It did look like the season ending was hinting at a new direction for the show where they no longer have to worry about guys like Gavin Belson because they are in positions of power like Gavin Belson.
They had to move away from that, only so much self-sabotaging and scrappy startup stories they can write before people start groaning.
It was really nice to see Richard learn from his ####ups and actually make a shrewd move. And the show didn't falter at all from a lack of TJ Miller, looking forward to seeing where they go from here
I don't think the self-sabotaging storylines will be going anywhere as that's pretty well Dinesh's character in a nutshell.
I am not even sure if the success/fail cycle of the company matters that much to the humour or writing. It can still be funny if it follows that formula, it's one of those shows where I don't think a story arch over multiple seasons is really important. Every season is kind of a reboot in a way.
It was really nice to see Richard learn from his ####ups and actually make a shrewd move. And the show didn't falter at all from a lack of TJ Miller, looking forward to seeing where they go from here
Show was 10x better without Miller in my opinion.
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Miller carried the show for the first two seasons but they leaned on him too much in season 3 and as with anything you can have too much of a good thing.
Weird ending to the show, not sure how I feel about it overall.
It wrapped it up pretty nicely, and it makes the previous episodes make a bit more sense in the context of knowing how this was going to play out. I do kind of wish though they had been able to make the season a tad funnier though. There were just a few times that were really laugh-out-loud worthy.
As far as the season goes, Jared meeting his parents was as savage a scene I've ever seen. Maybe not laugh out loud funny, but one of the most memorable scenes of the series for me.