This Is Us season 6 will begin airing on Tuesday, Januat 9 p.m. While we practice our patience, read on for all the key details gathered so far about This Is Us season 6: When will season 6 of This Is Us premiere? In the season 5 finale, we got a better idea of what's in store next when we saw Kevin involved in a construction company called "Big Three Construction," Randall being featured in a magazine as a "rising star," and Kate getting married to another man. In just 18 episodes, we'll all learn what's really going on in that famous flash-forward scene and what the future holds for the Big Three. It's hard to believe that we're so close to the end of the smash-hit NBC drama starring Mandy Moore, Milo Ventimiglia, Sterling K. By killing Sheidheda, Indra gives Octavia space to make the speech that will convince the last vestiges of humanity to lay down their weapons.Here we are, folks: we have finally reached the final season of This Is Us. It’s fitting that Indra is the one to take out Sheidheda, as she witnessed Sheidheda’s atrocities as a child he was also responsible for her father’s death. Later, Sheidheda is killed by Indra with a massive gun. If we’re going by traditional dying, however, the season’s major villains-Cadogan and Sheidheda-are the only major characters to die.Ĭadogan is murdered surprisingly quickly, shot in the back by Clarke while he was trying to take the transcendence test on behalf of all humanity in what feels like a fitting punishment for his character, who killed so many so heartlessly on his quest for transcendence, he never gets to transcend.
Who Dies in The 100 Series Finale?įor a show notorious for killing off its characters, The 100 series finale actually has a pretty low death count-unless you count “transcendence” as a kind of death, in which case… yeah, most of humanity dies. In the end, though The 100 series finale introduces some interesting philosophical questions through, the wibbly-wobbly logic of “transcendence” is far too muddled to understand what the stakes of this ending are, and that’s before most of the characters we care about opt out of the next phase in humanity’s evolution (or whatever) to have a beach party. The questions the concept of “transcendence” presents aren’t uninteresting ones to explore, but they’re not ones the final episode or even season of The 100 is well-equipped to answer. Everyone who is still alive-which includes very seriously wounded Levitt, Echo, and Madi, as well as Emori, who only exists as a mind drive in Murphy’s head-turns into energy and transcends. Then, she rushes off into the woods to help Hope keep Echo and Levitt alive long enough that they are able to transcend with the rest of humanity. “I don’t know what I believe, but I do know if we fight this war, we don’t deserve to survive,” Octavia tells the others.
Though it’s Raven who buys humanity more time (and who gives us a chance to see Abby’s face again) by touching the pulsar and asking The Judge for another chance, it’s Octavia who convinces Wonkru and The Disciples to put down their weapons and recognize that they are all part of the same human race, unknowingly saving humanity from extinction. While Clarke straight-up fails the test because of all of the genocide she’s committed, humanity gets another chance in the form of Raven and Octavia, who have both committed slightly less murder. Perhaps the same could be said for Clarke. As The Judge explained it to Cadogan: “We most often take the form of the subject’s greatest teacher or the source of their greatest failure…or can be their greatest love.” For Cadogan, it was all of the above. While The Judge took the form of Clarke’s deceased lover and friend, she wasn’t actually Lexa. It gave us the chance to see Alycia Debnam-Carey, which we’ll take. The choice did give us the chance to see Lexa again-well, that’s not exactly true. He had it coming, but it isn’t a particularly auspicious middle for humanity’s bid for transcendence onto a higher plane of existence. Let’s be honest: we all knew Clarke was going to fail this test, right? The Commander of Death literally enters the test pier by murdering Cadogan. Let’s break down The 100 finale… Clarke Sees Lexa, Fails The Test Does the episode accomplish that? Not entirely.
Who had “Most of Humanity Will Turn Into Groot-Shaped Beings of Energy?” on The 100 series finale Bingo card? If so, you guessed it! The CW series has finally come to an end and, after seven seasons, showrunner (and episode director) Jason Rothenberg has written a Battlestar Galactica-like ending that attempts to tie all the bloodshed that has come before up with a neat, tidy bow.
This The 100 article contains MAJOR spoilers for the ending of the series.