Weeds' series finale: A bright spot after several bad seasons?

As Showtime's long-running marijuana dramedy draws to a close, Weeds tries to briefly recapture its former highs

"Weeds"
(Image credit: Michael Desmond/SHOWTIME)

On Sunday night, Showtime's Weeds finally burned out, after an eight-season run that helped establish the cable network as a hotspot for original programming and paved the way for Dexter, Californication, and Nurse Jackie. Since 2005, Weeds has chronicled the misadventures of suburbanite Nancy Botwin (Mary-Louise Parker), who started selling marijuana after the unexpected death of her breadwinning husband. Though loyal viewers reliably stuck by Weeds, critics slammed its later seasons, complaining about increasingly far-fetched storylines. (Case in point: The time Nancy, having survived a sniper bullet to the head, ran afoul of a hospital clown selling marijuana-infused lollipops.) Speaking of farfetched: The series finale unexpectedly jumped forward eight years to an America where marijuana has been legalized, and Nancy is thinking of selling her wildly successful pot empire to Starbucks. Did the finale satisfy critics?

The series finale was solid enough: Though the flash-forward was arguably "random and facile," it let Weeds' writers achieve a "satisfying ending," says Jamie Peck at Crushable. And true to the show's consistently dense storylines, the series finale "crammed in an ending for nearly everyone we've ever met in this show's universe," which likely satisfied longtime fans. Plus, you've got to appreciate how the final scene, in which Nancy and her family share a joint, drove home Weeds' central theme: "This is one messed-up family that sticks together."

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