Even With a Major Departure, Ghosts Season 3 Is Still a Comforting Old Haunt
Photo Courtesy of CBS
Comfort foods. Comfort blanket. Comfort movies. Comfort music.
It may be cooler to live on the edge and thrive on spontaneity, but inevitably, we will seek out some form of familiarity and alleviation.
We want to see the same people and places because they make us feel warm and happy. We may even take advantage of this feeling of hominess; assuming it will always be there… until it’s not.
Ghosts, the CBS comedy based on the equally delightful British TV series, is my comfort TV. Although there are some living humans on the show—chiefly, Rose McIver’s Sam, who can see and speak to the dead after suffering her own near-death experience, and her husband, the very much not clairvoyant Jay (Utkarsh Ambudkar)—most of these characters are just where I left them last week. This is because these spirits who represent different parts of history (the American Revolution; the destruction of Native lands; the Jazz Age, ‘80s-era National Lampoons-like goofiness…) cannot leave. They are forced, for some strange reason not made clear to either them or the audience, to spend eternity within the confines of what is now known as Sam and Jay’s sometimes-floundering bed and breakfast, Woodside Manor.
There’s so much comfort in the familiar that it’s easy to take advantage of it.
The show’s second season ended with a cliffhanger. One, or maybe more, of my dearly departed friends seemed to have been “sucked off” (Ghosts parlance for going into the light and leaving this purgatory for another dimension. The show has a surprising amount of sexual innuendos for being a CBS sitcom).
The third season premiere, which aired last night, revealed that the unshackled was Sheila Carrasco’s Flower, a hippie who was so into free love that it killed her (she tried to hug a bear).
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