Pose: Season 3/ Episode 7 [Series Finale] – Recap/ Review (with Spoilers)
The time has come to watch, for the final time, the legendary cast of Pose live, werk, and THRIVE!
The time has come to watch, for the final time, the legendary cast of Pose live, werk, and THRIVE!
Pose begins to inch its way to potentially jumping the shark as the mob gets involved but takes steps back after something complicates Angel’s wedding.
Pray Tell heads back to PA, where he was born and raised to face his mom, aunties, childhood crush, and the church that was the root of all his abandonment.
With so much getting progressively worse, real conversations are had that act as jarring wake-up calls.
Three years have passed since the events in the season 2 finale, and while much has changed, it ain’t all for the better.
You already know if Janet Mock is writing or directing you are going to be shedding tears. Add in she is doing the season finale? HA! Grab some tissues, we’re crying together.
Line are crossed, secrets exposed, and children reveal themselves to be adults. Which, for Blanca, is one of the challenges she never prepped for.
With the opportunity to dance for Madonna coming up, Elektra and Blanca show who they are as Damon and Ricky grow close, once again.
The ladies of Pose return, and with the AIDS crisis in full effect, those who aren’t about the community and taking advantage of “Vogue” giving spotlight are called out.
When the industry speaks on new voices, faces, and stories, perhaps the best example is Pose. For with it presenting trans and gay stories front and center, it reminds you of why television can be considered revolutionary.
The final category is: Mother of the Year and considering all Blanca has done for her children, even her mother, will she win or will there always be next year?
As the House of Abundance falls, a new house rises from the ashes. One which takes advantage of what either could be seen as a mistake or right decision by Blanca.
With news of Blanca’s biological mother dying, so comes a quest for reconciliation, even if some make it harder than others.
Finding a way to go beyond surviving but absolutely thriving is either what is pursued or talked about. Though for some, thriving is a suburban fairytale.
Pose is so wonderful that you’ll wish Ryan Murphy and co. held this for Netflix so that we could get all the episodes in one sitting.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.
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