Returning to the comedy where the last season stops that follows the struggles of Johnny Rose, a young wealthy man, who owns a very successful video- store and lives in happiness with his family, but when he lost everything, he takes his family and goes to live in Schitt's Creek. In this new season, Johnny and Moira have a good picnic with one another.
With a premiere as in touch with the series' starting point as well as where it is today, wherever the Roses end up, together or separate, this final season feels like they're in the right hands.
Both the performances and writing are razor-sharp and, it turns out, there really are some stories left to tell and some more to learn about each of the characters as the season progresses.
"Schitt's Creek" evolved into a smarter, better series in later seasons when the focus shifted from if-the-Kardashians-lost-it-all plots to character-driven stories.
The show feels like a super fun, well-oiled machine at this point - yet still one that will surprise you with a joke or a storyline or the fact that your eyes are tearing up once again.
Based on viewing the first four episodes of the new installment, season 6 is shaping up to serve as the show's best, but it will also tug at the heartstrings.
Schitt's Creek's final season might not be self-conscious, but it is self-aware; as the series prepares for one last goodbye, it's interested in how endings become new beginnings.