Well, that didn't last long.
Kind of defeats the purpose of leaving it ambigious!
Kind of defeats the purpose of leaving it ambigious!

So, Good Girls is over, Ozark is over, and pretty soon Better Call Saul will be over. Any suggestions of other shows where middle class Americans do crime because I'm going to need a new fix soon!
I liked the ending overall (though I thought the final scene was a little too "Sopranosey").
One question, however. Maybe I missed something or read a little too much into this but:
With Ruth dead, isn't the Byrd's scheme about to fall apart and isn't the family going to be stuck there? Both the cartel and FBI seemed to be specifically banking on the idea that the casino would still be used to launder money (hence, the non-prosecution agreements for Ruth and Rachel). But with Ruth dead, the casino has neither an owner nor a licensee. Ruth was the majority owner and her only heir is "Three." He can't run it and, frankly, neither could Rachel (assuming she even still holds a sufficient interest). That means both the cartel and FBI are going to want Marty back in charge, right?
Give Justified a try if you haven't watched it. There's good guys to root for, but Walton Goggins as Boyd Crowder just about steals the show every season. Some of the best writing on any show I have ever watched.
Yup, that pretty much hits it right there. Makes the whole series kind of...eh. Doesn't take away from the great story arc for Ruth but the rest, I just don't care anymore.It would have been easier to stomach Ruth dying if the ending weren't just "The Byrds win, all the evil people get what they want, everyone likable is dead." I guess they were going for a realpolitik response to the more storybook way Breaking Bad ended. But the "Bad guys win in reality" statement they made just felt derivative.
I like that theory in the abstract but I'm pretty sure that isn't what the producers intended.Finished it last night. Hoo-Boy, that ending though!
Ultimately found it unsatisfying, and for numerous reasons. I found it ridiculous how easily they kept getting away with things, to the point that it felt rather cartoonish. You can't have things go their way all the time. It just became rather grating.
One thing that really bothers me in the crash. It's one thing to have it amount to nothing, but they kept playing it off as a major development, way back in the first episode of the season by rewinding to serve the season as events leading up to it. To viewers, that serves to show that it might be rather significant. So then it happens and they bounce right back... as if it never happened. uhh.. ok.
I would have ended right at the crash. Give them a few happy moments together, have the crash happen then cut.
I have an alternate theory to the events. Everything after the crash is a creation of Wendy's dilusional mind to grasp hold of the lie. Her conversation with the priest then makes more sense. The priest serves more as symbolism telling her mind she hasn't gotten away. Also, when they're back home, the windows are all broken, which I see as her reality being shattered. Jonah? Well, she always desperately wanted him to be part of the family business.
like that theory in the abstract but I'm pretty sure that isn't what the producers intended.
I like your theory a lot, Owain. Even if it wasn't what the producers intended, I think it makes much more sense than what we actually got.
Ultimately I was disappointed that Wendy didn’t get her comeuppance. She was an awful, awful person.
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