viewers and accolades, a charming workplace sitcom has transformed into a bloated prestige drama.
WAY too much Keeley...seems like they wasted a lot of time on a storyline that's not going to have much payoff...even if she ends up back with Jamie or Roy.AggieArcher17 said:
A couple funny moments, but overall probably my least favorite episode of the series.
I think they could make it work with both of them.Harry Stone said:
Jamie and Roy make the show. They need a spinoff with just those two.
I was really hoping they'd focus more on Keeley dealing with the challenges of being the boss, learning from Rebecca, and moving her toward something bigger...like being a leader at one of the other football teams. While they've done some of that, I think they've chosen more to create massive drama with her personal life, which to me cheapens her character and makes her seem weaker. There's still the opportunity to give her a better arc, but I think it's become drama for the sake of drama and takes away from what makes the show great.Average Joe said:
I think it would have been much better to just have Roy and Keeley struggle and work past them both being busy with the club and the PR firm.
Do not worry, zero percent chance that happens. The reason for McAdoo's gruff face reaction (maybe he has no other?) will be revealed as disappointment Collin wasn't already being his true self and not trusting his teammates to be open about it. Which is a valid reaction as far as trusting teammates, but also a rather simplistic way for an outsider to look at Collin's very personal situation.HtownAg92 said:
Rebecca was also great dissing on Paris.
I hope that they do not make Collin's outing into some huge negative gay-bashing scene because it wouldn't be realistic in 2023. Teams have gay guys come out all the time. It's old hat now. I hope it is the Captain gathering his team and collectively embracing Collin's orientation because he is family and that's all that matters.