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Old 06-11-2026, 08:58 PM   #1
TMC
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
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Default Saddest Moments in TV: How to End a Life and a Television Series in Six Feet Under

https://boomstickcomics.com/saddest-...ix-feet-under/

Quote:
Bryan Kluger
June 4, 2026



Six Feet Under: Season 5 – Episode 12 “Everyone’s Waiting”


HBO occasionally produces a television series so good that it makes the rest of television seem vaguely unnecessary. Six Feet Under was one of those shows. It wasn’t merely a drama about a family-run funeral home in Los Angeles. Rather, it was a weekly meditation on grief, love, resentment, mortality, and all the strange little indignities that come with being alive. For five years, the Fishers felt less like characters than relatives. They were all complicated, exhausting, and deeply lovable family members whom you occasionally wanted to shake and hug at the same time.

The show had a peculiar gift for making you cry when you least expected it. One moment, there would be a joke so dark about death, it bordered on criminal. And then the next, you’d find yourself staring at the credits through watery eyes. By the final season, crying had become less a possibility than part of the viewing agreement. It was part of the deal.

Then came Nate Fisher’s death. After surviving a brain aneurysm years earlier, he is suddenly taken from the people who love him and from the audience that had grown alongside him. It felt unfair, abrupt, and painfully familiar, you know, the way death often does. The show understood something most television avoids. It’s that life does not wait for emotional convenience.

And yet, somehow, the finale went even further.

Claire, the youngest Fisher, is preparing to leave California and drive east toward New York to pursue photography and, perhaps, a version of herself she has not yet met. After a tearful goodbye to her family, she gets in her car and puts on an aggressively uncool CD mix from Ted, and Sia’s “Breathe Me” begins to play. What follows may be the most devastating ten minutes of television that has ever been produced.

As Claire drives into her future, the series flashes forward through the lives and deaths of every major character. We watch children become adults, marriages endure and crumble, families expand, old wounds soften, and loved ones disappear. The show reveals not just how everyone dies, but how everyone lives. The years tick by, the faces age, and time, that undefeated champion, keeps moving forward.

By the time the screen reveals that Claire lives to be 102 years old, the effect is overwhelming. Not because death is sad, Six Feet Under had spent five seasons teaching us that, but because life is so heartbreakingly brief.

I have never seen a television ending that comes close to this. Most finales try to wrap up a story. Six Feet Under somehow wraps up existence itself. Watching it in real time between 2001 and 2005 felt like saying goodbye to people I genuinely knew. Even now, years later, hearing the opening notes of “Breathe Me” is enough to trigger an emotional response usually reserved for old photographs from when I was a kid and family reunions where certain loved ones are missing.

The Six Feet Under finale understands a truth that television rarely captures. It’s that every goodbye is really a thank-you. The Fishers gave us five years. In return, they received one of the most elegant send-offs ever put on screen. It was a final act so moving that it still feels less like an ending than a memory. This is not just one of the finest moments in television history. But quite possibly the most emotional.
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