![]() ![]() It feels almost too different from what we’ve come to expect. Did he make the right choice to coach a team on the other side of the ocean? More importantly, why is he still in Richmond? What is holding him there? As a character who has remained unwaveringly confident and optimistic for two seasons, watching Ted grapple with these emotions is heart-wrenching.Īt first, this less upbeat tone detracts from the show. This is the first time on the show that Ted’s doubt is noticeably tangible. After his son Henry (Gus Turner, “Life After Life”) leaves after a six-week visit to head back to his mom in the United States, Ted is left reeling over the loss, more vulnerable than we’ve ever seen him before. But more than that, this season’s version of Ted isn’t his regular chipper self. ![]() ![]() Part of this melancholy likely comes from the realization that this might be the last time we get to experience this character’s journey. This season, however, there is an uncharacteristically melancholy mood in the air. Following the journey of American football coach Ted Lasso (Jason Sudeikis, “Hit-Monkey”) as he attempts to coach a British soccer team, the series is back with the same iconic one-liners, sports feuds and emotionally unavailable men we’ve come to love over the past two seasons. “Ted Lasso,” the Apple TV+ drama-comedy series, and winner of eleven Emmys, returns for a third, and potentially final, season.
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