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The series returns again in the third season, when Clay's arrest warrant is extremely transformative, prompting his friends to make risky decisions. In those moments, the full details of the problem that occurred when returning home. On the other hand, Clay was released on bail, and Annie made a new plan for him to return to work. It seems that Price's murder will eventually be very clear.
Every time this show almost does something good it just veers off for the lazy sophomoric treatise instead. It's exhausting and it's unpleasant and it's often dangerous, and at this point, there is no reason why it should still be around.
By cluttering its plot with preposterous drama even as it strains for uplift, or at least some greater meaning, the series undermines its own intention-and winds up making itself useful to no one in particular.
Every season, the number of women in the cast shrinks, and they're replaced with more tortured boys in increasingly violent situations....It's just more blatant about it now.
What I'm really saying is that the third season of 13 Reasons Why is a ridiculous, maddening, overlong example of Peak TV-era television that doesn't know how to quit when it's ahead.
13 Reasons Why repeatedly indulges in the "angry young man" trope, but Season 3 sees Clay become more of an impediment to his own benevolence than ever.