B

After a few bumps, Shrinking lands its season 1 finale

A wedding is a perfect excuse to gather everyone we’ve come to care for since the premiere

TV Reviews Mariah Carey
After a few bumps, Shrinking lands its season 1 finale
Ted McGinley and Jessica Williams in Shrinking Photo: Apple TV+

And so Shrinking comes to an end, not with a bag nor with whimper but with a boop. But we’ll get to that final scene soon enough. (Don’t worry, I won’t make any crass cliffhanger jokes! Well, maybe just that one.)

I may have spent the better part of these recaps giving the team behind Shrinking grief for their arbitrary attempts at bringing its disparate characters together. Operating as equal parts workplace comedy and family sitcom—both subgenres that structurally already spell out why the main characters all hang around one another in specific spaces: the office and the home—Shrinking seemed to slowly realize that, if it was to work, it needed to keep threading its ensemble no matter how outrageous the reason. This is one reason why this season finale works so well. A wedding (and a cornhole bachelor party), after all, is a perfect excuse to gather everyone we’ve come to care for over the course of nine previous episodes. And when the chemistry between your cast is that good (truly, what an ensemble!), I can’t blame them for such arbitrary plot entrapments.

Much like the season as a whole, Shrinking’s season finale anchored its comedic and emotional heart on Jason Segel. The actor, best known for his work on How I Met Your Mother, Forgetting Sarah Marshall, and The Muppets has long excelled at an earnestness that’s never cloying, a kind of masculine fragility that’s surprisingly endearing. That was on full display here in “Closure.” The wedding speech alone, which oscillated between a cringey roast and a doe-eyed emotional screed was Shrinking (and Segel!) at his best, especially as it espoused what emerged as the thesis statement of the show: “The best way to help yourself was to help others.” The caveat, of course, and what has led me to stay cool on the show’s message, is that how we help others can sometimes be just as important as the fact that we do. Thus, no matter how lovely this platitude sounds when it’s coming from Segel’s mouth, all I kept thinking was that it was shortchanging the very ethos of not just the show as a whole but of mental-health professionals like Paul and Gabby.

Both of whom, it must be noted, are making inroads into building new lives for themselves—the former while sleeping with his doctor and the latter by pursuing a teaching career. Both have come a long way from where they started; Paul has thawed quite a bit, and Gabby has toughened up in turn. And look at them now! Hydrating together and playfully bantering back and forth.

Also moving onwards and feeling better than ever? Sean. Talk about new beginnings: He’s set to become an entrepreneur. Only a few months back he was an unemployed vet refusing to deal with his PTSD. Jury’s out on whether he’s made all that much progress on that part of his life, but outwardly, at least, Sean’s in a much better place.

Similarly, “Closure” offered Alice exactly what the episode title suggests. Jimmy may clearly be ready to move forward in—if not past—his grief, but Alice is finding ways to bring herself to move on in her own way (like by wearing Tia’s heels and embracing that she can still mourn her mother without letting that stop her from enjoying her life). Father and daughter seemed like they’re on the right track…so long as nothing quite as disruptive as, say, having Jimmy start a relationship with his late wife’s BFF.

Which: Oy. I didn’t enjoy their pairing right off the gate and I remain unconvinced this far in. I guess all that talk about “safe dick” would end up biting Gabby in the ass. She’s clearly falling for Jimmy. He’ll likely enjoy knowing he’s no longer “safe dick.” How he’ll react to maybe being more? Unclear.

But back to that final boop, which was, arguably, more of a bombshell than Gabby’s admission to Liz about how Jimmy makes her feel.

When the montage began playing and we saw everyone giddily dancing at the wedding as Jimmy’s many patients were seen, if not thriving, at least making moves toward bettering their lives, I worried about the message Shrinking was going to leave us with. Was the entire season proof that Jimmy’s unorthodox gambles had actually paid off? That his meddling had, indeed, done more good than he and Paul feared? And then we saw Grace (hiking, of course!), who seemed to have made the most 180 turn of them all, a person who found a way to take in Jimmy’s advice and yet keep her relationship with her boyfriend going. Watching her snap turned out to be a great narrative cliff-hanger; here is the pilot episode blown up. It’s both a call back and an attempt to up the ante. Now that we know season two is officially happening, we can sleep soundly knowing we will find out how and whether Jimmy will have to grapple with Grace’s choice and how he’ll handle the consequences of what turned out to be hilariously ill-fitting advice that, all in all, did more harm than good.

I’m cautiously excited about the show taking this dark a turn but given that the finale also teed up Gabby to start teaching and Sean and Liz to team up on his catering business—not to mention giving Harrison Ford, I mean Paul, an out out for his life in Pasadena—I worry we might be getting a whole different kind of show when it returns.

Stray observations

  • I swear to god if they go hiking one more time…. (But at least we entered “shirtless Brian” era?)
  • Speaking of Brian: the pearls detail on the grooms? Divine.
  • “Are you sad because he was so kind to you?” Honestly, if there’s one line that hit home more than any other and which showed just how attentive to the human experience Shrinking can sometimes be, it was this one. (Seriously, kudos to Christa Miller for so carefully rounding out what could easily have been a shrewish wife of a role and for even pulling off self-aware lines like “I can be a lot” which are both hilarious and heartbreaking in equal measure.)
  • A Harrison Ford hug! What a concept!
  • “It’s like Mariah Carey hitting that high note good.” More of Jessica Williams impersonating Mariah, please.
  • This is a dad joke show! I can’t believe it’s taken me so long to come to this realization. It’s not just that Jason Segel delivers peak dad content (that dancing!) or that Jessica Williams has yet to meet a low hanging fruit joke she can’t deliver skillfully (“rocks are not the only things she knows how to polish” heyooo!). Or that, you have Harrison Ford basically playing himself as a grouchy father figure (and doing it oh so well). It’s that, tonally, Shrinking is a dadcom, an heir apparent to a show like Ted Lasso, where corny humor is seen as the worthy antithesis to toxic masculinity. What better figure to build a show like that than a cringey dad?

20 Comments

  • sockpuppet77-av says:

    I love the contrasting line reading of “You look so much like your mother” from the first episode to this one.

  • DLoganNZed-av says:

    The minute they showed her hiking with her boyfriend, I knew. I KNEW!! Will be interesting to see what happens from here! Also, Paul’s doctor should really not be his doctor anymore. So inappropriate.

    • jacquestati-av says:

      Why?

    • sockpuppet77-av says:

      Oh yeah. That relationship is so out of bounds that I just assumed we weren’t playing in the same sandbox as real life. If the show is going to start holding its characters accountable like real life, both Sagal and Malik’s characters are being sanctioned/losing their license next season.

    • uccf1-av says:

      I was afraid Grace’s boyfriend was going to kill her. I guess this qualifies as the best case scenario (assuming someone has to get booped).

    • tacitusv-av says:

      Not being smug (honest!), but the moment Jimmy affirmed Grace’s determination to push Donny off the (metaphorical) cliff I knew there was only one way the season was going to end.I thought it was a little over-the-top to have Donny state outright that he was going to start abusing her — but I guess ambiguity regarding Grace’s premeditated self-defense doesn’t really belong in a feel-good comedy like Shrinking. That’s okay, but it was a little clumsy compared with the rest of the writing.

      • DLoganNZed-av says:

        Yes! I remember thinking “ooh, that was not a good thing for him to affirm”…but did not think the show would go there until the hiking scene!

      • radarskiy-av says:

        I was hoping that Grace was just fantasizing about booping Donny, and that she’d snap out of it and Donny would yell “Are you even listening to me, you dumb bitch?” and she’d say “Not anymore” and turn around and walk away.

    • yllehs-av says:

      The show seems to be chock full of inappropriate – patient living in therapist’s pool house and staying there after possible romantic/sexual feelings towards therapist’s teenage daughter, co-workers sleeping together, boss being an ad hoc therapist for employee’s kid, a therapist making a reference to a patient murdering one’s significant other. There are some things I like about the show, but all that drags it down for me.

  • it-has-a-super-flavor--it-is-super-calming-av says:

    Watching her snap turned out to be a great narrative cliff-hanger

    Might have to call this one a cliff fall-er.

  • ryanlohner-av says:

    These reviews have been a real education in how there exists at least one person in the world to whom human interaction outside family and work is a completely foreign concept, and it’s been a fascinating dive inside that alien mind.

    • dhawksii-av says:

      I’ve never seen someone so dedicated to calling out common sitcom tropes in the exact system in which they’re explicitly supposed to exist.

      “Why are these things happening in the thing they’re supposed to happen in? It’s very upsetting!”

    • liebkartoffel-av says:

      WHY DO THE HUMANS SPEND SO MUCH TIME TOGETHER WALKING OUT-OF-DOORS WHEN AN AUTOMOBILE IS A FAR MORE EFFICIENT FORM OF CONVEYANCE? AND WHY HAS THE WORK ASSOCIATE OF THE ONE HUMAN BECOME THE FRIENDLY COMPANION OF THE OTHER HUMAN? AND WHY HAVE A GROUP OF HUMANS GATEHRED TOGETHER AT THE HOME PLACE OF ONE OF THE HUMANS FOR NO FURTHER PURPOSE THAN TO CONVERSE AND DRINK ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES? I AM CONFUSED AND ENRAGED.

    • erikveland-av says:

      An extremely American, capital A, point of view.

  • mike-mckinnon-av says:

    The thing is, this show made me laugh more than I’ve laughed in a long time. For that alone, its first season gets an A.

    • thundercatsridesagain-av says:

      It’s been a real joy for us, too. It wasn’t immediately apparent in the pilot how funny it was going to be, but by midseason it hit its stride. It embraces a lot of different styles of humor, and I think that means it works for a lot of different kinds of people. 

  • undeadsinatra-av says:

    I think S1 of this show was very much like “It’s okay not to have strong boundaries” and S2 will pivot to “Okay, perhaps *some* strong boundaries are necessary”

  • dr-boots-list-av says:

    I’m trying to imagine hearing that wedding speech from the perspective of someone who didn’t know Jimmy. Awk—ward!

  • interlinked-av says:

    ‘Shrinking’ an heir apparent to a show like Ted Lasso.If only there was some sort of connection…hmm.

  • notvandnobeer-av says:

    I’d love a version of this show where Jessica Williams was the main character. She’s an absolute delight. Hell, I’d watch an entire show that was just her morning car rides with Harrison Ford.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Share Tweet Submit Pin