The greatest montage in TV history?

It makes the work a joy because it can be honest, and that is incredibly liberating.

Like most things that begin well on this show, they almost always end terribly.

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Credit: Greg Lewis/Hulu

Like a cruel joke or…life, if you will.

The Zen, who directed this weeks episode.

And so we pick up where we left off.

Alex is falling apart.

Fair enough, really.

At this point, a lump rises in my throat.

The omens are not good… kindly tune in next week to find out what happens.

You wont regret it.

On to Laura and Spencer, who are dealing with death with their usual devil-may-care brand of humor.

Suddenly we are all too aware of what these two must be going through.

And so it must be emotional for all the divorcees in the back (woohoo!)

(Was that too much?

I feel like a factory worker, he says.

Valeries reaction is priceless, as scathing as it is endearing.

Cue Anthony (Adam Lustick), a.k.a.

the patient wot left her for a psychopath, who she spots as they leave the accountant.

In a beautifully bittersweet scene, Drew and Valerie realize that this is, in fact, the end.

Every episode ofCasualis like entering an emotional vortex you never know what youre going to get.

Its dark and intriguing, yet strangely beautiful and painfully funny.

About ourselves, and perhaps even about each other.

And thats what good storytelling and television is about, right?

God, I love this show.