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The satire and energizing accounts of Veep return again. The series pursues the day by day life of former Senator Selina Meyer who envisioned to be Vice President of the United States however she laments to get this job as it doesn't appear as she anticipated. This season accompanies new satire occasions start with Selina makes examination about her past and present campaigns. Then, the press tosses the light of Jonah's own life.
Veep is still as hilariously cutting as ever. Its performances are fantastic, its rhythm and density are unparalleled, and its sense of the absurd is still sharp.
I'll miss Veep's prickly patter when it's gone, but I appreciate that, like Louis-Dreyfus's Seinfeld before it, the show aims to quit while it's ahead.
This last batch of episodes refocuses by turning to the singularly ridiculous process of launching a presidential campaign - a smart pivot that suits the show well, especially for a final season.
Veep works on a much deeper and more cynical level; I can imagine no sadder way to watch it than to compare and contrast it to the comedy of errors America has endured since the 2016 election.
Not everything is perfect in this final season... but its acknowledgement of the foibles of its leads in meta terms reminds us that this is a show that exists on its own terms.