colourfulsevens
colourfulsevens
colourfulsevens

If I’d read this immediately I finished watching the last episode I might have agreed with you, but with some reflection I’ve come to the conclusion that this stopped being that kind of show after season 4. Killing him would have undermined the ethos of the story.

In the end, BoJack Horseman has revealed itself to be

“She did not burn all of their troops who were just actively fighting against her because surrendered and bent the knee to her.”

I think this is the crucial point. She’s happy to spare her opponents, save innocents, and liberate slaves so long as the soldiers bow to her rule, the innocents know she saved them, and the

I feel like this episode proved the theory I posed last week, that having the entire Sanchez-Smith family involved in both the A and B plots allows the show to take necessary, sometimes profound, breaths. Taking Morty and Summer out of Rick’s hands and placing them in the B plot finally let us see where Beth stands

I’ve had similar feelings about this season and it’s helped me realise why I like the first two seasons as much as I do.

Simply put, there’s been a serious lack of Beth, Summer and Jerry this season, and I think it’s resulted in the show not being as grounded in a sense of “reality” like before. As much as the show has