
But how do the episodes stand up when ranking them from 100 through to 1? If you’re dying to find out the answer to that then today is your lucky day, as for the first ever time online every single episode of Nip/Tuck is about to be ranked from worst to best! Join Ben as he gives you his unique opinion and rankings in what is sure to be an interesting collection of rankings along the way! 100. From self-circumcisions through to Annie eating her hair, we have gone over every single classic moment the show has produced. We'll see you in syndication.It’s been nearly a decade since Christian and Sean last asked somebody to tell them what they don’t like about themselves, but here at The Oz Network we have brought the memories of Nip/Tuck back to life by becoming the first ever podcast to recap all 100 episodes of the classic Ryan Murphy show.

These people are going to keep doing the things they do, and that's okay. I like that nothing was melodramatic, and that no final lines were drawn anywhere. I wish the finale could have been more centered, and that the other bits and pieces could have been filtered out before now, but I rarely get what I want. That has nothing to do with this episode. And while I can't think of a recurring character that I actually wished good things for (even Liz is annoying now), I wish Portia de Rossi's character would have gotten some side-boob time. We've had some bad times, particularly mime times and crazy teddy bear lady times. Oh, Sean, we knew you'd be the one to look, you big softie! Final scene: Christian alerting a pretty lady that he's a plastic surgeon. Small talk is shared through an airport hallway, and a short goodbye. And after the sloppy reveal of Matt and Ava, there's a very understated and almost bland scene between Sean and Christian. Then Sean stares at the new desk sign, which now only reads "Troy/Cruz." Then Christian scrubs his hands alone, five o'clock shadow intact. And besides, you'd have nothing to come back to.Īnd a brief moment is shared between the two men. Sean: And in six months, when I'm pining for the glamour of Hollywood?Ĭhristian: We both know that's not going to happen. It's a somber moment, particularly in the exchange: Christian sees Sean's affection for Raphael and foresees a future where Sean realizes his dream of helping the underprivileged. Christian hands Sean two one-way plane tickets to Bucharest, from where Raphael was taken. He alerts Sean to the fact that the McNamara name is being removing from the business.

For once, Christian doesn't use malice or sarcasm to prove his point he's just clear. The next day, Christian sits Sean in the patient chair, and psychoanalyzes him. I hope John Hensley picks through his future roles with the finest of tooth combs. Matt, meanwhile, dupes Christian into giving him back his daughter, and then meets up with Ava as she flees the country. So away she goes, and Sean becomes entirely invested in this child.

After the surgery, Ava is shattered when she learns that Raphael's scars won't fully disappear. She agrees, and when she tells Matt, he doesn't believe it, and his wide eyes totally convey this. (Grr.fucking moron.) Christian then goes behind Matt's back and promises Ava the surgery, but only if she leaves Matt alone. Sean and Christian are bitter, even more so when Matt asks them to look after his own child while he accompanies Ava to Brazil to find a doctor for baby Raphael.

The episode actually begins with Matt returning from his wedding-halting tryst with Ava's leper-babynapping psycho self. Later on, there's a well-delivered introduction scene from one of those film efforts, involving many women, in which our cockarate master dies of a heart attack after he plants his seed. An aging Asian porn stud, slutty sluts hooked on each arm, is in to rid himself of a surgical scar left from heart surgery, to help his crossover to American XXX cinema. The hilarious throwaway patient plotline is as fleeting as any this season, so it's kind of a shame it made it to the finale, but so it goes.
