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TV Ending PDF Print E-mail
Written by nacho   
I shaved off a good chunk of my beard because my ex girlfriend Eileen thinks it's funny to pop up outside the bathroom window and scream my name. So I let her in to putter around the kitchen while I shaved the rest of my face in a dark frenzy. I was planning to anyway, but I wanted to do it on my own terms. I grew the beard while on vacation and had meant to get rid of it, but people started calling me "sir" and nobody carded me for booze. Without it, everyone thinks I'm an 18 year old Mormon. I was glad for the image shift.

Eileen wasn't in the kitchen making food, mind you. I don't think she could successfully reheat a pizza. But she sure does putter. As far as I can tell, she just opens all the cabinets and rattles the pans around. I've always thought of it as some compulsive female instinct, like she needs to affirm to herself that she is a skirt since, generally speaking, she's unable to perform any household womanly duties. My old friend James says she does this because she's crazier than a squirrel that's been dropped from a biplane. Regardless, I forgive her eccentricities because she has a killer body.

She wanted me to take her out to dinner, which was fine. Now, I left Eileen for a reason and, yes, it's because she's crazier than a squirrel that's been dropped out of a biplane. But when she wears a summer dress and wants to go out on the town, I always say yes. I usually agree to these weird platonic dates because I enjoy taking her to Ledo's up at the strip mall and watching all the sad daddies stare longingly, trying to ignore their little wives and wailing children. Eileen knows men stare hard at her and she can rarely last five minutes without hiking up her dress and asking me to identify an imaginary blemish on her inner thigh. Though that may also be designed to confuse me.

After half an hour waiting for our pizza, my ability to converse on an intelligent level started to fade. Eileen was on politics and smart girl things, which is useless since I know what she looks like naked. Sensing my mental drift, she brought up a topic that really warmed me up.

"Best finale to a TV show," she said, sitting back and smiling.

"Any show?"

She nodded and smiled, crossing her arms over her lovely breasts and pushing them up slightly.

I watched her fox-like face for a moment, then I cleared my throat. Three shows came instantly to mind: Newhart, MST3K and Magnum PI.

Magnum ended it's sixth season with an open ended finale that suggested the main character's demise, but left the actual facts open to interpretation. Upon hearing about this, the fans all had a meltdown and a powerful public outcry caused the studio to put together a knee-jerk seventh season. However, this was against the will of everybody involved. The compromise was to make an abbreviated season - about 12 episodes - and provide a more fitting exit. Leaving in the original death finale as a cliffhanger, Magnum and crew returned for the final season, but, throughout the handful of episodes, it was continually hinted that Magnum did die, that he's a Sixth Sense style ghost. In fact, they took it a step further and suggested that he died a long time ago, earlier on in the series. There was a fifth season near death episode that was mentioned several times in the sixth and seventh seasons. Though I doubt Magnum enjoyed a Joss Whedon-style foresight, there's a feeling in that fifth season episode which, taken in retrospect, makes me wonder if there was an attempt to create a mood for the final years of the series. The cast and crew planned on the following season being the last and, from the beginning, the sixth season was all about death -- peppered with the often violent destruction of supporting characters. To add to this theory, the sixth and seventh seasons also re-introduced a supporting character as a sort of "is he or isn't he" ghost/spirit-guide. He'd been blown up in a car bomb meant for Magnum, and there were whole episodes devoted to the ghost routine.

Magnum's seventh season was an experiment in dark depression. Every loose end was moodily tied up over the course of the 12 episodes and the two-part finale opens with Magnum staring at graves and monuments in Northern Virginia. He's called back to Hawaii, against his will, to help an old friend. Another open ended death scene wraps up the final act and, looking back, this was probably intended to be ghost Magnum's realization that he had died long ago. So cut to commercial, then we return for the epilogue. Magnum appears at a friend's wedding (ignored by everyone) in Navy dress whites, stepping out from a hedgerow. End on a comic note, fade to black, then open up with Magnum in dress uniform walking on the beach with his young daughter (murdered early in the sixth season). The camera pulls back and we see Tom Selleck watching the final beach scene on TV. He takes a sip of beer, then raises the remote control and turns off the TV. A reminder to all of us that the seventh season was forced and, in the end, it was just a TV show and we should have let it go.

Newhart ended in 1990 and has the most clever ending I've seen. After years as a retired shrink running a hotel in Vermont, his season-long battle with the golf course developers comes to a comical end when Bob is hit on the head by an errant golfball.

He wakes up in bed with Suzanne Pleshette, the actress who played his wife in The Bob Newhart Show which ended in 1978. Looks like the past 12 years have all been a weird dream, honey. Talk about creativity -- there you go.

Mystery Science Theater 3000 put together a perfect finale. Mike and the bots finally escape their imprisonment on the Satellite of Love and what do they do? They get a basement apartment in Minneapolis (it's "right on the bus line!") and settle down on a ratty couch to watch a bad movie. There's a pause while the camera pulls back so we're watching from the familiar position, then they start making wisecracks and the scene fades into the credits. What's the message there? We'll never escape cult cinema? Or, maybe, it's an homage to the ending of The Prisoner.

By the way, that's not on the greatest finale list because I think Patrick McGoohan was just being bitter and weird.

I think Eileen is turned on by all this movie and TV talk...or maybe the shrimp pizza wasn't settling with her. Either way, we left on good terms and I went home to rub my beardless face, watch the last episode of Red Dwarf and think about blemishes on Eileen's inner thigh.

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