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BoJack Horseman, the hero of the 90s talk show, who adopted three horses and after 18 years of absence, comes in that new series, as a star, who prepares for his new show, but he fears of failure, as he is always fall in terrible, but his best friend and his ex girlfriend support him and help him passing over through all challenges he faces.
Netflix's BoJack Horseman, which premieres its fifth season on Friday, has gotten so confident that it tosses off jokes other shows would milk to death.
Few shows on TV... make me laugh as hard as BoJack Horseman, few shows that take as long to watch because of the frequent need to pause and rewind to catch background jokes, and no shows that do those things and then punch me in the gut as effectively
BoJack Horseman season 5 does not disappoint and moves its show and characters forward in a way that most shows aren't willing to explore. Some of the best work from the entire series is in this season.
What's really remarkable about the show's excellent fifth season is how it pushes fans who have otherwise stuck with BoJack through thick and thin to follow him to his darkest point-and darkest act-to date.
Whether the show is dealing with adoption, identity, dating woes, divorce, addiction, career burnout or the endless toxic media cycle it does so with an insightful clarity that is both damning and compassionate.