The entire point of Angela is to conclude the 'character arcs' of most of the cast that aren't Diane as she's had her conclusion pretty definitively. It works on all corners for those cast members.
Horny Unicorn set Todd up on the route to not being a one-note joke character who's severely out of touch with the world, and this one does an amazing job of showing that he's still that but he's grown. His very real problems stem from a very real place of not being able to understand why the adults around him treat him the way that they do, the way it's handled is fine and good for Todd.
I've always wanted more Judah because I don't get his character. It seemed like he's meant to be a workaholic thirty-something year old who's on the spectrum as a joke. But this episode does an amazing job of telling you no, that's exactly what he is, but it's been played so straight when he does finally express his feelings it felt genuine. Everything made sense, and his actions as awkward and weird as they have been made perfect sense.
The only real issue here is Bojack is once again screwed. The issue isn't a matter of him failing to do the right thing or even giving up. At this point it seems like everyone has turned their back on him for his past, which is a very real thing that happens to addicts and very good way to make them relapse. He falls into his old steps hard, and it's not quite fun to watch as he's being dragged around every which way until...
Horny Unicorn set Todd up on the route to not being a one-note joke character who's severely out of touch with the world, and this one does an amazing job of showing that he's still that but he's grown. His very real problems stem from a very real place of not being able to understand why the adults around him treat him the way that they do, the way it's handled is fine and good for Todd.
I've always wanted more Judah because I don't get his character. It seemed like he's meant to be a workaholic thirty-something year old who's on the spectrum as a joke. But this episode does an amazing job of telling you no, that's exactly what he is, but it's been played so straight when he does finally express his feelings it felt genuine. Everything made sense, and his actions as awkward and weird as they have been made perfect sense.
The only real issue here is Bojack is once again screwed. The issue isn't a matter of him failing to do the right thing or even giving up. At this point it seems like everyone has turned their back on him for his past, which is a very real thing that happens to addicts and very good way to make them relapse. He falls into his old steps hard, and it's not quite fun to watch as he's being dragged around every which way until...