[s3e12] That Went Well -

The sun was setting over the Pacific, casting a bruised purple hue across the Hollywood Hills, but BoJack Horseman couldn't feel the warmth. He sat in his Tesla, the engine silent, the weight of the last few months pressing down on him like a physical force. Sarah Lynn was gone. The Oscar he had sacrificed everything for was a lie. His house was a wreckage of bad decisions and broken glass.

He pulled onto the highway, the speedometer climbing. 80, 90, 100. He let go of the steering wheel, closing his eyes, waiting for the impact or the relief of the end. But then, he saw them. [S3E12] That Went Well

to balance her career with her desire for a family Which character's journey should we dive into next? The sun was setting over the Pacific, casting

He looked at the bottle of pills on the passenger seat. For a moment, he thought about the bridge, or the bottom of his pool, or just driving until the road ran out. He had spent his whole life trying to be "good," or at least trying to be seen as good, and every time he reached for it, he ended up hurting the people who actually cared. He had called Diane, but the conversation had left him feeling more hollow than before. She was moving on, finding a version of happiness that didn't include his chaos, and he couldn't blame her. The Oscar he had sacrificed everything for was a lie

If you'd like to explore different aspects of this finale, we could look into: during her final phone call with BoJack

In the distance, across a flat stretch of wild grass, a group of wild horses were running. They weren't running toward anything, and they weren't running away from a camera crew or a bad review. They were just running. Their muscles rippled under their coats, their manes flying in the wind, synchronized in a way that felt more honest than anything BoJack had ever done on a soundstage.

about his own identity and his future with Emily