Audra McDonald as Liz Reddick in The Good Fight episode 1, Season 6.
Bianca Coleman24 March 2023

We say goodbye to The Good Fight - but this isn't the end

Even as Season 6 marks the end of an era, fans of this crazy legal dramedy will be pleased to know CBS has given a pilot order for a spinoff of The Good Fight and The Good Wife, titled Elsbeth, following Elsbeth Tascioni, played by Carrie Preston.

As a recurring character in the previous series, Elsbeth won us over with her apparent ditziness, which is a carefully calculated ploy to throw others off the scent of her courtroom and negotiating brilliance. In Season 6 of The Good Fight, she encounters a new character (and introducing such a fabulous new character at the 11th hour can only bode well for other spinoffs *crosses fingers*), Ri'Chard Lane, played by Andre Braugher (Brooklyn Nine-Nine) — a brilliant actor who can do serious but also doesn’t take himself too seriously. By the way, that’s Ri’Chard pronounced like “Rishaad”. He makes the mistake of underestimating Elsbeth.

André Braugher as Ri’Chard Lane in The Good Fight episode 2, Season 6 streaming on Showmax

Lane sweeps into Reddick & Associates as a new name partner installed by STR Laurie, the bosses upstairs. His entrance is as dramatic as his vast collection of spectacles with bright and flamboyant frames. He’s there to shake things up but Diane Lockhart (Christine Baranski) and Liz Reddick (Audra McDonald) are not going to make it easy for him. For a man used to blustering his way to desired results, this leaves him a bit bewildered at times. He also has a history with Liz’s late father, Carl (Louis Gossett Jr), whom you will recall was tainted by accusations of rape.

Jumping ahead to the series finale, it certainly looks like the door has been left open more than a crack for another spinoff with Diane and Marissa Gold (Sarah Steele) but show creators Michelle and Robert King denied this, saying it was just a way to finish things off in a tidy manner, with a carrot they have been dangling for a long time, to be fair.

Christine Baranski as Diane Lockhart in The Good Fight episode 1, Season 6.

In an interview with LA Times, Baranski said the series has a happy ending: “It’s ‘happy’ in that she’s [Diane] going to keep doing what she’s always done, which is to stay in character, pick herself up, accept that the world is dark and unjust. It’s called ‘The Good Fight’ and that’s what she’s done for 13 years. Diane was always trying to keep her balance in a crazy world, trying to keep sane, trying to make the right decisions — often not making the right decisions, but then reflecting on them and moving on. Is it happy? It’s happy for me in that it’s forward-moving, it’s active. And we can’t give up on our country and on women’s rights.”

Season 6 is mostly about Diane (with strong story arcs for the firm’s investigator, Jay, played by Nyambi Nyambi, and Marissa with a delightful return of Alan Cumming, her father). She’s experiencing deja vu and so are we, what with the birds flying into the windows in bloody splats. Diane is profoundly affected by current affairs and tries to make a clean break from slavishly following the news - which as we all know, can be very traumatic at times, as we struggle with the conflict of being informed and knowing what is going on in the world, and not wanting to be utterly overwhelmed by all its horrors and just get by with our heads in the sand.

Quite improbably, there are violent riots going on down in the streets below the law offices, which continue as a background for the entire series, and more likely serve as an ongoing motif, or a metaphor. The show had been relatively vague about the nature of the protests, reports Vulture, but it finally identifies them as an example of “accelerationism,” an effort to ignite racial tensions to trigger a race war and accelerate the breaking up of the government. The Good Fight, for all its wackiness, has been consistently on top of political tensions in the US, and unapologetically outspoken about its leftwing stance.

Christine Baranski as Diane Lockhart and John Slattery as Dr. Lyle Bettencourt in The Good Fight episode 6, Season 6 streaming on Showmax.

Via a VR game (so legit), Diane is given the details of a Dr Lyle Bettencourt, described as “a brilliant, sophisticated and sensitive physician who helps Diane through a crazy time”, according to The Hollywood Reporter. In his rooms, he administers a monitored therapeutic psychedelic drug followed by talk therapy. Nothing new for Diane, who previously microdosed mushrooms. Following the first treatment, “Diane's view of the world takes on a golden hue as she exits his office softly singing a few bars to Something's Coming from the musical West Side Story. She carries her feather-light mood down the street with her, past lines of police in riot gear and the incessant din of protests outside of her that never seems to let up,” says Salon

The doctor is played by John Slattery (Mad Men, for which he was nominated for an Emmy four times) and I’ll tell you this for free: I totally get Diane’s attraction to him. As much as the treatment gives her a warm fuzzy glow, it’s the doctor who completes the package. So much so, it even threatens Diane’s marriage to the equally sexy Kurt McVeigh (Gary Cole). It’s most unfair to have to choose between them.  

“In the wake of getting dumped by Diane in last week's penultimate episode, Kurt made a last-ditch attempt to win his wife back that began with him tendering his resignation at the NRA and concluded with him in an epic cardio duel with his chief romantic rival, Lyle,” says TV Line (link contains spoilers). 

Of the finale, AV Club says, ”It’s very much The Good Fight stripped down to its basic, surrealist trademarks, as the show wraps up with an examination of our present, more pessimistic cultural climate.” Spoilers here too. It will be strange to live in a world without The Good Fight, but you never know…

More like this

The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Africa on Showmax

Jojo on The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Africa reunion, social media backlash and more

Jojo opens up about the highly anticipated reunion for The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Africa, coming to Showmax on 20 and 27 February.

Original South Africa
The ‘Burbs on Showmax

The ‘Burbs S1

In this adaptation of the 1980s Tom Hanks dark comedy, a couple moves back to the husband's hometown, only to face a cul-de-sac shrouded in mystery.

First
MaBlerh as the host ofThe Real Housewives of Durban Season 4 reunion on Showmax

MaBlerh to host the first-ever The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Africa reunion

MaBlerh will host the first-ever reunion for The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Africa, set to air in two parts in February 2026.

Original South Africa
mizani_showmax

Daudi Anguka on Mizani, organ trafficking and why the coast is finally taking centre stage in Kenya's film industry

Award-winning filmmaker Daudi Anguka opens up about his first Showmax original, tackling organ trafficking and the rise of Kenyan coastal cinema.

OriginalMade in Kenya
Landman S2 on Showmax

Landman S1-2

Taylor Sheridan's Landman stars Billy Bob Thornton. In the heart of Texas, roughnecks and billionaires collide in the get-rich-quick oil industry.

The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip - Africa on Showmax

Christall dishes on The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip

Christall Kay on the drama of The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Africa, and what it was like to reunite with Evodia. All episodes on Showmax.

Original South Africa
Mizani is on Showmax

Mizani S1

From the award-winning director of Mvera and Pete comes a searing new series set in the dark underbelly of Kenya’s coastal city.

OriginalMade in Kenya
I Love LA S1 on Showmax

I Love LA S1

Toxic friendships are taken to a whole new level in this off-the-wall comedy, as a co-dependent friend group navigates life and love in Los Angeles.

First

Single Kiasi S4, now streaming

Reckless S1, now streaming