This is for season 2 -
“Changing the Cast ≠ Continuing the Story — Stop Misusing ‘Season 2’!”**
**Review:**
Let’s get one thing straight — *just because you label something “Season 2” doesn’t automatically make it a continuation*. The original story from Season 1 deserved closure, not abandonment.
Here’s why this is a major letdown:
#### 💢 1. **No continuation of the original storyline.**
Season 1 left viewers with unresolved questions — a husband possibly killed by his wife, hidden secrets, and a complex emotional triangle. Ending it without follow-up and jumping to completely new characters in Season 2 is just lazy and misleading.
#### 🔄 2. **Completely new couple, completely different dynamic.**
Season 2 features a new story with different people — that’s fine, but then **why call it Season 2?** Make it a new series with a new title. Simple.
#### 🤥 3. **Feels like the creators took advantage of Season 1’s success.**
Instead of continuing the emotional thread, they used the popularity of Season 1 to promote a new, unrelated story. That’s opportunistic and disappointing. Even if the new season is good, this strategy ruins the experience.
#### 🧠 4. **A real series builds continuity.**
Look at smartly written shows like *You*, *Dexter*, *Breaking Bad*, or *The Crown*. They add new characters across seasons, but the **core protagonist stays the same**. That’s what real storytelling and character development look like.
#### 😒 5. **This isn’t bold storytelling — it’s creative escapism.**
Instead of tying up loose ends or committing to one narrative arc, the creators hit the reset button. That’s not risk-taking — that’s avoiding responsibility.
#### 🤷♂️ 6. **Maybe they gave an official explanation — but we never saw it.**
If there *was* an announcement about Season 2 being a different story altogether, it clearly didn’t reach the core audience. So the confusion is still their fault.
**Final Thoughts:** 📌 *You can’t keep changing everything and still expect fans to follow blindly. If you’re offering a new story, give it a new name. Don’t piggyback off Season 1 and call it “Season 2” just for marketing. It kills interest, no matter how much effort you put into the new plot.*
Don’t sell “anthology” as a “season sequel.” Viewers aren’t stupid.**