When I reviewed this seasonās second episode, I explained why I loved this show when it worked. Hereās the snippet:
Ā āCHELSEA is a special episode because it contains all the elements that make TED LASSO worthy of Beardās excited āscream.ā Itās the quotable dialogue, the character likability, and the growth, and it tugs at the heartstrings while also making us laugh.ā
In episode nine, there is little to quote and laugh at, and we spend a lot of time with the unlikeable characters ā Nate (Nick Mohammed) and Jade (Edyta Budnik). Nate has been supplied with a strange romantic subplot with Jade, who was first ājadedā when they met and inexplicably is now in love with him. Over season three, this subplot has been given a lot of playing time for wherever Nateās eventual story arc to become good goes.Ā
Yet, what works unbelievably well is the evolution of Roy Kentās (Brett Goldstein) character. Audiences have been waiting for anything to challenge Roy outside his angry persona, and weĀ finallyĀ get a step in that direction. This is also an essential episode for a key character I wouldnāt dare mention in a SpoilerFreeReview. But, for how BIG the moment is, it felt preachy and on the nose. Also, before readers get upset at me, I want to point out that a morally important message in a TV show doesnāt make it good. I can love the message and dislike the execution.
Season three of TED LASSO has been a mixed bag. Itās still good TV, yet the magic of the first two seasons is gone. The show, just like the runtime, has become bloated, concentrating on lesser uninteresting characters instead of staying laser-focused on the āseven-layer dip,ā that is, Ted, Beard, Nate, Keely, Rebecca, Roy, and Jamie.Ā
Iām not āheart bentā on doing an āIrish goodbyeā to TED LASSO, but Iām also not giving it a warm hug this season.
Itās available on Apple TV+.Ā

