
The final season throws myriad roadblocks in her path-some from external forces, like a fatphobic doctor who recommends weight loss surgery, and some from her own internal compass, still imperfectly calibrated when it comes to negotiating her own white privilege and self-hatred. Annie is juggling men, balancing new challenges in her work as a journalist at The Thorn, and feeling more liberated than ever, but she hasn't got it all figured out just yet. Season Three finds Aidy Bryant's Annie Easton newly energized after breaking up with her deadbeat boyfriend in the Season Two finale. It doesn't feature a animal wedding, but somehow, it's exactly the right swan song for the groundbreaking comedy about gender, body image, and what it means when women own their power.

But when news reached Team Shrill that the third season would be the show's last, midway through the process of filming eight episodes in Portland, the season finale soon became the series finale. In an alternate universe dreamed up by executive producer Lindy West, the series finale of Hulu's Shrill would feature a double wedding-no, a triple wedding, with humans, dogs, and horses alike making their way to the altar.
