I’m flunking out of clown school. Things aren’t going the way I planned. They don’t- I don’t know. They don’t- they don’t get me here, I guess.
Baskets | 1.1 Renoir

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Brunei
seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Brunei

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Türkiye

seen from Yemen
seen from Singapore
seen from Malaysia
I’m flunking out of clown school. Things aren’t going the way I planned. They don’t- I don’t know. They don’t- they don’t get me here, I guess.
Baskets | 1.1 Renoir
honestly, i wish that they had done the cult storyline earlier on in baskets if they had to do it at all. like, i love that chip's depression and lack of direction once the rodeo was forced to close drove him to seek meaning in any way that he could. i felt like it made sense for him to join a cult. but i wish that the whole thing didn't take up the entire series finale, because i feel like it would have been better to have some resolution to the character arcs and dynamics that ran through the entire show.
3/8/18 easily one of the best shows on tv
baskets
It’s the damndest thing, what Baskets has become. Even at the start, it was never a conventional comedy, but it had some of the signposts of one: the identical twins gag, or Chip’s obliviousness to his professional and romantic prospects. And it was very much a Zach Galifianakis vehicle, since he created it with Jonathan Krisel and Louis C.K. But it was also deeply sad from minute one, and Louie Anderson’s performance as Christine was never treated as a joke, and the show has only doubled down on the melancholy of it all in this season. At times, it’s felt like a series where Christine was the main character — and since the show’s named after the family, that can work — and even when the emphasis is back on Chip, his struggle to find his place in the world goes very much hand-in-hand with hers. And, remarkably, both of them grew up quite a lot over the course of this season: Chip after his hobo odyssey ended in tragedy, Christine through meeting Ken and dealing with the death of her mother. This comedy about a bumbling clown who doesn’t understand why no one likes him has very quickly and gracefully morphed into a drama about a woman getting a chance to truly live for the first time when she’s in her 60s, and a man who’s only starting to figure life out after wallowing on society’s bottom rungs for a long time.
Alan Sepinwall, "Baskets Concludes A Beautifully Sad, Weird Season”