
Showtime announced earlier today that “Weeds,” its half-hour comedy about Mary Louise-Parker selling pot without a shirt on, will come to an end after the upcoming season. This doesn’t exactly come as a surprise, as ratings have been declining sharply for a while and some members of the cast have already moved on to other projects (most notably Justin Kirk landing on the new NBC show “Animal Hospital”), but it is somewhat notable because the show was one of the first to put Showtime’s original programming on the map. Also, because once or twice a season Mary-Louise Parker would appear naked and/or have sex in a bar with Zack Morris Peter Bash. As far as what to expect for the final season, series creator Jenji Kohan says that’s still up in the air.
The final season will quickly resolve this year’s assassination attempt cliffhanger, and fans can expect a time jump and a return to the suburbs. Beyond that, Kohan hasn’t yet decided how to conclude Nancy’s tale. “We wrack our brains every year for crazy cliffhangers and we’re trying to figure out how to top ourselves,” she says. [EW]
Considering that two of the major complaints about the show in recent years were that it went to somewhat ridiculous lengths to get Parker’s character into and out of trouble, and that it was jumping around quite a bit to do so, I’d say hurriedly wrapping up an assassination attempt then abruptly changing both time and location is a pretty fitting sendoff.



Am I the only one who’s bothered that after all this time Kohan still has no idea how she wants to end the show? I would have hoped that was the ONE THING she had all along. I hated the ending to The Sopranos but at least that was Chase’s plan all along and not something he wrote at 3am the night before they shot it.
I think most show-runners look at it as something they’re going to do for a few years. When it turns into a going concern then suddenly there’s pressure to have it all “have meaning”.
Meanwhile, I didn’t watch last season. And now that I’ve been told how bad it was many, many times, my expectations are low enough that I think I can watch it with some level of enjoyment.
@Homo_Erectus
I actually thought last season was an improvement over 2 seasons ago, so there’s that.
Sure, raise my expectations!
“We wrack our brains every year for crazy cliffhangers and we’re trying to figure out how to top ourselves…”
That summarizes perfectly why I continue to have zero interest in this show. I’m surprised Dan Brown isn’t on the writing staff.
You beat me to it. I can’t think of a mantra that will ruin a half-way decent premise more quickly.
The show has definitely taken several turns for the worst but after staying loyal it’s still sad to hear it finally coming to a close. I think this means they end it with a bang: Conrad’s big comeback with Romany Malco adding some hilarity back to the show as well as him finally ending up with Nancy and Andy probably turning to a life turning tricks on the streets in a bout of depression. I’m thinking if I brought that idea to Jenji Kohan and included the last part she would definitely consider it for at least 5 minutes before shutting it down
Hey, at least they’re going back to the suburbs, where the show was good. With all the little boxes and such.
I can’t not watch this, I’ve been loyal this long, despite the outlandishness of the plot. What people seem to forget is that this show is a comedy, and plot isn’t terribly important in comedies. Anyway, Andy is the best stoner character ever.
WTF?! I thought last season’s finale was the SERIES finale
You thought they would end the series with a mystery sniper that may or may not have taken a shot that may or may not have hit anyone that was in the backyard in the final scene? WORST ENDING EVER.
It should have ended after the neighborhood burned down in…season 3?
Or at least with Esteban chopping off Nancy’s head after she snitched him out to the DEA. Cartels don’t mess around.