![]() ![]() Those shows were announced as final seasons, and got the send-offs they wanted with their final episodes. Even now, months after the finale, we’re debating whether it should be called a “season finale” or “series finale.” Among this season’s major Emmy nominees, we definitely know that “Better Call Saul,” “Succession,” “Barry” and “The Marvelous Mrs. ![]() That pretty much confirmed something the stars and even Sudeikis had been saying for the past year: That this was a three-season tale they were telling, and that story had reached its conclusion.īut the parsing of words - that “Ted Lasso” didn’t necessarily end, only this particular “story” did - kept us all guessing. That Season 3 finale was titled “So Long, Farewell,” and it sure seemed to wrap up the series’ story. No hard feelings.)īut here we are, nearly a year later… and we still don’t have a firm answer on the fate of “Ted Lasso.” I mean, we sort of do. As others from the show chuckled to me later, “That was… fun?” (I noticeably haven’t been asked to moderate a “Ted Lasso” panel since then. And I’ve come to realize that perhaps the star wasn’t so thrilled with me hogging the mic, trying to get an answer that he wasn’t ready to give. It was a lively back-and-forth, but there was no actual confirmation either way. But hey, why not try?) Soon, it became a bit of a game, as we were in a “Who’s on First”/Abbott and Costello-style dance. ![]() (I know, suddenly I’m pretending to be Woodward and Bernstein backstage at the Emmys. Perhaps too many times, in too many different ways. Sudeikis danced around an answer, which is why I kept asking the question. After they filed into the room and talked about the win, I got my turn at the mic. ![]()
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