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Axed: Vida confirms final season

US drama about Mexican-American sisters, will end with its upcoming third season.

US drama Vida, starring Vida, starring Melissa Barrera and Mishel Prada as Mexican-American sisters, will end with its upcoming third season due in late April.

Creator, showrunner and director Tanya Saracho wrote, “I have not been able to write this letter — every time I try my palms get sweaty, my heart does a cumbia beat and I get nauseous. It’s taken me days. Because no matter how you slice it, this is a farewell letter. So I’ll get that part out of the way: Season Three will be Vida’s final season. Rather than dwell on the ‘hows’ and the ‘whys,’ what I’m burning to get to is the ‘thank-you’ part. That’s the part that’s making my chest ache.

“When I began this journey three and a half years ago, I never dreamed that by the end of the process I’d be so wholly changed — mind, body and spirit — and that I’d be standing so strongly in my abilities to run and create a TV show the way it should have always been created: By us. When I started this, the landscape was a bleak one for Latinx representation. In the television landscape, the narratives about us were few and far between and were stuck on stereotypical. And I had only heard of one Latina showrunner who’d been allowed to run a show solo. Also for brown queers, there was truly no representation.

“This is where the thank-yous begin: Because you championed our delicate and darling little series, we were gifted three beautifully compelling, trailblazing seasons of television. Sincerely, this is why I wanted to personally write this letter, to express that your support has meant everything. It has meant two renewals and validation that our brown narrative is worth telling. I will never be able to thank you enough for your reception and endorsement. Truly.

“This goodbye is too bittersweet for words. I’d be lying if I said I’m not sad about not getting back into that magical writers room to keep crafting our story. But after all, I got to tell the exact story I wanted to tell, exactly how I wanted to tell it, and that is rare in this industry. I leave steeped in gratitude. Thankful to Starz for not just allowing Vida to happen, but for being great co-parents as we raised her together. And grateful for the collaborators whose careers we were able to launch: Latinx cinematographers, writers, actors — almost entirely female — who are now out there and in demand. What a beautiful family we built. And what a beautiful show.

“Mil gracias. I do hope you’re able to give this, our last season, a good send off, because let me tell you, it is a powerful one. It is just as compelling as ever with some imagery and themes I’ve never seen on television before. I’m profoundly proud of it.”

Vida airs in Australia on Stan.

Source: Variety

One Response

  1. Anyone watching Netflix will see a number of Mexican shows mostly concerning drug cartels.
    Mexico does seem to have a thriving TV industry if the number of episodes are any indication, actors and staff must work pretty hard too.
    Vida was attempting to change the stereotypical themes of these Mexican shows but still didn’t hide from the undercurrent of violence and the community underclass, Vida was well made television and cleverly used its explicit sexual content as an added bonus to get people watching, but at some point the story was going to have limitations unless it became a soap opera.
    Like so many shows with finite development potential it should have been made exclusively as a limited season series with a beginning, middle and end.

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