

In a shock development struggling English Premier League team AFC Richmond hires American football coach Ted Lasso as its new manager. Lasso knows nothing about soccer/football. With unshakable enthusiasm and positivity he rises to the challenge but little known to him there are forces within the club that don't want him to succeed.
Where to Watch Ted Lasso
Ted Lasso Ratings & Reviews
- JetscrmDecember 13, 2025Season three of Ted Lasso took a show that thrived on the messy, heartfelt interplay of traditional masculinity and human vulnerability, and quietly purged the former to make room for an immaculate vision of the latter. Ted, once a quietly stoic optimist who led through strength and humor, becomes a fountain of endless therapy-speak. Roy Kent, the snarling embodiment of unapologetic maleness, is bent into yoga poses and emotional compliance. Jamie, Colin, even Nate—every male arc either softens into sensitivity, pivots toward queer identity, or shrinks in deference to the women’s ascendance. Meanwhile, Keeley and Rebecca are elevated to flawless, untouchable heights: entrepreneurial queens whose triumphs leave the men orbiting like satellites, diminished and supportive. The women aren’t merely strong; they’re scripted as infallible, while the men are gently corrected out of their rougher edges. What began as a story about flawed people finding connection through football becomes a polished seminar on acceptance, where friction, banter, and unfiltered masculinity are treated as relics too problematic to keep. The warmth remains, but the soul—the specific alchemy of heartland grit and locker-room candor—evaporates. In chasing an idealized, frictionless world, the show lost the very tension that made it human. Progress shouldn’t require erasing half the human experience to celebrate the other.
- RolandMcdolanDecember 4, 2025for a show about soccer, this had me feelin every emotion in the book, phenominal
- cdev5July 28, 2025What a lovely story of kinship.
- DarlingInThePlexxOctober 2, 2025Okay, so full disclosure—Ted Lasso was not my pick. My fiancé begged me to watch it, and I went in pretty skeptical. But wow, I ended up really enjoying it. What I love is how grounded it feels. The stakes are real but not ridiculous. Problems don’t spiral into over-the-top melodrama or murder mysteries; instead, it’s about people navigating relationships, work, and personal struggles in a way that actually feels human. Conflicts resolve like they might in real life—messy, imperfect, but believable. And Ted himself? I joke that this show is basically “White Male Eat, Pray, Love.” A guy from middle America goes abroad, stumbles through his flaws, finds himself, and builds unexpected connections. It’s charming, heartwarming, and surprisingly insightful. But above all, it’s funny. Like, laugh-out-loud funny. And that’s the most important thing for me—it makes you feel good while also making you think a little.
- dravyamehtaApril 23, 2025I can’t watch it for some reason
- stevedr3November 25, 2024Just wonderful. The characters, the storyline, the feel good the sadness I thoroughly enjoyed every moment of this tv series



























