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Christopher Matamoros's avatar

I never used to cry. Like Patrick, not as a macho thing, I just didn't react emotionally to anything. However after my daughter was born, I became much more susceptible to quietly weeping when presented with emotional subject matter. Several episodes of Bluey have made me tear up, but I read a bit about this mega episode, so I thought I was prepared (spoiler: I was wrong). I was keeping it together as the sad song swelled towards the end of the episode, but then my five year old, who was laughing all throughout the episode but had suddenly gone quiet, turned around with tears in her eyes and yelled "I don't want them to move!" Seeing my little girl have such an emotional reaction was too much for me. Never thought I'd be sobbing through a kids cartoon with my daughter. Bluey really is special.

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zFUBARz's avatar

My brother passed away a couple weeks back, he's the one who told me to check out Bluey with my son years ago, his daughter is a year older, so he was already in the know, and Bluey was a daddy, daughter thing for them. Shame he didn't get to see this one, but I know his wife and daughter watched and cried their eyes out just like the rest of us. For me I think the bit that got to me wasn't the sadness of the move, or the kids, but the other storyline that was going on throughout. *Spoilers ahead* The zen nature of it all, the subtle and not so subtle tales of love and loss, like Chili's sister being pregnant, the classmate's parents finding each other, Grandpa coming back from his trip, of course the wedding/complications themselves, all of that.

And then in the end, the not so subtle point with the music, that all of life's hardships can be blunted, and all of life's joys can be heightened. if you have a trusted friend, or loved one to share those times with with. The loving supportive couples on display, to me were the real focus of the episode. They struggle, make mistakes, and bad choices sure, but in the end they are there for each other and their families and together they'll see how it works out. Of course given my own experiences in life I'm obviously a bit primed for that sort of interpretation.

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