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Captain's Log

TV Thursday, 4/30/26: Season Finale Season

I should've saved "season finale season" for the excerpt

In two days, five of the shows on the Captain’s… manifest, I guess? had season finales. With so many shows coming to an end, I decided to take a quick look at those five season finales and which ones worked better than others.

The best

Matlock Season Two

The final two episodes felt a bit rushed, but the flipside of that is that our heroes are now suddenly under time pressure, so our characters should at least feel rushed. Madeline, Olympia, and Julian are close to putting together the paper trail that could finally implicate Senior and anyone else involved in the coverup… but they have to do it soon, because if they don’t do it before the Lamar & Olson merger (and Senior’s retirement), the new firm takes on the legal liability and Senior skates free. There are a few fun twists and turns in this, and a couple of moments of great tension (perhaps not coincidentally, in two different one-on-one meetings where one party learns something about the other that puts the first in grave danger).

A few of the side stories and characters were maybe a little glossed over, and the cases of the week continue to not be the most compelling parts of the show, and most of the final ten minutes had the air of the writers saying “Hey, this will be what season 3 looks like now that we’ve wrapped the Wellbrexa story!” But, they did wrap it and satisfyingly enough so, rather than dragging on the story past the point it could reasonably keep going, and they’ve got plenty of time to break out what season 3 will look like (it’s not returning until 2026, in large part because Jennie Snyder Urman and the writing team asked for the extra time to break a season without Wellbrexa involved). So all in all, good enough to stand out as one of the best from the week.

Invincible Season Four

For a season that it occasionally seemed like wasn’t sure where it was going, or was content to go on diversions or even ignore large parts of its cast for nearly the entire season, the finale was arguably the season’s best episode. After a season with detours (Invincible visits hell at Damien Darkblood’s request) and what seemed like repetitive filler (the Flaxans are back yet again), we moved to the fight against the Viltrumites… which at least advanced the story and gave us some thrills, but also took us away from many of the most compelling characters back on Earth, and instead gave us the largely variety-free and personality-free Viltriumites, who are essentially “space Nazis who punch real hard.” (In other words, “What if the Nazis actually had the physical might to reasonably claim, or at least enforce, that they were in fact the master race?”)

But this episode finally tied the two parts of the story together, and in a way that focuses on what the show is at its best: the cost of being a superhero. Mark, still barely an adult, not only dealing with the aftershock of all the combat and brutality he’s seen, but also being thrust into responsibility for huge decisions, whether or not he wants to be (I remember there’s some popular line about power and responsibility from some other superhero comic about a teenager). And the conclusion was very satisfying in that regard, as well— a choice that is no choice, it is true, but also one where Mark was able to keep his more impulsive, immature side at bay. And what it sets up going forward is far more interesting than another series of epic battles where people punch each other in space. It was a rockier road than would have been ideal, but the finale pulled the season together about as well as could possibly be expected.

Fine

Going Dutch Season Two

No real surprises, and not the funniest episode of the show, but funny enough and reasonably satisfying. Of course Patrick would find a way to fend off the NATO takeover of Stroopsdorf. Of course Maggie and Shah would decide to give it a real shot. I will give them bonus points in that I didn’t see Papadakis’ awful haircut coming.

Abbott Elementary Season Five

The two episodes Abbott aired were mostly okay, but the apparent dramatic questions— will Janine and Gregory get back together, and will the school be closed?— lacked any real tension, because the answers were so obvious well in advance. On the bright side, the reason the school ends up staying open is not some heartwarming triumph but a matter of practicality (after investing so much in fixing the school furnace, the district doesn’t want to let that investment go to waste).

The worst

Animal Control Season Four

After a season of the rival precinct moving in, primarily represented by antagonist Templeton Dudge (and his sidekick Daisy), you’d expect our team to finally get the best of them and them to move back to more occasional, recurring villains. And if not, for them to grow enough to be integrated into the show, right? Wrong.

It’s no fault of Gerry Dee (or Kyla Pratt), but their characters are both so antagonistic to our protagonists, and Templeton in particular seems to have no redeeming qualities— Emily nailed it calling him crude and disrespectful (and that he’s openly been gunning for her job), and he’s a host of other things, dishonest among them. And he never seems to get any comeuppance for this. The increased presence of one-dimensional villains in a sitcom is only acceptable if they’re defeated in the end. Instead, Templeton still finds a way to win. He hasn’t grown or changed a bit, every seeming moment where he does so is faked on his part, and he’s awful and obnoxious, success or failure. And now he’s apparently going to be a significant part of season five, as well.

I feel like rule number one of a hangout sitcom is “don’t constantly feature a guy nobody at home wants to hang out with.”

And, aside, one can only drag out a simmering will-they-won’t-they for so long. It has only been 43 episodes— even Jim and Pam took 53 episodes before they got together— but when you air such short seasons (9-12 episodes each so far), and this particular will-they-won’t-they has been more on the backburner and occasionally hinted at rather than being the primary romcom-story focus, it feels like we might not get a real answer to this for five or six more years— long enough for the viewer to lose interest.1

(Also, while I was tempted to use a header image that gave, well, me something I’d rather look at, I couldn’t deny this was the funniest image I could find from the season 4 finale. It was also my last chance this year to use an Animal Control image, and I’ve used one for every other show I wrote about today except Abbott, which is popular enough that it doesn’t need the help— and, unlike Animal Control, returns in the fall, so it’s still not my last chance for 2026. And there’s your insider look at the behind-the-scenes process at the Captain’s Log.)

Other thoughts

With the TV calendar finally thinning out, we caught up on some streaming shows we’d fallen behind on; specifically, we finally blasted through the rest of How to Get to Heaven From Belfast. So we actually saw six season finales, but since this show came out all at once two and a half months ago, I didn’t include this finale in the above section. Anyway, I rather enjoyed this show, although it’s difficult to describe because it bounces between tones so much. It’s almost akin to The Chair Company in that a comedic creator / persona is thrust almost by accident into a conspiracy thriller.

In this case, it’s somewhat like the grown-up Derry Girls (Saoirse, Robyn, and Dara map pretty well onto Erin, Michelle, and Orla, although I don’t know who most carries Clare’s worrying) getting a mysterious email and then finding themselves in the middle of a faked death, a conspiracy of dangerous people, and a very strange psychological experiment… not to mention their own history with their “dead” friend Greta.

It often bounces between these tones rather than trying to integrate them all, even scene to scene: the farcical comedy of errors a la Derry Girls mixing with a more standard police investigation (mostly led by Liam of the Garda) and a conspiracy around Greta not really dying, what her true backstory is, and the people who are helping Greta and interested in covering all this up (most notably Bronagh Gallagher2‘s Booker, who is definitely dangerous and whose interactions with our lead trio drive most of the “thriller” part).

I don’t know how well it all came together, and that may be in part due to wanting to leave open questions for season 2, but was I not entertained throughout? I certainly was. The funny parts were funny, the thriller parts were tense (and occasionally also funny), and even if I am unsure how it all came together, my interest in finding out what happens next was strong enough to drive me to keep going. I had a good time.

Upcoming finales and debuts

Season Finales: DMV May 11 (series finale), Bob’s Burgers May 17 (just returned Sunday), Elsbeth (May 21)

Season Premieres: Rick and Morty season 9 May 24, The Four Seasons season 2 May 28, House of the Dragon season 3 “June.” I got late-breaking word that Ted Lasso is premiering season 4 on August 5, but that’s a ways away and a show I may want to write more specifically about its return than just a line item here.

Next week

Our own Bridgett Taylor has some thoughts on DTF St. Louis. I did not watch the show, so I do not have any opinion on what she has to say. I did read the column, however, and it was well-written. So, enjoy while I take another week off.

And remember, TV Thursday is always open to any writer who has something about TV that they want to write about. Inquire in the comments, or on Discord, or really, any place you know how to reach me.

What did you watch?

In particular, if you have thoughts on these or any other season or series finales, let’s hear ’em!

  1. If you don’t watch the show somehow but know the characters, I’m not talking about Emily and Shred, who finally did get together in the season 3 finale, but Frank and Victoria. The latter is probably more interesting because it doesn’t seem planned by the writers, but a natural outgrowth of who the characters turned out to be and what they have in common. And while I’m indifferent on the question, I’ve seen a significant number of viewers complain that Shred and Emily don’t have any chemistry. ↩︎
  2. It’s been more than three decades and I’m not familiar with almost anything she’s done in the interim, but particularly eagle-eyed viewers might recognize her as Trudi, the one who isn’t the one with all the shit in her face, from Pulp Fiction. ↩︎