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When news breaks, you need to understand what matters β and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today? They fail, of course. You can pick your friends, etc. But goodness knows they try. As such, season three is much more episodic than either of the first two seasons. It strains at times to get all of the characters in the same place for the finale, and it notably leaves one of them on the outside looking in as the season wraps up.
At times, the season of TV it reminded me most of was the third season of The Sopranos β another season of television that, like Transparent season three, tried to interrogate why audiences would even want to watch these characters, and concluded with a supporting character singing a rendition of a pop standard that reduced others to tears. Transparent is never content to rest on its laurels, to bask in its many accolades.
That might lead it down strange paths, but it always finds its way back in the end. If there was something to grouse about in Transparent season two which was my favorite TV show of , it was that Maura Pfefferman, whose journey after coming out late in life as a trans woman, stepped back a bit from the stories of her own children.
As a whole, Transparent is about the possibility of self-definition in a world where you still have to deal with other people who might want to define you otherwise, whether maliciously or obliviously.
Transparent exudes empathy, even for those it disagrees with. The season begins with him still navigating the wreckage of his break-up with Rabbi Raquel, but pivots around its midpoint when Rita β the adult woman whose sexual abuse of Josh when he was a teenager has hung over his life like a cloud β kills herself in a mall. Josh embarks on a journey to Kansas to see Colton, his biological son, whom Rita gave up for adoption.