What an amazing final episode. What a tribute to a series that has rearranged our concepts of masculinity, femininity, violence, sexuality, and the ways in which television can and should depict all of these things. And what a tribute to the fallen. But, really, let’s just skip all that for a moment and go straight to the really big holy crap moment of the evening, shall we?
The gays lived.
The gays lived! Seriously, when do the gays ever live? I’m pretty sure they killed all the gays at the end of Will and Grace, that’s how rarely do the gays live. But our two fan favorites, Agron and Nasir, lived to walk off into the sunset (well, sunrise) together.
Wow.
Of course, not very many other people lived, but we’ll get to that.
The series finale opened as this series finale should: to the sounds of battle.
The gays lived.
The gays lived! Seriously, when do the gays ever live? I’m pretty sure they killed all the gays at the end of Will and Grace, that’s how rarely do the gays live. But our two fan favorites, Agron and Nasir, lived to walk off into the sunset (well, sunrise) together.
Wow.
Of course, not very many other people lived, but we’ll get to that.
The series finale opened as this series finale should: to the sounds of battle.
- 4/13/2013
- by mgmc
- The Backlot
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