The Sign - Most Misunderstood Ending in Bluey (Deeper Meanings Explained)

แชร์
ฝัง
  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ก.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 656

  • @Pugly
    @Pugly  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +99

    Check out Joe Brumm’s thoughts on The Sign: www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-abctx-15e9c0d
    This was one of the more fun videos I’ve made in a while because of all the fun symbolism I got to talk about as well as all the messages that the episode offers. I hope you buddies enjoy!
    Become a Member:
    - PC: th-cam.com/channels/DZNUb6vcwQT2G4qXz_VzUw.htmljoin
    - Mobile: www.patreon.com/TheUglyPugly?fan_landing=true
    Twitch Channel: www.twitch.tv/puglystreams
    My Bluey Twitter: twitter.com/HeelersFridge

    • @SilverScribe85
      @SilverScribe85 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I see the ending as happy because while moving to the city WOULD present better opportunities for his family, Bandit realized how much the house meant to his family and felt such a big decision was...too big of a change for everyone

    • @laceyshanebalina4320
      @laceyshanebalina4320 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I’m l

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@SilverScribe85 I am cuttign and posting my theory why it's really a sad endign but that in reality there really aren't endings
      One theory about something very important that people are misinterpeting
      So my basic take of the message behind things is that there really isn't any endings. Most characters seem to experience monumental changes but the endings are all ambiguous and the future is somewhat uncertain. The Chinese Storybook basically says that.
      Even with that though like always has points of critical change. Another messages is that you cant control that and you need to understand things change and deal with that.
      Many people seem to think the ending of the episode is a happy one but I am going to make an argument that it's the worst possible ending and that at least one character knows that.
      At the end we see Bandit approach the Sign and grit his teeth with a look of anger and frustration and struggle with it before eventually ripping it out of the ground and the other Heelers are ecstatically happy. Cut to t e end. Lots of people see this as a very happy ending but I think it's meant to infer it's the opposite and I will give reasons why
      1) Bandit is in a job with limited chances to progress.
      2) He's been offered one such opportunity but it requires him to move to another city.
      3) We've seen him in a number of episodes seemingly weighing up an important decision
      4) We then finally see him having weighed everything up choosing to take the job.
      5) Then the whining starts. The kids have no understanding of the greater issues - they are kids - kids are self centered and they only see a move as something they dont want and Chili like most Mums hates seeing her kids sad.
      6) Bandit tries to get through this
      7) Things go a bit astray and Bandit finally succumbs tot he pressure and rips out the sign. His look of anger and frustration isn't at the thought of moving though it's because he's pretty certain what he's doing in this moment is the wrong decision.
      - Depending on the situation with his current job he's either condemned himself to be stuck in it going forward or perhaps unemployment and his skills aren't exactly in high demand
      - Even if another job comes up in the future the right time to uproot the family was when the girls were in a lower age group of school and could adjust easier. Once they hit High School moving would be incredibly difficult
      - There may never be an opportunity in Brisbane
      - Those same girls that have been begging him not to move are probably going to come to him sometime in the future wanting a Car or to go to a more expensive Higher learning institution or wanting him to pay for a wedding and maybe he wont be able to afford those things because in this moment he has chosen their short term happiness over everyones long term financial security. What's he going to tell them - Sorry Bluey and Bingo but remember when you begged me not to move when you were puppies - well we are a bit screwed now because of that.
      So Bandit doesn't particularly want to move but feels it's the best choice and he struggled weighing everything up before making that choice and now a setback has seen him placed in a position where he is going to make a different choice that he knows is probably the wrong one but he looks back at his family, he looks at his wife and his two adorable little sociopaths who have no concept of short term pain for long-term gain and he knows this choice will make them happy but that it's probably not the best choice for either him or them. He then makes the easiest choice and pulls out the sign. Everyone is happy except Bandit who knows he's probably done something stupid.
      Which brings us to the 3rd major thread in the episode - "We'll see"
      Maybe it will all work out and it will prove to be the best choice - maybe it wont but it's been made now - what has happened has happened. Theres no use for regrets - the choice has been made and now they will all have to deal with the way things play out. It's just another theme of the episode playing out. Whatever choice is made good or bad - it's happened now and they will deal with whatever comes from that..
      Thats why Joe said it's a bit of a non ending because life doesn't really offer endings

  • @therealopaartist
    @therealopaartist 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2266

    Calypso literally said that stories give us happy endings because real life gives you sad ones. That should’ve been A SIGN of what what going to happen.

    • @naomigreen9749
      @naomigreen9749 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

      Good point!

    • @Lovehandels
      @Lovehandels 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      Spot on!

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

      Bucky voice casting highlights there really aren't endings either. If you dont know he was a mega succesful comedian, radio and tv host who fell in love with a beautiful soap star. Sounds idyllic and a happy ending. By the time thye married though she had already been disgnosed with fatal breast cancer. She died a year later. Sad ending. Then he marries a new wife and they have a daughter - happy ending. Thats life. It goes on and changes and change can be good or bad but IT WILL happen. The Heelers haven't moved house now but that doesn't mean everything will work out badly or well - what will happen will happen and it will be up to them to deal with whatever happens good or ill.

    • @bl3343
      @bl3343 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Then why not let the bird live in Copycat?

    • @AlmostArrynt
      @AlmostArrynt 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      @@bl3343 That wasn't the ending of the story. That was the topic of the story about learning to cope and deal with loss, the ending was a happy one.

  • @NobodyC13
    @NobodyC13 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1231

    Right now in this day and age, I'm growing tired of online discourse being incapable of tolerating ambiguity and ambivalence. Everything has to be unanimously good and unanimously bad. I think it's good for Bluey to teach kids (and adults) that not everything has easy answers and easy solutions; it just is.

    • @lucifie
      @lucifie 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      'Gone With The Wind' has ambiguity and ambivalence--that's what makes it such a good story--it just is!

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Check out the voice casting for Bucky. It sums up how there really aren't any good or bad endings - there really aren't any endings at all. Rove was a mega successful comedian, radio and Tv host who fell in love with a beautiful soap opera star. Happy Ending. By the tiem they marry she has already been given a fatal diagnosis and dies a year later - Sad ending. He remarries and they have a daughter - happy ending. The truth is it all just keeps going - it's not a story where it truly has a definitive end - life keeps going and you take what you get. Much like Rusty's dad's voice actor, having links tot he military, early childhood learning, SID's tragedy and charity work and mega successful childrens entertainment there are many layers going on. In both cases I am certain their casting isn't an accident

    • @smileyeagle1021
      @smileyeagle1021 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Except, the episode does show an easy answer and solution, pull out the for sale sign and everyone has a happy ending. Yes, Bandit asks if he made a mistake and Chilly says that he probably did, but it's such a quick throw away line that I wouldn't have caught it if there weren't video essays tearing the episode apart line by line to analyze it.

    • @greglynas52
      @greglynas52 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That’s what I love about the end of Fahrenheit 451. That ending is just so good.

    • @ShadowWingTronix
      @ShadowWingTronix 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@smileyeagle1021 On the other hand he agonizes about it throughout the story, and even in Ghostbasket as the realtor he helps the grannies keep their home.

  • @ThePhantomCavalier
    @ThePhantomCavalier 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +478

    Can we talk about how The Sign is also about Bluey growing up ans rites of passage. She's allowed to sit up front for the first time, she's learning to accept change, and she's telling stories to help those younger than her process their grief.

    • @soniccookie655
      @soniccookie655 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +76

      And the moment where she sits on the steps wearing headphones, thinking. She looks like she has very mixed feelings. That’s something that happens more as you get older.

    • @ratter1023
      @ratter1023 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Very true!

    • @alyssabullock6421
      @alyssabullock6421 26 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@soniccookie655 The headphone scene made me think she was finding new methods to cope. A lot of younger adults/teenagers can relate to using music as an escape from the world, and that could be what Bluey was doing.

  • @epicbirdy42069
    @epicbirdy42069 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +846

    I think "Army" helps show kids that moving is okay. Jack says he's very nervous when going to school but immediately fits in. He's not only good representation, he's a hope for kids leaving everything they knew.

    • @aromaladyellie
      @aromaladyellie 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

      Yes, but also, Jack wasn't leaving a happy place with lots of friends like Bluey and Bingo. He describes himself as an outcast. He also didn't move house, he just moved schools.

    • @epicbirdy42069
      @epicbirdy42069 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      It’s never implied that he stays in the same house. Even then, he’s in a completely new situation. I know because I was one of those kids. When I was 8, We moved to a suburb 15 miles I due to it having better disability services for kids. Even then, Jack’s family is still putting himself in an alien situation and he found Rusty(and Bluey). A lot of kids, when moving are worried about what lies ahead and uncertainty can be very scary. I don’t Jack knew of Rusty when he first got into that car but it worked out in the end.

    • @tranatkikomi6873
      @tranatkikomi6873 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      @@aromaladyellieJack’s family is from Victoria, the license plates and Jack’s dad still not knowing the area without GPS shows they didn’t just change schools.

    • @MrWarners14
      @MrWarners14 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      From my understanding, Jack didn’t seem to have any friends or really anybody (aside from family) who would ever give him a chance until he went to the new school. It’s implied he was bullied and even treated poorly by his old teachers in different schools if his sister copying those words is anything to go by.
      The Sign by comparison is starkly different. The Heelers have friends, extended family and a support system for them. Moving away from that only for Bandit to potentially suffer from mass lay-offs would’ve not only been all for nothing, but also would’ve brought long term harm to the family and serious trust issues to the children.
      They may deal with similar ideas but are vastly different in practice.

    • @sarmajere2866
      @sarmajere2866 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I like to think that Jack is like me as a kid (smart, but with physical delays, to the point I never learned how to write more than my name, because I physically CAN’T, couldn’t skip or run or do anything like that). In one school year, when I was about seven , I got moved around to several classrooms at a few schools in my district based on who had programs that the school thought would help me. Now, during this time I was being moved between Kindergarten, first and second grades, in various special Ed programs while they tried to accommodate my needs. I did miss basic math lessons for most of that year, which really did a number on my math abilities and it did not help that I was undiagnosed with dyscalculia and on the autism spectrum, which everyone thought was ADD with other delays (they did think it was weird that ADD and ADHD meds made me hyper, but in those days only the kids with really high support needs, and rarely girls, got diagnosed with autism. I would have been diagnosed with what used to be called Asperger’s syndrome back in the day, when the label existed). Anyway, I got moved around a LOT, and it was a really bad time of my life, so when I finally got settled in a classroom with appropriate support, I managed to do really well for that year. I imagine Jack as being in similar circumstances, like moving to a new school but not necessarily a new home at the same time. He really resonates with me, so I read that into it, but I’m not sure how special ed works in Australia or in Steiner/Montessori type education (I do think I may have done well in one had it been a style more commonly known about in the 80’s-90’s).

  • @sleeping_asher
    @sleeping_asher 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +248

    I just realised that the whole moving and new job situation might be the reason Bandit was so stressed and lost in thought in earlier episodes of this season. For example the stickbird one

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

      Totally agree with this. I actually think he's frustrated and angry at the end of this not at the sign but at the fact he's choosing to rip it out and not move but he's thought it through and knows thats probably the wrong choice.

    • @rakino4418
      @rakino4418 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      ​@@alphaomega2117 when his older brother (the groom) says he's moving to Queensland Bandit says "Aren't you worried you're making a mistake?" And the reply is "You worry too much."

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      @@rakino4418 True. The thing is are other people not worrying enough?

    • @uget-uget
      @uget-uget หลายเดือนก่อน

      yaaah

    • @DeathnoteBB
      @DeathnoteBB 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Oh my god :0

  • @Nutellacat
    @Nutellacat 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1186

    it's both a happy and sad ending, happy for the heelers but sad for bucky who didn’t sell their house.

    • @Snarl_Marx
      @Snarl_Marx 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +207

      I choose to believe that Bucky was the realtor for the house the sheep dogs ended up buying lol

    • @TheAllSeeingEye2468
      @TheAllSeeingEye2468 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +55

      ​@@Snarl_MarxHe'll be fine also he's the one that made stop drawing so screw him

    • @Bashuraptor
      @Bashuraptor 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      He was 6. He definitely didn't know it would have that effect ​@@TheAllSeeingEye2468

    • @plaidzebra5526
      @plaidzebra5526 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      @@TheAllSeeingEye2468 what do you mean "he's the one that made stop drawling?" Can you elaborate please

    • @TheAllSeeingEye2468
      @TheAllSeeingEye2468 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      @@plaidzebra5526 I'm the EP "dragon" bandits flashback scene

  • @comfortablespaces
    @comfortablespaces 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I truly loved the episode because it seemed that Bandit learned that family and community are more important than more money. He was about to uproot his family from aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents, friends, and neighbors for more money. And so often in life our kids tell us, “but we don’t need that stuff.” And it was beautiful to watch the family to go against what may be more popular in culture, the desire for more things, to end up with the people that matter most instead. I thought it was a powerful storyline

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You could also tell he himself wasn’t so keen on the move. Having more money is great and all, but the sacrifices to be made for it don’t always make it worth it. Don’t forget Chilli was in on it too believing it’d be good for the family.

  • @Nutellacat
    @Nutellacat 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +625

    calypso it's right, let the ending be a happy one guys life is sad already!!

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      I think the point is there really isn't an ending though. Thats why Bucky's voice casting is important - it's someone who literally if you tried to put an ending at certain given points it's super happy, super tragic and then super happy again. If you dont know he was a super successful comedian, radio and tv host who fell in love with beautiful soap opera star - happy - by the time they marry she's already been given the fatal breast cancer diagnosis and dies a year later - tragic - but life goes on - me marries again and they have a daughter - happy. The truth is there really aren't any endings but things will change.

  • @gd3741
    @gd3741 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +101

    as a kid who was forced to move every few years, I love the ending of the sign. its healing to see them get to make the choice to stay. to see this sweet family not have to go through the experience of being forced to move. it's the kind of episode I wish I had as a kid so in that moment I could live out that selfish wish fulfilment that meant we didn't have to move again that my whole family would have been able to relate to and connect over.

    • @kyoyameganebereznoff
      @kyoyameganebereznoff 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      My experience with moving was kind of traumatic. “Little t” trauma, but still very emotionally difficult for me. My whole life was there. All my memories were there. The house and yard and garden and my climbing tree felt like my friends I was leaving behind.
      The end of The Sign makes me feel really happy.

    • @gd3741
      @gd3741 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@kyoyameganebereznoff ay you get it! It felt so emotionally healing to see them get the outcome I always dreamed off

    • @midgetwthahacksaw
      @midgetwthahacksaw 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Same for me! It was very traumatic and difficult and I still feel those feelings as an adult. It was the ending i never got but always wanted!

    • @kiranerysegordon5485
      @kiranerysegordon5485 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yeah. We had to move too. My parents were getting divorced because my mom just so happens to be possessed by an evil spirit making her look narcissistic and stuff, but mainly she hit me too many times near where I was hurting because she thought I wasn't hurting, but she also did things that was best for us like keeping the house clean inside and out and making sure we did our homework and finished school although I was the only one that didn't finish because of this disease I was born with. My 3rd oldest brother was too, but God gave him a miracle in middle school so he still has the disease but isn't getting crises anymore which I'm happy about for him, but I wish I didn't have to deal with this disease either... Anyways, this stupid judge made me live with her. She ended up living with her mom since Dad kicked her out because of the BS that the spirit made her do. Well I think it was the spirit... The judge thought she was punishing me, but hitting a child isn't punishment, especially when they aren't lying! I have NEVER lied about when I was in pain because I knew that bad things would happen if I did, and yet those same bad things happened anyways, why? It's like it doesn't matter what we say or do like we are just meant to suffer for the God of Chaos' enjoyment 😡 As long as we follow the rules of the universe aka nature, we'll be fine... in the afterlife, but during life... It's nothing but pain and suffering almost all the time for us good ppl while the bad ones only get to suffer a lot before they die and then suffer in the afterlife or don't depending on what else they did via the universe's rules. That's right. Killers can go to Heaven. The gays and trans can't because they are going against the rules of nature but there's nothing bad about killing because that's what we do to eat plants and animals. Yes, plants are alive. They can even communicate and feel pain. There's videos on it. Take that vegans! Plus, ppl who eat meat tend to live longer than vegans because meat is hiding something you can't find in plants that all living things that are carnivores or omnivores need to live long. This comment was not originally meant to go against vegans, but it's not my fault they need to be taught the truth for their own good like the rest of humanity. Also, my intuition and instincts are better than everyone else's because I just so happen to be the Savior and many more good things that tie in to help me as Savior like being the smartest and wisest Being and the strongest first made angel and more! Honestly, I don't want it. I'd rather have just been a messenger or some other type of angel that stays in the spiritual realm in Heaven... Problem is, I'm the only soul closest to the kind of personality that was given to Jesus despite the fact that there is no soul with said personality. I literally just said that Jesus isn't what the Bible says he is, but in a different way.
      I went off on a tangent. Sorry. Anyways.
      I was forced to live with mom and grandmere but her apartment complex was too fking quiet and got me irritated but once we moved out and into another complex, it was too loud and got me beyond furious not to mention that the entire complex was filled with negative (hurts me) and evil energy(makes me uncomfortable) and for some reason there were a lot of storms and near an airport and ever since I got there, there was already two shootouts and one girl(which I didn't heard so my dad told me because it was on the news, just like the shootout at my 3rd oldest brother's and friend's graduation across the street from the theater in this highschool my 2 oldest brother was at) shot herself trying to figure out how it works because all but like two parents there(my mom and some random dad) are a bunch of egotistic, narcissistic dumb@sses... Also, one time after I left and went back living with dad, I went back to mom's for something like a birthday party at my third grandma's house or something I stayed for a couple of days at her apartment home/room... There was another shootout ;-; So it was too much for my extremely sensitive six senses and I didn't want a stray shot hurting me since I can't be killed since this is the last reincarnation us Chosen Ones have and we're too important to die. Somehow, it is always the right amount of quietness and "loud" ness wherever dad would go like he was that guy that had good things happen to him more than bad things despite being extremely kind. Maybe that's the thing. You have to be kind with no hate whatsoever 😅 Well that's extra hard for me, especially since the Lyrica makes me irritated and angry. Almost killed my mom once because of it and also dad and I thought I was able to leave once I turned 18 but it was 20 or until I finished school. No I didn't get any blood. I never do :/ But anyways, I cheated the system and I don't cheat. Not on purpose anyways. I left right before I turned 20(like a month or two before it) and I never finished school and mom let me :) I blame God for giving me this disease. I wouldn't have ever gotten behind if it wasn't for the disease and how stupid, selfish and greedy everyone else is, and it's not my fault the Bibles were translated wrong and then messed with by demons and demon controlled humans in the process. That's right. Both Testaments are wrong. Well, partially wrong. There are things here and there that are true. Like Noah's Ark except that he and his family weren't the only ones that survived The Flood because there were ppl on the continents of today even before The Flood happened so Noah may or may not have gotten a warm welcome from the natives... Also, Jesus was put in Mary like that but by the God of Destruction and was never God's son. Jesus did do and say what he did to get ppl hooked, but it was all a lie 🤬 Now he's gonna get everyone killed and put in H3ll including the Christians that believed him 😢 Those aren't the only stories but I can't go on. I never read the entire Bible, just things we were taught in Bible study and service. I still plan on reading it all, but God forced me to leave the school earlier than I wanted, so I left without it because I wasn't sure when I was leaving. I left thinking I would go back at least once only to never go back again and I couldn't even get any extra work done either during those times I was still actually in the school. It was partially online but we had books called Paces so we could work at our own pace and wherever we go, but in that last year in the first quarter, He made me not do any work whatsoever. Now I have to find a way to get better so I can go back and get my Bible so I don't waste any money unnecessarily despite being expensive 🙄 and leavey phone number to my friends since some of them don't have phones and some do and I don't have their phone numbers for the ones that do because we aren't allowed to have our phones there so some either leave it at home while others take it with them to put it in a box and come back for it as school lets out. One time I took my tablet and forgot it was in my bag, so it stayed there the whole entire 7 hours of school😅 It happened twice actually LOL! Our school starts at 9 for assembly (or maybe it was 8), 10 for the work and ends at 3.
      I still wish to die.

    • @Window4503
      @Window4503 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@kyoyameganebereznoffMoving is generally on the list of traumatic experiences for kids. Don’t underestimate the importance of stability and familiarity in your childhood. That matters too.

  • @jonathanbarton834
    @jonathanbarton834 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +100

    Series 3 starts with bedroom, where Bluey and Bingo think they'll be better off moving into separate rooms but end up realising that they will actually be better off staying together in the same room and ends with the same situation but for Bandit and Chilli, perfect bookends to the series and shows how well thought out the writing is of the series as a whole.

    • @oliverg6864
      @oliverg6864 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Omg amazing!! I never would have thought of that, so true.

  • @BUGFlower413
    @BUGFlower413 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +200

    that expression of pure anger from Bandit against the sign is what always gets me, i love so much how at the end the ones that show the strongest emotions are Bandit and Chili that had been holding it together for so long for their daughters
    also i think the issue is how many people didn't understand Calypso's message to Bluey from the beginning. life will already gives us enough sad endings, and also risking it all for the happiness of the ones you love like Bandit did i think is a message just as if not even more powerful

    • @saul8510
      @saul8510 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Agreed , love how he looks so pissed at that dumb sign and how he pushes it with all his might just for his family happyness.

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I'm cutting and positing my theory because I dont think he's angry at the sign but that he's angry at himself because he's going to rip it out. It's longish but hopefully you'll understand why I think what I think.
      So my basic take of the message behind things is that there really isn't any endings. Most characters seem to experience monumental changes but the endings are all ambiguous and the future is somewhat uncertain. The Chinese Storybook basically says that.
      Even with that though like always has points of critical change. Another messages is that you cant control that and you need to understand things change and deal with that.
      Many people seem to think the ending of the episode is a happy one but I am going to make an argument that it's the worst possible ending and that at least one character knows that.
      At the end we see Bandit approach the Sign and grit his teeth with a look of anger and frustration and struggle with it before eventually ripping it out of the ground and the other Heelers are ecstatically happy. Cut to the end. Lots of people see this as a very happy ending but I think it's meant to infer it's the opposite and I will give reasons why
      1) Bandit is in a job with limited chances to progress.
      2) He's been offered one such opportunity but it requires him to move to another city.
      3) We've seen him in a number of episodes seemingly weighing up an important decision
      4) We then finally see him having weighed everything up choosing to take the job.
      5) Then the whining starts. The kids have no understanding of the greater issues - they are kids - kids are self centered and they only see a move as something they dont want and Chili like most Mums hates seeing her kids sad.
      6) Bandit tries to get through this
      7) Things go a bit astray and Bandit finally succumbs to the pressure and rips out the sign. His look of anger and frustration isn't at the thought of moving though it's because he's pretty certain what he's doing in this moment is the wrong decision.
      - Depending on the situation with his current job he's either condemned himself to be stuck in it going forward or perhaps unemployment and his skills aren't exactly in high demand
      - Even if another job comes up in the future the right time to uproot the family was when the girls were in a lower age group of school and could adjust easier. Once they hit High School moving would be incredibly difficult
      - There may never be an opportunity in Brisbane
      - Those same girls that have been begging him not to move are probably going to come to him sometime in the future wanting a Car or to go to a more expensive Higher learning institution or wanting him to pay for a wedding and maybe he wont be able to afford those things because in this moment he has chosen their short term happiness over everyones long term financial security. What's he going to tell them - Sorry Bluey and Bingo but remember when you begged me not to move when you were puppies - well we are a bit screwed now because of that.
      So Bandit doesn't particularly want to move but feels it's the best choice and he struggled weighing everything up before making that choice and now a setback has seen him placed in a position where he is going to make a different choice that he knows is probably the wrong one but he looks back at his family, he looks at his wife and his two adorable little sociopaths who have no concept of short term pain for long-term gain and he knows this choice will make them happy but that it's probably not the best choice for either him or them. He then makes the easiest choice and pulls out the sign. Everyone is happy except Bandit who knows he's probably done something stupid.
      Which brings us to the 3rd major thread in the episode - "We'll see"
      Maybe it will all work out and it will prove to be the best choice - maybe it wont but it's been made now - what has happened has happened. Theres no use for regrets - the choice has been made and now they will all have to deal with the way things play out. It's just another theme of the episode playing out. Whatever choice is made good or bad - it's happened now and they will deal with whatever comes from that..
      Thats why Joe said it's a bit of a non ending because life doesn't really offer endings

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@saul8510 Is he angry with the sign or angry with himself for giving in and ripping it out? If you look at my post in this thread you will see why I think it's actually the opposite of what you think. I might be wrong though.

    • @BUGFlower413
      @BUGFlower413 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@alphaomega2117 yeah you do have really good points there actually, none of the endings are actually endings, most got a happy conclusion to their arcs, yet not their stories as a whole which was definitely made on purpose.
      also to some degree i also think Bandit was angry at himself, yet not bc of ripping out the sign. he didn't seem to like the idea of moving either, not only bc his family was sad about it, but bc he didn't want to leave either and was just bottling that up until the end. i suspect he most likely no longer has a job, so that might be a thing he will have to worry for now, getting a new one or getting his old one back, yet knowing Bandit and Chili and how they prefer their daughters happiness over anything else, i feel it's a sacrifice both Bandit and Chili are more than willing to make
      either way i think you might like to watch the newest episode of the end of season 3 btw hun, i won't spoil why tho ^u^

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@BUGFlower413 Thanks. Yeah I definitely think at some level Bandit doesn't really want to move - thats why we see him distracted a few times in the season as he weight up whether to do it or not. I do think he's unhappy with changing his decision though because he knows it's probably a mistake. With your points about sacrificing for their daughters happiness - are they though? Is staying a sacrifice or a cop out. The girls are small children and will adapt quickly enough. He knows that. Is he jsut using that as an excuse? Is making them happy in one small moment worth potentially making life harder for them long term? I think all that stuff is going through Bandit's head in that moment.
      Yeah looking forward to seeing the next episode - life has kind of intervened right now though.
      Have a good one.

  • @ratter1023
    @ratter1023 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

    Bandit was absolutely *terrified* of making the decision to stay instead of going after a better paying job. He knows well it will be hard. He's not like Radley who's been living alone working that oil rig for years now. He has children and those children need to be provided for, they need doctor appointments, they need school supplies, etc. It's a decision of either break his family's hearts and leave, or stay and be in way worse position financially for honestly who knows how long, BUT his 3 girls will be happy. Nobody in the family really wanted to move. Maybe for Bandit it was just a sad reality, but Chilli and the kids were so distressed. I believe Bandit had job problems way back in Stickbird and all that lead to him resigning. Who knows what the future will bring? You can see in Bandit's eyes how scared he is when he's pulling out that sign. But the universe *clearly* was telling him something with that last phone call, the last moment to turn back. I'm so glad that he listened. It will be tough, but it will be worth it.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I could tell he wasn’t very keen on moving either cuz he himself loves that home too.

    • @agckirozx4902
      @agckirozx4902 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      In the end of "surprise", His two daughter grown up, and both have a happy Life, so Bandit at the end, the risk of not accept the job with better income was totally worthy.

  • @plaidzebra5526
    @plaidzebra5526 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +266

    I would like to point out that I knew they weren't going to move because going into it I remembered Bingo's best friend Lila showed up in Season 2, Episode 8 | Daddy Drop Off. And at the end it showed through still photo's how close Bingo and Lila are as friends as they got older, up to when they graduated from school. I always thought that was a very important detail and surprised that no one's brought that up. Maybe because Lila doesn't make an appearance in The Sign, but when Bingo finally understands that their moving, she quickly asks if Lila is coming.

    • @SAMMYTASTISCH
      @SAMMYTASTISCH 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      This scene could as well have been a "dream" or "fantasy" sequence. So I guess people didnt think too hard about it

    • @soniccookie655
      @soniccookie655 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      Also Bluey visiting that same campsite when she’s older, though they could have traveled back. I think those “visions” are probably canon.

    • @KodyCrimson
      @KodyCrimson 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Those are flashforwards. And if they DID move, there are ways it could have still worked. But I do feel that was the biggest indicator that they wouldn't, even though it doesn't change how hard it hits. You can know the end of the story and still be affected by what's before it.

    • @retii5047
      @retii5047 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I saw one guy reacting and he remembered and said "if they move it won't be canon and I'd cry"

    • @justanautisticnerd8969
      @justanautisticnerd8969 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      ​@@SAMMYTASTISCH considering the episode was basically about the butterfly effect. Probably not.

  • @jeremyblade7561
    @jeremyblade7561 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

    They may not have moved, but the way the house was empty at the end still reminds of when I did move as a child. Everyone sitting on the floor because the furniture is buried, eating fast food because the dishes are too.
    Swap the rug for a plush carpet and the food for Subway and thats my family.
    Imo. Thay managed to make staying still feel like a fresh start, and still remind me of that nervousness/excitement of finding out where you're going to live now.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Wow good way to look at it.

  • @VoidWalkerOblivion
    @VoidWalkerOblivion 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +36

    When I was about eight years old, my parents sat me down and asked for my opinion on moving because of a job offer my dad got. We'd be going from Sydney to Adelaide. Closer to *their* families (who were in Melbourne), but an infinite distance away from everything I'd ever known. I was treated like a grown-up in return with my opinion valued and considered instead of dismissed, but had to deal with the uncertainty of knowing what MIGHT happen and without any idea of what that would mean.
    Getting to be a part of that decision - to be able to really think and *have* to express my *thoughts* instead of my impulses - was an incredibly potent thing that I think really influenced the kind of person I became. Being able to say I didn't want to move, but having to explain why like I was a grownup. The idea of moving was something that I'd seen in my books and cartoons. The idea of having to sit there and think about it, to make a decision about it, and then have the uncertainty of not knowing whether I'd be at the same school next semester - that was not something I had any media to help me process.
    In the end, we didn't move. People wanted a different message to the one we got because they think its what always happens. But not moving is also a very common story; and its an important message we don't see nearly as much.

  • @Zodiastarmann
    @Zodiastarmann 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +101

    another thing someone pointed out is that if the Heelers moved then there would be a huge continuity error with the ending to Daddy drop-off showing Bingo and Lila growing up together in the same school

    • @littleevsamoyed7130
      @littleevsamoyed7130 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      I love how we saw Greeny the balloon from mom school

    • @arioctober
      @arioctober 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I wanted them to move but I knew they wouldn't because of that scene!!

  • @lackedpuppet9022
    @lackedpuppet9022 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +410

    My favorite tie-in to the rest of the series through this episode is seeing how far Bingo and Lila's friendship has come. From seeing them meet in Daddy Dropoff, and seeing Bingo be happy for her in Pass the Parcel, to just a couple episodes earlier playing in Slide (and bringing Flappy the Butterfly into the series.)
    Bingo realizing she'd have to leave Lila was the part that really hit me in The Sign, and I'm excited to see if you mention this aspect in your deep dive!

    • @Toppy_From_Scratch
      @Toppy_From_Scratch 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Cave?!

    • @bubblehead4270
      @bubblehead4270 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      But they did show them growing up together didn’t they? That felt like the clue that they’d stay.

    • @lackedpuppet9022
      @lackedpuppet9022 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      @@bubblehead4270 That's true, but it wouldn't have been impossible for the creators to change direction and retroactively write that out.

    • @bubblehead4270
      @bubblehead4270 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@lackedpuppet9022 that’s true too

    • @Cosmic-Crusader321
      @Cosmic-Crusader321 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      Me: I'm Ok if the Heelers Movie
      "Bingo will have to leave Lila"
      Me: Nevermind

  • @michaelwilson4010
    @michaelwilson4010 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +65

    This show has been an absolute perfect masterpiece. No show I've seen in my 40+ years on this earth has captured my emotions and imagination nearly as well as Bluey has. Like I said before, I was legit crying with Chilly when she tackle-hugged Bandit.

  • @pap64
    @pap64 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Here's my take as to why some call the endings in the special "weak"; up to now , Bluey has done an excellent job of explaining to everyone that even if bad stuff happens, life goes on, and you can continue to grow and obtain happiness. It was cathartic because it was realistic but uplifting especially to an adult audience. So when the show gave us "The Sign" and gave us seemingly endless happy endings (Brandy being pregnant, Bob not being dead, Frisky getting married and not moving etc), it felt alienating because usually there is a "BUT" that balances everything out. Audiences feel seen by Bluey, and when the characters face similar obstacles and learn from them, we feel vindicated.
    One thing I read and hear is that they made the concept of moving away seem like a scary, sad thing that was a missed learning opportunity for people to cope with change.
    But in my honest opinion, I feel that audiences have become to used to seeing themselves in the characters and situations of Bluey that they forget that they are also unique characters that have their set developments according to the show's original writers and creators, and should be respected. The fact that all that Brandy wanted was a baby and she got it was met with so much criticism I feel it was people projecting too much and forcing their perfect ending for Brandy. Not saying that these ideas are bad as art is about subjective interpretation, but people saying the show lost some of its value because its endings didn't fit with their perceived notions of the show is going a bit too far, and feel that we can both relate to the show and then let the show take its course story wise.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Exactly it. People are projecting themselves on them and when it doesn’t go their way, they feel so jealous and envious that they don’t like it so much anymore. That’s just not fair.

  • @rredy
    @rredy 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    I agree with all of this, but I would not like the expected ending of the Heelers moving away. The culmination point was just too intense to not make something snap. The whole episode was building up to them realizing that they should stay, because giving someone a happier life is more than a better job. All the time they prefered to stay with the community and the better pay didn't really matter that much for them.
    It's overall a perfectly executed ending, smashing all my expectations and beyond that. Seeing the relief in their eyes makes me very VERY emotional. The ending is my favorite scene in all of Bluey, it's the most meaningful and the most filled with emotion one out there (Only rivaled by Camping's ending lol)

  • @iferren
    @iferren 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    It also give's meaning of the stickbird episode. Maybe that was the reason Bandit was stressed.

    • @arioctober
      @arioctober 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      OMG NO KIDDING!!!

  • @eric988
    @eric988 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    This episode was pretty impactful for me. The whole way through, I kept comparing it to something that had happened to my family. When I was younger, my dad was able to get a job in another state. We were all devastated that we were going to have to move. My dad was in the other state, and my mom was home with us trying to convince us of the new opportunities and adventures we'd have. over a couple weeks, we got used to the idea of moving, and even began to accept and enjoy the idea of this new adventure. We were all packed, and the house was sold. My dad then found out some shady things the company was doing, and he decided to turn away from it completely. My parents were miraculously able to rebuy our house. We were sad to not be able to move, but we were also happy. I guess we never know if something is going to be good or bad, until we actually do something. My dad had lost his job, and we didn't know what would happen to us. It was an unsure time for us all. Money was tight, and my dad was stuck working several jobs over the next few months. But I feel we grew closer together as a family as we all readjusted to our lives.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Some might call this ending “unrealistic.” But no this kind of thing can definitely happen in life, and you just set a similar scenario to this.

  • @KaityKat117
    @KaityKat117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    You've changed my opinion on the ending of The Sign.
    Before the episode came out, and after watching Ghostbasket, I was sad about the Heelers moving out. I didn't want them to have moved.
    Then The Sign came out and the whole episode was about (at least to me at the time) embracing change and being okay with things not going your way. Then the ending came and eveything worked out anyway, which made me feel like they had just thrown away the message.
    It wasn't until I watched your video that I came to the realization that I had put my own emotions into it and closed myself off from the message they really meant to convey. I thought the message I needed because of this move that I didn't want to happen was about being okay with things not going your way, and that was why I felt like the episode's ending gave me whiplash. But really the lesson that was important here was, like you said, about embracing uncertainty. I really should've paid a bit more attention to the story about the farmer.
    Thank you so much for this in-depth analysis of the episode's ending and helping me see what I had neglected to consider.
    You've earned yourself a new subscriber. ^v^
    PS: I really like how you showcase the fanart at the end. Rather than just rapidfire showing the art one after another to get through as many as possible, you take time to appreciate each one and give them the attention they earned by working hard on their art. and I love that.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Message: everything will work out like it’s supposed to
      -Calypso

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Maybe the lesson is there are NO real endigns. Everyone changes in this episode but everyone is left with ambigious endings to thsoe chages - what will happen to Brandy, or Radley or Bandit tomorrow. We will see. Story's can have definitive endings life really doesn't.

  • @van8ryan
    @van8ryan 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

    What's honestly great about the ending of THE SIGN is that it can work as both a finale to the actual show or a good "Place to Stop" for awhile.
    In a lot of ways, the message of this whole episode is really how to "deal with change" and not necessarily about the actual "coping with new environments" that most that move experience. Bluey learns how to go with the flow; she's still sad about moving, but she's learned there can be a silver lining. Even Bandit learns the same message but in a different sort. As much as he knows a new job with more money will help his family, he's distressed at how much pain it's causing his wife and kids (and even his own mixed feelings about leaving).
    So, when the house deal falls through, Bandit's definitely just "numb/stunned", but then, he looks at his family and finally unloads all the emotion he's been keeping inside and just decides to take it as "a sign" and goes with the flow.........................
    And of course, most will say, "Well, what about their new house? Will they give it up? Will they be able to get the money back from it?? Are they making a bigger mistake now with no job aspects at all??"
    What would Bandit say?
    "We'll see"

  • @sammysstopmotionoas2004
    @sammysstopmotionoas2004 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

    We all knew they weren't gonna move. If they moved, tourism for that air b and b would have gone down, and Bluey World would have needed a massive last minute make over.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Also they do this in shows all the time where they intend to move but don’t. My first thought hearing about them selling the house was “oh one of those scenarios again.”

  • @lunaponce4068
    @lunaponce4068 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +61

    One we knew they wouldn’t move, we see Lila and bingo grow up together
    And two this was a planned ending all the way from the beginning this was set up since helicopter and Winston’s dad pool 😁
    Also I thinks it shows there is more to success and having a better life than money. Bandit wanted to give his girls more opportunities to have their best life, but they have their best life. They have their friends family and a community
    That’s just me tho I understand why people feel like the ending was a cop out I just think it is important to see how the family deals with this

    • @tc4331
      @tc4331 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I completely agree with you! Throughout the show, we've seen how much Bandit and Chilli love their family and are willing to sacrifice anything for them to be happy. But I'm glad that they realized sacrificing their home isn't always the best solution, because we already see how happy they are in their home. Why move when their family is already content with where they are?
      I'm glad that someone also saw that message in the episode and not just change, change is good and unexpected, but you decide to choose what to do next.

    • @aussiejed1
      @aussiejed1 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Joe Brumm in the interview on the "Gotta Be Done" podcast talks about how having Winton's dad and the terrier's mum being part of the resolution was not something that was planned earlier in the series - it just worked out that way - he realised he could use the pool as an important point, and then the pieces fell together.

  • @Magulousmous
    @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    The message of this episode was the first thing that was said in the trailer: Everything will work out like it’s supposed to. Some people who don’t like the ending got the wrong message thinking that it’s about adapting to change and the lesson wasn’t learned but no it’s about what Calypso said and signs are given to show what’s meant to be. For this family it was to stay right where they are. Bandit did have good intentions but even he wasn’t keen on the move either. Chili was in on it with him too but I’m so happy to see them finally realize it’s this house that’s their home and nowhere else. More money is good and all but the sacrifices to be made for it isn’t always worth it.
    Also a lot of those who don’t like it are ones that project themselves on these characters and want to feel seen but that’s not fair. These characters are their own people too not these people who don’t get their happy endings. So it seems like these people look at the characters with envy which is terrible.
    I understand the struggle about change and moving but the thing is I do not want this family to move. Their lives are so amazing the way they are that I can’t bear to see them just leave it behind. If you’re already happy with life, then don’t change it.
    Also I’m gonna talk about something. I had actually leaked for myself the Surprise episode that’s coming this Sunday and it mentioned the house selling so I already had a clue about the move. But even if it wasn’t for the leaks I’d still know that they wouldn’t move cuz listen, they do this in shows ALL THE TIME. The character intend to move but they don’t. If I had seen the for sale sign for the first time I’d think “oh it’s gonna be one of those plots.” And when I turned on The Sign, hearing the conversation in the car I could just really tell they weren’t gonna move. I’m smart like that that’s just how I think.

  • @MKLettis
    @MKLettis 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I interpreted Bandit's rage in the ending being directed at himself. His decisions were good for him, but they were hurting his family. And in the end he realized that and was really upset about it. He's a man who wants to protect his family and ensure their happiness. And when he realized that his decisions were hurting them, it kinda broke him. So he directed his anger at the sign and made the decision that he'll never make a decision that would be to the detriment of his family's happiness ever again.
    I knew they weren't gonna move cuz of logistical production reasons, but I see it as less of a cop out cuz it made for a very powerful ending. Especially for Bandit's character. It reinforced his character and his values in a very good way.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Don’t forget that Chilli was in on the move too believing it’ll be good for the family. Even Bandit wasn’t so keen on it either. Chilli did say too that they’ll make the mistake of moving together. But the signs came to show him that this is where they’re meant to be. So beautiful.

  • @Baider808
    @Baider808 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Now, this is just a me thing. I grew up moving a lot due to financial instability (I moved about 14 times before I graduated). I never knew a home with stability, and we never stayed longer than 3 years at a home. For me, this ending was beautifully perfect. I cried because the house is as much of a character as the Heeler family, and it gave me that feeling I missed as a child. Selfishly, I'm glad they stayed.

  • @supper-girl7405
    @supper-girl7405 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +65

    I feel like Chilly saying "probably" instead of "maybe" when Bandit asks her if he's making a mistake, really helps solidify the notion that none of them WANT to move

  • @fairlyoddenginecreations
    @fairlyoddenginecreations 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

    I think it ultimately comes down to what kind of kid show ending you enjoy more. An unfortunate, but hopeful one.. or an unapologetically happy one? Neither is really incorrect, but it's interesting to hear everyone's stance on it all.
    Good video as always, and of course.. HAPPY LATE BIRTHDAY!!

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      One thing to consider is if the message is that there really aren't any endings. The storybook doesn't really end - the side characters expereince monumental changes but none have an unambiguous clean end. Whatever Bandit chose at the end wouldn't of been an ending - either choice involves change. He chooses the one that makes people happy now but may lead to hardship later - he hopes it wont but he cant really know.

    • @fairlyoddenginecreations
      @fairlyoddenginecreations 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @alphaomega2117 Okay.. but we don't even why he doesn't like his old job. He seemed so quick to dismiss it for this new one. I know he thought he was doing the right thing for his family but still, Honey's dad was there how can you do my boy Marcus like this 😭

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@fairlyoddenginecreations Given we know what Bandit does for a living I dont think it's a case of not liking his old job and more likely the new one is a great opportunity in his field and those opportunities are relatively rare.

  • @andocoolxd5158
    @andocoolxd5158 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    This fits way better in this video, astonishing analysis, mate! You appointed each point perfectly and (I can't deny it) made me cry by nostalgia and uncertainty, I loved how you displayed the uncertainty of every point that seem 'happy’ at first glance, but after dissecting even further, you realize that not everything is sugar coated and WE'LL SEE how everything develops at the end.
    This episode was a masterpiece, a full-length MASTERPIECE and I think we can all agree our tissue boxes ran out immediately.
    Now rewatching the special I can't help but notice some people are... not satisfied, while that's completely acceptable that made me reflect on something that is currently happening to our community.
    People want to project themselves into the show.
    It's no wonder those episodes that got exploration towards a deeper intended message are the most efficiently received; because it's relatable, because it's realistic, because it's hard to digest... but mostly, because they feel seen.
    The sentiment of 'being seen' is gratifying, to finally have a show that broke the delimited barriers all through, to grant the desired desparity being contented by how SEEN this show has made us feel.
    But... there's always a limit and I think a large percentage of the fandom are reaching it; "a happy ending is unrealistic and convenient" "life doesn't work that way" "so much foreshadowing for nothing"... This critiques are quite reasonable and I respect them fully, but there's something people tend to forget after the feeling of relating... This ain't your lives.
    I know it would have been interesting to show a darker-side of the coin, to fully experience this characters being completely wretched, for them to truly experience tragedy... but that's not what the show wants to convey.
    I've seen the 'I Love You, You Hate Me' documentary and that made me reflect and compare the situation to the current actuality; Bluey started being an average show for children, another puddle on a continuous pond... that is until the show exhibited freshness... innovation and eventually UNIQUENESS.
    But people wanted more, and that's when they start to project themselves on the screen; they want to enclose with something relatable to their experiences, they want to discover an authentic portray of family life... and when it's passing the line, they want to uncover THEIR LIVES.
    Happy endings have gone unpopular by how the world truly operates, how sometimes predicaments are intractable, how life can be pitiful... and they want to project THAT on their screens, I get it, I'm not the exception.
    Yet again, they have to understand something: THAT'S ONLY A PATH; life can work on unpredictable ways.
    Sometimes life can be a crippling mess, sometimes it's not
    Sometimes life can suck, sometimes not
    Sometimes life can be pitiful, sometimes it can be plentiful
    Sometimes life gives you surprises, sometimes it takes away your hope
    That's how life is, unpredictable... maybe that wasn't the path some people wanted... maybe they wanted to perceive the bleakest path of the story; but sometimes it's just not the path they wanted to follow, and that's ok.
    Like Chilli once said herself "the world is a magical place” but it's each viewers job to interpret this phrase by our own individual meaning, after all, a significant part of this show is to wonder "what happens next?” and to fill the blanks. That’s just how powerful this show is.

    • @cutepuddleslime8201
      @cutepuddleslime8201 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Preach it to the people at the back! I thought the fact that Bandit ending up not moving was actually a unique ending, whenever characters move out that the move is final and no amount of tears will stop it. But here, it subverts the trope and keeps the family at this house for the rest of their days

  • @pebna-jay
    @pebna-jay 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    as someone who has moved multiple times as a kid, i genuinely am so happy they stayed. I also think anything about actually moving they could do with a new character coming into the neighborhood (like how lila was new to school!) (plus from a production standpoint moving them would have been an expensive choice due to making a whole bunch of new characters, places, and assets for all of those)

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Hey that could work! Ya I’m so glad to hear that plenty of people who were in the same shoes as the Heelers and even Brandy are so happy with how it turned out for them. Everyone does react to things differently. Can’t go and please everyone. So it’s on them for it. I do get that it may be impactful if they made the move to some, but there is NO WAY in hell I want them to leave. Perfect just the way it is.

  • @ego-lay_atman-bay
    @ego-lay_atman-bay 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    The scene at the end, where they're eating french fries on the rug, really hit home to me, quite literally. During my first move as a kid (not my families first move, we moved many times before I was born), we sat in the basement hallway of our new house eating french fries. I know they're not exactly the same, but it's still very similar, and such a nice coincidence.

  • @AyoCrunchy
    @AyoCrunchy 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    I remember seeing the end of the episode, where bluey said "It's Bluing time." and blued all over the place. My favorite episode 🙏 💯

    • @Pugly
      @Pugly  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      It was peak

    • @jukesy1992
      @jukesy1992 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      ahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahhaha this comment's made me laugh in a good way, it's so silly.

  • @sarahanderson136
    @sarahanderson136 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    My family lived with my grandparents for the majority of my life, to get help with my drastically younger siblings. When we moved across state lines when I graduated it hurt drastically since she had moved into a house down the street from my grandparents a couple years prior. My entire support network beyond my immediate family was knocked out from under me in an already difficult transition period of my life. I’m okay with where I ended up, but this episode hit me really hard. I love when kids shows touch on subjects that are difficult, and occasionally even outside of the control of the protagonist. It’s an extremely useful tool for growth, even for people older than the intended audience

  • @glitter1336
    @glitter1336 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    i will die on the hill of this episodes ending being an amazing culmination of everything thats come before. because if you look at the pros and cons of moving, the only pro Bandit can give is: "this job makes more money, so i can give a better life to my family" but, what does "better" even mean here? the Heelers life is about as idealic as it gets, they have a beautiful home, a lush city with plenty of playgrounds and vibrant nature trails, an amazing school, and most important of all, a strong supportive community of friends and neighbors. the Heeler family doesnt seem to be as well off as other familys on the show, but by no means has it ever looked like they were struggling terribly. a job that pays more is always appealing, but no amount of money can replace the community they have in Brisbane, and at the end of the day isnt that INFINITELY more important? if they went through with the move, and they have loads more money, would that fix it if Bingo was struggling to make new friends? if Bluey went to a school that didnt nurture her creativity like Calypso is so good at doing? if the new neighbors were rude to Chili? if Bandit had no one to play ball or watch cricket with? ive seen people complain about this ending being about "spoiling" Bluey and Bingo just because they dodnt want to go because moving is scary, but its about SO much more than that, its about trusting your gut and putting things into perspective so you can do right by the people you love

  • @_P.B.the13_XIII
    @_P.B.the13_XIII 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    As soon as Bingo mentioned about Lila moving with them, it was an aha moment that made me connect all the dots to led up on that episode. Because they grew up together and stayed friends for ever and ever and ever. And as a person who moves a lot, I was really hoping they wouldn’t move because it gave me lots of pain whenever I moved with no one to blame. I’m just really happy with the ending. I wish mine also would’ve went that way but we’ll see right?

  • @shqahmd22
    @shqahmd22 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    This episode WAS SOO GOOD that IT GOT 9.9 RATING ON IMDB. Hats off the the creators man , mad respect 🎉🎉

  • @CheeseDanish85
    @CheeseDanish85 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    As someone who moved too many times in my early life, this episode was incredibly cathartic for me. Seeing Bandit realize how much they'd give up by moving, and making a decision that would be better for his kids. I still cry every time I get to the end of this episode, and my kid has already made me rewatch it like 5 times. It's like others have pointed out in many comments sections across the internet so far, as said by Calypso: stories give us happy endings because real life will give us plenty of sad ones. This is the happy ending we all want to have, and many of us didn't get.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Let’s not forget though that life DOES sometimes give us happy endings.

  • @rebeccamills16
    @rebeccamills16 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I’m glad they stayed because that’s what I wanted when I was a kid. We moved once a year for many years in a row. It was really hard as a kid.

  • @CrazyCobraCC
    @CrazyCobraCC 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    Sadly, I don’t think it makes much sense for them to actually go through with the move as cool as it would be. They’ve gone through the work of designing so many characters and places that it would be nearly impossible for them to make more things like that and it feel realistic or good. What would they have done with the dogs they leave behind?

  • @midgetwthahacksaw
    @midgetwthahacksaw 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    As someone who moved SIX times before the age of 10 (and not little moves either, these were from State to State in the U.S.) this episode's ending was what I always wanted.
    Each time, I wanted to STAY. I wanted to rip down the sign and have it stayed ripped down. But, in the end, I always moved.
    This episode really awakened how much I hated it as a kid but could never have the capacity to explain it.
    Unfortunately, my parents were not great at explaining it ways I could understand which only cemented the pain more.
    As an adult, its made things really difficult. I don't have a friend I've known since childhood. I've gone to so many schools, I lost count. So many housed I've lived in and so many rooms that used to be MINE.
    I'm not used to STABILITY. Even my family wasn't the same in the end. My parents are just now divorcing after 30 years of marriage.
    Having the Heelers stay and keep their school and friend and house and their bedrooms is the sort of dream I NEVER had come true for me.
    I cried.

  • @mildlycornfield
    @mildlycornfield 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    There's so many reasons, story, production, etc, that the Heelers were never going to move. It's not like live action where a set can be rearranged and given new wallpaper to represent a new house when a family moves. The Heelers moving house would mean that every single one of the show's backgrounds would have to be scrapped, which just isn't practical. More than just the setting, the *entire cast* save for the Heelers would have to change, which is even more impractical.

  • @BeanBag343
    @BeanBag343 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I saw a doctor today who told me she thinks I have lupus, so I have to go for a lot of blood work and I'm really scared about what will happen. Then I rewatched this episode. For some reason, Calypso reading the Farmer story feels more comforting than my mom telling me that I'm fine and that my doctor is wrong. I know that it's highly likely that none of them will read this, but I have to say, thank you Bluey writers for helping me cope with my fears and uncertainty ❤

  • @NyxTrix.
    @NyxTrix. 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Im so early yay!
    Edit: I completely agree this episodes ending was amazing, it didn’t feel like a cop out at all, and if they want moving stuff they can totally make an episode with Winton adjusting to living with the terriers now and how Radley is adjusting to living closer to his own family, the entire episode felt so fulfilling, the ending was foreshadowed from the very beginning and it just feels like it all connects so well, i cannot wait to see where the series goes from here, with the terriers living with winton and his dad, Radley moving closer to his family, brandy being pregnant, bandit perhaps needing to find a new job, i cannot wait!

  • @Daniel_Nye
    @Daniel_Nye 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The Sign uses the Chekhov's gun principle throughout alot of this that I think the real issue some might have is that the storytelling is too efficient and see it as too coincidental. But I love how it also is Chaos Therory in that every action someone takes, we see its consequences of it. If Frisky didn't leave, Bluey wouldn't find the coin, Muffin wouldn't get it stuck, and the "dogs with no eyes" wouldn't see the house with a pool. Because the real enemy in this story is Australian estate agents. Fact.
    It would have been interesting to see them move, but I love the other characters so much that I'm glad they didn't. Speaking of, I love that as soon as Bingo realises what moving out means, the first thing she asks is "Is Lila coming with us?" That broke my heart.

  • @Darke_Exelbirth
    @Darke_Exelbirth 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As a young kid, my family moved a lot. But always in the same town. I remember going from a house, to an apartment, to a duplex, and then a house again. My parents also divorced, so I also had my dad's apartment I went to during that time, still in the same town. But that changed in the middle of 4th grade, when my mom and stepdad decided we'd move to a smaller town. All of a sudden, I was in an unfamiliar town, no friends, and slowly fell out of touch with the friends I did have in my original town, because the internet wasn't a thing and i had problems with talking to people on the phone. That period of time sucked, and I didn't really make any friends until around 5th grade. Eventually I did, and I came to really love the house, but my mom had actually bought it with plans to resell after investing some remodeling into it, so we moved out of that house into an apartment, and then another house she wanted to flip, and by the time it was time to start high school, we were leaving town again, and again, I had no friends.
    Eventually her and my stepdad split, I moved in with him, and eventually moved out with my partner and we've lived in the same place ever since. I honestly don't ever want to move again, and I feel it may be due to how negative constantly moving ended up being for me growing up.

  • @alicebenson8512
    @alicebenson8512 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I wonder now with the heelers staying in Brisbane, if we'll get an episode revolving around Bandit's struggles with unemployment and with finding a new job?

  • @squeebers
    @squeebers 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I also am not one of the people who thinks ending soured the messages.
    The ending hit me all the harder because they didn't move. It's a very powerful ending. Sometimes you wanna change something because you think it's better, but you don't realize the good you have til you change it.
    What I mean is, you think moving somewhere will be better for you than staying where you are and growing there. But when push comes to shove, somwtimes it isn't the right decision for you. You may not realize it was a bad decision until you are already in your new house.
    And sometimes it is the right decision as demonstrated in The Sign with Winton's dad deciding to sell his house and move in with the terriors.
    (We'll see how that move turns out.)
    This episode is a masterpiece, man! I don't know what else to say.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Preach it dude. Having more money is great and all, but the sacrifices to be made for it isn’t always worth it. Also real life does have enough sad endings, but it still does have some happy ones too. So the ending still felt realistic in a sense.

    • @squeebers
      @squeebers 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Magulousmous The ending really did feel realistic to me.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@squeebers Everything will work out like it’s supposed to
      -Calypso
      Signs were given to show that this family is meant to stay in this house, and they realized it.

    • @squeebers
      @squeebers 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Magulousmous Yup!

  • @BeanBag343
    @BeanBag343 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Honestly, I think the message of this episode is perfect!
    SPOILER ALERT!!
    Parents, if you are not struggling financially, you don't live in an unsafe environment, and/or your house isn't falling apart, *do not move* . Especially if your kids are old enough that they will miss their friends and become resentful of you for a good chunk of their lives. I understand wanting to give your children a better life, but if their lives and yours are perfect the way they are, and you aren't struggling, it isn't worth taking that away. Yes, life is full of risks, and there are many times when change occurs, and we have no control over it. However, if you do have control over it, you need to put your children's needs before your wants. I think it's a great message for everyone since most kids shows or movies with this sort of plot just say, "change is always good" when for a lot of kids, major changes in their lives aren't good for them. It can be traumatic and damage them forever. Kudos to Bluey for being brave enough to knock some sense into parents

  • @yamazaki752
    @yamazaki752 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I haven't finished this video yet, I'll get there as time allows, but I wanted to share my wife's opinion on the episode, and what she believes is the real message it's trying to tell, at least to parents.
    It's about difficult choices.
    See, initially, Bandit is stuck trying to decide if this new job is worth moving the family. We see him fighting with this discussion internally during Stickbird, although he never says a thing about it. And throughout the Sign, Bandit is still fighting with the choice. Because both choices are difficult - taking the new job and making better money, but having to move the family as a result, or not taking it and possibly being jobless, but letting the family stay in their house and within reach of their extended social supports (family, friends, neighbors, etc).
    Obviously, the whole thing wraps up nicely, but you are right - we don't see the full scope of everything yet. We don't know the results of the choice to not move. But we'll see, and it'll be interesting and fun nevertheless.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The Surprise episode came after this and everything is back to normal.😎

  • @kevinmai6617
    @kevinmai6617 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    This is seriously almost all my thoughts! When I first watched The Sign in the watch party, I verbally said the ending of the book Calypso read is ambiguous. It has a double meaning, so that's why there's not just a good or bad ending. The amount of "We'll see"s in the episode even just sets up the entire plot. Not everything is set in stone, and that's why I love the entire episode and its ending!

    • @alphaomega2117
      @alphaomega2117 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      In life there are NO endings. You can do that in a story but in reality everything keeps going. All the characters experience pretty monumental changes in this episode but none have a clear unambiguous ending. The will all wake up tomorrow and what comes next.

  • @Smokeybluetheraccoon
    @Smokeybluetheraccoon 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As another person who moved as a little kid, I'm actually partial to this ending. I want to imagine everything worked out and that I didn't have to deal with the sadness that happened.

  • @crownclowncreations
    @crownclowncreations 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm actually glad they stuck with having the Heelers stay.
    A couple of years ago, my parents moved out of my childhood home. A place my mom has always loved, and always said she'd never move away from. When she told me I was absolutely heartbroken.. They did have their good reasons for moving, but it all just moved way too fast for me. In my world, it went from "We'd never move" to "We're moving in 8 weeks" just from one moment to the other. The timing was also just unlucky, as I was smack in the middle of a severe chronic depression, and as soon as I knew my mom was about to deliver bad news, I literally thought to myself "the worst thing she could tell me right now, is that they're gonna move.." I didn't expect that to actually be the case.
    It caused me a lot of grief, and even now I still miss that place so much. Doesn't' help that my bio dad had moved away from my other childhood home a couple years prior. And since I live on my own, I'm never gonna live at the new places. They'll never be or feel like "home"..
    So this episode really stuck with me. On one hand, I was interested in seeing how the writers and the characters were gonna deal with this huge change. They weren't just gonna move houses, they were moving to a different city. And I can recognize all the important life lessons this could bring.
    Regardless, the fact that they end up staying, made me cry happy tears. Again, I wouldn't have hated seeing them move. But just as Brumm stated, this episode gave me the happy ending I didn't get in real life. And there's also something to be deeply appreciated there 💙

  • @arindadupont1061
    @arindadupont1061 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I really appreciated your perspective on this episode. I found myself really really wanting to like the episode but it falling flat. I’m really grateful to be able to see the episode through another persons eyes. Thank you

  • @Torivic
    @Torivic 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    It's kinda scary to think now what would happen if Flappy ( Butterfly ) in the Slide ended up being squished ( it was under threat 3 times ). If Butterfly wasn't here.... would it mean Rad and Frisky wouldn't end up getting married? Would it mean that Bingo and Lila would never meet again?

  • @mikewilkinson8653
    @mikewilkinson8653 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Just watched episode this while eating breakfast with my toddler yesterday. By the end I was in tears and she was confused why I was crying. I couldn’t answer her. I still don’t know why this episode affected me so much (plenty others have, but for reasons I understood).

  • @sensiblesentimental
    @sensiblesentimental 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Man. Part of me still wishes that my own dad would've had a Bandit moment way back when we first moved, or any other times that we changed homes after.
    He was still looking out for us, in the financial sense, but having to change schools and leave behind friends and places that had just gotten familiar... It's rough for a kid.
    I'm glad they got a happy ending here. Keep on healing that inner child.

  • @KaliGoodfellow
    @KaliGoodfellow 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Show wise it was obvious that there would be no move because 1 we know that lila and bingo stay friends until adulthood, and 2 if the heelers did leave either the show would be over and we wouldn't get that "how did they cope and deal with things after the move", or we would have to follow the heelers and say goodbye to all the characters we've grown to know and love (who will say morning Wendy?), or we would have to say goodbye to the heelers while the show focuses on a different character like rusty who was supposed to be the original star. So as a show then leaving didn't make sense. Now realistically speaking I loved the message. As a kid you have less control for everything and have to be able to cope and embrace the fact that things happen and you have to work through it as bluey had learned by the end. As an adult this cuts home more then ever. Most people who are adults have had a similar moment where you might have to leave family and friends for an opportunity at another state. Maybe you got something far away and your in a relationship and wonder do you breakup, do long distance or stay. If you have a family do you move them away from everything to hopefully provide them with more opportunities or do you stay and risk struggles later on for them and you? This was an incredibly hard decision for any adult and being able to find the courage to choose the more unknown risky decision to stay for your families happiness is incredible to see. However just as calipso said this was a happy and sad ending. It was happy in the sense that they got to stay, but sad because they might have to go through alot more hardships and struggles. No can say for certain if things would be better one way or the other, all you can do is wait and let things go the way they're meant to be and see where it takes you. Its a great message for kids and adults alike (though again it might hit home alot more for adults who have had to be faced with such moments in time). Anyone who doesn't like this ending ask yourself, "what would you have done? Would you really choose to make your family unhappy for money? Would you choose to stay and struggle for yourself and your family if it meant their happiness?" Its not an easy choice to make as is life realistically. Sorry this is long, hope its okay at least - v -;

  • @customink1576
    @customink1576 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    A friend of mine summed up what they thought about the discourse as "People forget that just because you might move, doesn't mean you will" - Definitely remember cartoons and even life moments where it seems like you're moving to a new place but actually you're not. Maybe they will eventually move away to be somewhere, maybe they never do, but just because they might, doesn't mean they will.
    I for one related hard with Bluey as someone who grew up in a financially struggling family who had at multiple "scares" at moving away from the people I knew because of that, but my parents wanted their kids to be happy and feel a sense of stability, I knew those fears and anxieties that Bluey went through (and wish I had a Calypso that helped me look to the bright side of moving xD) about the thought of moving away. Most people probably only ever got one (never having to move) or the other (forced to move) but this episode pretty much encapsulates the fear of moving everyone at some point must have felt.
    EDIT: Relating to Ghostbasket's "Coping with Change" falling in with the Sign - Who's to say that things won't change, now that Bandit doesn't have a job?

  • @settratheimperishable7800
    @settratheimperishable7800 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I’ve moved houses multiple times in my live. At this moment I can recall 7 houses that my family had stayed in over the course of my childhood mostly due to landlord issues or financial problems so moving was always a natural thing to me. My parents always tried their best to keep me in the same school which I only had to leave one grade and thankfully I still graduated there! I personally think this ending isn’t a “shoehorn” it’s a sign that sometimes you have to sacrifice something in order to keep something else. I think too many people get caught up in the moving aspect, the losing your job aspect. While staying in the family, home is good for the families morale it does create a little financial uncertainty in the future.

  • @alixiria
    @alixiria 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As someone who grew up moving a lot and feeling upset about it this episode would've changed my life as a kid. Cause all that moving did actually land me in a "better ending" even if each one didnt feel like it at the time.

  • @del5145
    @del5145 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

    WAIT WAIT WAIT....I have NO IDEA how I missed this or if it's been pointed out, but I just discovered that Bandit throwing all of the "bad" away in Stickbird lines up PERFECTLY with Bandit throwing the Sign. AAUURRGG LUDO AND JOE YOU AMAZING SONS OF GUNS.

  • @Kitastrophic
    @Kitastrophic 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I loved the ending. I feel that it also shows the wisdom of understanding that money is not always the most important thing, and that the “best life possible” doesn’t have to mean having the most money possible. I think the ending represents a choice between people/friends and family or more money, and the realization that no matter where you go, there will always be challenges. Those challenges just might be different. I think if they had moved, the meaning of so many things in the episode would have been lost.

  • @dearilz
    @dearilz 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Before I turned 8, my moving situation was one of running away from abuse. I had to move to alot of houses and stay at alot of family homes. Moving as a kid wasn't a good experience for me, and even now as an adult moving still isn't good.
    So the Heelers being able to stay in their home for the foreseeable future, makes me happy. That's what this show is, it heals our inner child and for me that's wishing I had one home in my childhood instead of over 40.
    In ghost basket we kinda saw how this was gonna play out, someone wanted to buy the house but changed their mind last second. And that's the current housing situation in Australia right now, it's almost impossible to find a house as I'm still searching for a house here in Queensland since I recently moved here.
    Although I wish we could have at least seen a fun house hunting episode, maybe it could have been a good experience for the girls to try and get use to the idea of a new house. But that would mean making a bunch of new backgrounds, and if they did move it'll be alot of work to make a brand new house and neighbourhood, possibly a new school. So I'm glad they decided to not move, for our sake and for the background artists

  • @kolonarulez5222
    @kolonarulez5222 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Just from a production standpoint I knew they wouldn't be moving. They just updated the website bios and they put way too much time and honestly merchandising into establishing the background characters to suddenly write everyone off.

  • @leonarose738
    @leonarose738 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Amazing video as usual! I believe you explained everything just right. As a person who tends to actually live on the words "We'll see" I felt a particularly close connection to this episode, especially when Calypso says "Everything will work out the way it's supposed to, Bluey". I'm Christian so it may sound odd or silly but I feel like Father God Himself was giving me a sign through the episode The Sign with that particular line. I'm tearing up just writing this. Sorry for rambling but I just wanted to share my personal thoughts on it. The only reason I slightly (very slightly) didn't like the ending is because I think of the children who have had no choice but to move watching it and it dragging those negative feelings back up, but all in all it's a masterpiece. A beautiful masterpiece.

  • @Warhorse26
    @Warhorse26 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This was such a fantastic overview of the episode, and I feel exactly as you do about it. I couldn’t have described it better myself when you said “the sum of its parts is what makes this episode so powerful”. I COULDN’T AGREE MORE! I keep telling the people I know with kids who haven’t watched The Sign that they NEED to watch the key episodes (let alone the whole series) before watching this one to get the most emotional impact out of it, but they just don’t understand which is disappointing. Regardless, I’ve watched every episode of the series and have been patiently waiting for this episode for months. I can’t tell you how much of a thrill it was watching every moment and I cried more than once my first time through. Great video

    • @Pugly
      @Pugly  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thank you buddy! I hope that perhaps in the future others will listen to you haha because it really does make a difference on this episode haha 💙

  • @turq99
    @turq99 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Huh I didn't realize this got criticism like that. While I admit with most things I watch I am sucker for seeing things work out, I enjoyed this episode. I thought it was an interesting way to show fate has a way of navigating your journey. You make choices without fully knowing what lies ahead but through time, support, and understanding, you will find acceptance in whatever happens next.

  • @pineappleprincess9704
    @pineappleprincess9704 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The ending is honestly very sweet and I love it! It's so sweet it makes me think up scenarios with other characters in place of the heelers (and I do not mean other bluey characters)
    I just wish more people saw it coming sooner because lots of hints to it were in other episodes, with the biggest one being in Daddy Dropoff, where Bingo and Lila grow up together and even end up going to Calypso's school at some point

  • @Soul_Slayer
    @Soul_Slayer 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I find it fitting that the episode starts with Calypso reading the story, and ends with her voice actress singing the song over the ending.

  • @fimbulvetr721
    @fimbulvetr721 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I think you voice my mixed opinions on the ending of the sign at 6:20, I felt conflicted because I myself dealt with something similar as a child and it felt bad that it seemed like other people seem to think not moving is the only way to have a good ending. After sitting with it for a while I did get that it wasn’t supposed to be a good or bad ending and I wasn’t able to stay, we didn’t even have a choice to stay, but bandit and bingo did and they chose the best choice they could just like my parents did and in the end we’ll see

  • @Septic-Hearts
    @Septic-Hearts 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Someone in the subreddit argued with me about the ending. I asked their perspective and they were combative about mine. They didn't say this, but it felt like they were trying to get me to see how their own perspective was the 'correct' one, in that the ending was a cop out. But tbpfh, I don't think we should hold the show to such a high moral/philosophical standard. Yes, it teaches lessons, but never as the main goal. They're one mere product of the creators' passion. Bluey never compromised story for them.
    Also slight rant, but I feel like it's pretty ridiculous to be upset that a show intended for younger audiences has a story or ending that is straightforward, 'simple' or 'too much of a happy ending'. I agree with the argument that having the label of children's media isn't an excuse for bad quality. We should hold media to a higher standard, especially if it's intended for kids. But in the same breath, some Reddit reviews feel pretty pretentious and myopic to read. You are knowingly watching a show that is deliberately made for younger audiences. Bluey has surpassed all expectations, yes, but it's silly to be upset when it caters to that younger audience. The show is not solely made for adults, it is made in a way that adults can still enjoy it when they watch. It really irks me when 'critics' criticise something for what it isn't as opposed to what it is. Good criticism isn't about how you would prefer things. Good criticism is a commentary on how well something was executed. And honestly too many negative opinions of the ending overshadowed the actual valid critiques.

  • @monchaisooksiri8946
    @monchaisooksiri8946 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Ok so if you guys ever watched the episode camping and bingo you would know they did not move because we see bluey in the future at the same campsite when she was 6 and that campsite is only in her city and in the episode bingo we can at the end bingo went to the same school as bluey in the future so that mean they did not move in the episode the sign and it will take the bluey makers forever to figure out which city they are going to live in and it will take thousands of hours to make a new house design a new job for bandit and chill and the house design and the background and backyard and at the end of the episode the sing we now that bandit ripped the sing of the ground and chill tackled him and his kids follow and we see in the details bandit got called by bucky saying the two bilnd dogs decided to buy winton dads house so yeah it doesn't make sense for them to move❤❤❤

  • @ororomunroe8170
    @ororomunroe8170 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    So the primary issue with moving comes from the technical realities of having a show like this. For kids animation specifically, the design and the characters are meant to be recognizable. The Heelers house is one of the single most recognizable house in kids TV. Kids can't really understand change the way adults can. This is shown with Bingo not understanding that moving means leaving the house itself.
    Bluey probably wouldn't have continued much longer if they had to develop a whole new set and cast of characters. Kids wouldn't recognize the show and it would probably upset most of it's target demographic.
    Recognizability is one of the core tenants of animation, but specifically kids animation. The silhouettes of the character, the color palette, the recurring props and scenery, all of it, a kid would be able to point out without a second thought, but that's threatened when you change such a significant part of the show.

    • @dominicon3591
      @dominicon3591 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      My thoughts exactly; I'm glad someone else said it! People can argue about the storytelling decisions Joe Brumm and the writers made till the cows come home, but the Doylist reason for not having the Heelers move is that it would fundamentally change the show - new house, new supporting cast, etc. Not only would that require a massive redesign of the backgrounds, environments, and characters, but there's also no telling how the changes would be received by the audience, and Bluey as a brand is too profitable to risk that happening.
      As much as it would pain me and Bluey fans worldwide, I almost wished that The Sign had truly been the last episode of Bluey, regardless of whether it ended with the Heelers moving or staying. My fear is that Bluey will end up like the Simpsons, going on endlessly until every last iota of charm has been wrung out of the characters and the show becomes a shadow of its former self. Better for it to be like Disney's Gravity Falls, which ran for only 2 seasons as intended by creator Alex Hirsch, and the fact that the show and its story wasn't drawn out only served to underscore the fleeting nature of childhood, which happens to also be a theme Bluey has touched on several times before.

  • @SlashSlashX
    @SlashSlashX 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I took a message for adults from this episode that no one else seems to be talking about, but I think the lesson here is value. The reason Bandit gives for them moving is his new job offers more money so he can give his kids a better life. This is what motivates him to start the move. His focus is on how money affects a situation, even asking Rad what he'll do about his job and if he really thinks this is a good idea. But as the episode goes on, he starts to see the value in the home and friendships he already has. Yes, a new job will give him more money but it removes him from the friends, family and support structure he's known since before Bluey was born. As you said, he can see the effect it's having on his relationships with his family and he questions it right up to the moment he gets the call and realises he's being given the chance to change his mind. Yes it will be hard but in the end, the extra income can't replace what he has now.
    It gives greater weight to the lucky coin too. For Bluey, that one coin changed everything even though she doesn't know it. How it ended up being used had a greater impact on her life than Bandit's new job could have.
    We live in a society where money is a dominant force. Even if you have enough to maintain a good standard of living, for adults there's always that pressure to take the next step, get that promotion and the raise that comes with it. I know many have no choice but to take that job role. However, for me, as well as accepting change this episode asked where is the real value in life? Leaving the house would be hard but the biggest tear jerker moments for me were when Bluey was telling her friends she was leaving and when Bingo found out she'd leave her best friend behind. She hadn't even been able to say goodbye properly because she didn't understand what selling the house meant.
    Throughout the series we've seen the bonds between the characters result in key lessons and support when it was needed most. It helps us see the value in those bonds we have and where we are now. This episode, for me, really put the question on the spot of what matters most. It's never an easy answer, but I'm glad they found the happy one.

  • @belughlegosi
    @belughlegosi 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I loved the episode I finally saw it last night. I wish all the episodes were that long lol. At first I thought the ending was a cop out but now hearing you and seeing comments, I see how it works. Plus kids like a happy ending and probably don’t wanna see the heelers move

  • @Matthew-oi6kz
    @Matthew-oi6kz 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I think my comment on the community post expresses my feelings well, but there is a new thing I realized from watching SuperCarlinBro's video on this. The whole reason Bandit accepted the job offer at first is he wanted a better life for his family. At the end, you can clearly tell he did not want to move either, he was just doing what he thought was right.
    He is an amazing father and husband, he just had a moment where he didn't realize his family's life was already perfect.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The signs were given.😏

  • @samuelphillian1286
    @samuelphillian1286 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It’s a powerful message that family and community are actually more important than a few extra bucks, something our culture has lost

  • @Troubled-Kidd
    @Troubled-Kidd 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The episode that resonates the deepest with me is Onsies. When Brandy reaches out to Bingo and Chili says it’s not meant to be I see myself in a way. But not about wanting kids… wanting a family. A real family. A family that loves each other unconditionally. I love my mom but we can never have that and that hurts more than words can describe… I live every day in fear of the day those cigarettes take her away. We never bonded and my childhood was horrible… At this point in my life we’re trying to fix things but we can’t fully repair the damage done. It’s like we’ve hit a wall. The first time she said “I love you” to me felt so off and strange. In that moment I realized I never felt like I had a mom.
    I want a family more than anything in the world but it’s just not meant to be…
    My emotions change over time. This is how I feel about right now. In recent years I realized I don’t hate her, I hate what she did and what she didn’t do. We never bonded but I still love her. She never felt like a mom but she was still there. Even if she wasn’t really there… part of me is emotional about the first “I love you”. I can’t remember if I cried or not but I remember it felt wrong yet somehow sentimental

  • @koffinrott
    @koffinrott 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I like this episode because it was the ending I didn't get.
    When I was 11 I had to move away from my home town. I grew up in Casitas Springs, right along the 101, and I loved it. It was a small rural spot with a river bottom, and hiking trails and it was my truest love. My family moved to a massive city and it was supposed to be for the better. It was the most miserable thing we ever did. My family has always been a "we can work it out" type family, and I never understood how we couldn't work out staying in my childhood home.
    I'm 31 now and, as of a year and a half ago, I live in a small rural town that I fell in love with about five years prior. It's the most like home I've ever felt, and although life and adulthood make things harder than they were when I was small, I will fight tooth and nail to stay here. I felt so displaced until I found my new home. I never want to let it go. ❤

  • @spectralumbra1568
    @spectralumbra1568 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I think the way the story was set up, it was the opposite of a cop-out. They didn't set up the expectation of a move happening and then change their minds later, they intended for the move to never happen and then intentionally wrote it so viewers would expect otherwise. The whole episode was about uncertainty and that theme wouldn't have worked as well if it wasn't set up this way. If there was none of the foreshadowing from earlier in the season, and the episode started off with "the family's moving but no one really wants to," it would have been obvious where the story was going and the theme would have been lost, or at least not nearly as impactful.

  • @Troubled-Kidd
    @Troubled-Kidd 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I like to see as many interpretations as possible with Bluey. It’s a very emotional show and hits deep for so many people. We all see ourselves and what we’ve been through in this show and I don’t think there’s just 1 meaning to any episode. That’s the beauty of art: the artist’s meaning and the meanings we find in the art are all equally valid

  • @PFGFrankly
    @PFGFrankly 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    the ending purpose is given because life can be unpredictable. once the buyer turn down the deal which is possible in life, bandit backdown on his idea of moving for a better job.

  • @oliverg6864
    @oliverg6864 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thanks, this video helped give me a new perspective on the episode! I was disappointed that they didn't move. But now I can see that they were hinting at the ending all along and it's a pretty cool artistic vision for the show. I do think it makes sense for the characters. I still think it would have been nice to show the changes that kids go through when moving. But also I really appreciate that they're showing how Bandit realizes having more money won't necessarily make his family happy.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I could never imagine them living somewhere else. This is their home and it’s meant to be that way. Their move wasn’t a necessary one unlike some.

    • @oliverg6864
      @oliverg6864 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Magulousmousyeah I'm definitely happy they didn't move in the end. I like their home and it seems like they're not struggling financially so why move just to make more money? More money doesn't necessarily make you happier. The reason I was slightly disappointed they didn't move was because what if kids watching think that because in the show they magically didn't move, that will also happen in real life? Idk if it's a super realistic message. But also I get that it's a story, and stories should have happy endings because life has enough sad ones. Personally I'm happy they didn't move, just not sure how realistic it is for a show that tackles a lot of real-life issues.

    • @Magulousmous
      @Magulousmous 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@oliverg6864 hey I think it’s pretty realistic in a sense cuz the message was what Calypso said, everything will work out like it’s supposed to. Kids who are moving have to understand not to be jealous or project themselves on these characters cuz these characters aren’t them, and it’s not fair to have the characters suffer just because they suffer. Despite how realistic Bluey gets, it’s still a cartoon and it can’t cover EVERY life lesson at once. If I was a kid moving I’d be happy they’d get their happy ending I believe. Also having more money is great and all, but the sacrifices to be made for it don’t always make it worth it.

  • @amidthephantomsrose
    @amidthephantomsrose 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I look at this as a parent making a sacrifice for his children. He accepted a job that would make more money and what he thought would give his kids a better life. He's focused on that. Then he realizes in the end that this choice is actually harming his family. So he makes another sacrifice to save his family and their well-being mentally and emotionally and do something that is the best for them. He takes to heart what rad says and realizes "I can get another job" I can understand how this may not be the norm for most people moving, but it does happen. Something similar happened to my family when I was younger. So this episode also feels very personal. Plus if you watch bluey regularly, it was plain to see that they wouldn't move because we see in the episode daddy dropoff a montage with an older Lila and Bingo growing up together and graduating highschool together. Something that they couldn't do if they were living in different cities. Since they wouldn't be going to the same school

  • @icrichton8955
    @icrichton8955 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I think it was good that they stayed because it highlighted the importance of children growing up in one place where they can keep long lasting connections with people and their environment.

  • @MrWarners14
    @MrWarners14 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    In hindsight, I think about the beach episode where Bandit feels deeply melancholic over a situation and I thought that this situation is what he was thinking of.
    This new job would’ve brought short-term monetary gain but his children would’ve gotten long-term trust issues and he could’ve been fired from said job if he moved anyway, making it all for nothing.
    Tearing the family from everything they have ever known would’ve brought a lot more harm to the family long-term and it would’ve definitely invalidated a lot of episodes, especially Lila’s episode.
    Sure, there are a lot of unknowns but just as many solutions too. When Bandit was stuck with a massive mental weight on his shoulders, it feels cathartic to see him stand for what he feels is right for him and his family.
    Bandit’s pride had been a source of many conflicts. The fact he decides NOT to sell the house even after the other dogs decide to go to another, it shows serious character development when he decides what’s best for his family (they already have EVERYTHING they need), not just himself. He puts his family first over his job and that made the ending a lot more rewarding on a rewatch of the entire show so far.
    I think you should do a video talking about all of the foreshadowing to The Sign throughout the series as far back as the beginning of Season 1, as I feel there definitely is a lot of advanced planning leading up to The Sign, even if extremely subtle. I would appreciate that a lot.

  • @annikaruelo1383
    @annikaruelo1383 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I totally agree with this! I love me a vague ending with hopeful undertones. Although if this episode were to take the other route it would have really helped my cousin, a very big fan of the show and very reprehensible towards the idea of moving. I think the lesson would be really nice for children that hopefully some other show may display someday. For sure would have helped me when I first moved

  • @blue_bo1
    @blue_bo1 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Hello Pugly!! Before The Sign episode I had no idea who you were. I am on the discord server that you were interviewed on the day The Sign went live and it was amazing listening to you talk about your channel and Bluey in general! I am glad I joined the live event that day because it was so enjoyable and I am also happy to have discovered you because of it! Keep up the good work with the channel 🙌💙

    • @Pugly
      @Pugly  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I’m am beyond ecstatic to hear that buddy! I’m really happy you found the channel through the discord event and that you seem to really enjoy the channel. You just made my day 💙

  • @lucifie
    @lucifie 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Dear Mr. Pugly,
    You have made great observations of Bluey in all of your videos, doing so excellently in this one. I hugely applaud your work with kids--I have Aspergers' and was a special needs kid myself. But the whole 'We'll See....' concept in this episode has some very ominous aspects. Bluey and her family have had such great good fortune in the end.....well, WE'LL SEE, wont we? Remember that little game that Socks was playing with those figurines while Stripe and Trixie were arguing in the background? What's going to happen with Socks and Muffin, with their parents fighting, and Stripe drinking too much? What indeed, because Muffin and Socks are just so tiny in age? We will see.
    The 'Bluey' show started off as being intended for toddlers aged four and younger, but it appears to me that Mr. Brumm is gradually increasing the age group of the intended audience--'Bluey' is shaping up to be Australia's animated 'Gone With The Wind'-like epic. We have a whole story and saga so far told in 150-odd seven minute episodes, and one long episode. The long episode has been a roaring success--that gamble by Joe Brumm has paid off excellently. You are absolutely right that the continuum of these 150 or so episodes, are together telling a great epic story, with Bluey herself as the Scarlett O'Hara parallel. But the saga is going to get more intense from here. Think 'The Animals of Farthing Wood', or 'Watership Down.' Both of those are intended for older kids and teens and adults--like the ones watching 'Bluey' now. We better be prepared to shed a LOT more tears as this series progresses. "Gone With The Wind" had such an intensely tragic ending, and yet no film has had more instances of someone paying to see it. Strap yourselves in, kids!! Pugly, I would love to exchange emails with you and hopefully discuss my views of 'Bluey' with you.
    Yours, henrygvaillant@hotmail.com

    • @Pugly
      @Pugly  5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I’m really happy you enjoyed the video and the episode in general. I agree with you that the future is looking very interesting. I’m not good at responding to emails but you’re welcomed to finding mine on my about page or joining my discord server 💙

    • @jukesy1992
      @jukesy1992 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think he might increase the agegroup a bit, but one thing he's said is he doesn't want generations to be excluded either, so I still think he's going to keep things OK for pre-schooler.s One thing he did say in th podcast is "you can't really cover divorce" so I truly think that's out of the question. Bluey, overall, is seemingly a show about hope.

  • @cliftonchurch6039
    @cliftonchurch6039 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The beautiful thing about the title "The Sign" to me is that "the butterfly effect", which is the idea of big things can be changed by something as small as a butterfly's wings flapping on the other side of the world, created *the sign* Bandit needed to find his confidence in deciding what the right choice was for his family.
    And if this episode makes them believe that a Bluey movie is a good idea, I've got a concept for structure. Movies tell one big story, usually over three acts. I think they should write an overarching story over three acts, but give each act it's own title to help keep kids following the parts. And maybe throw in a 10 minute Bluey dance party between the second and third act, in case kids need to let out energy or go to the bathroom.

  • @Shiny_Misty
    @Shiny_Misty 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My sibling and sister had to move a LOT being in an army family. It hit really close to home for my sibling, who was watching the episode with me.
    I don't know how they feel about the ending, personally, but they were smiling, so I think they were happy for the family. "They don't have to go through what I did" kind of feeling, you know.

  • @not_taro
    @not_taro 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Omg I’ve been waiting for this vid!! Thank you for explaining the meaning of the ending cuz I honestly was confused. Ur honestly one of my favourite TH-camrs keep up the vids mate!

  • @jinchaoz
    @jinchaoz 5 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    9:30 Not him saying "you can look at it in a vakuum" and showing Bandit vakuuming the floor xD
    also great video over all :)

  • @chocosoy8692
    @chocosoy8692 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Here's why I like the episode:
    The conclusion part (i dont want to call it ending because its not technically ending as mr. Pugly also pointed out) gives more questions than answers meaning there is soooo much more we'll have to look forward to. More questions, more episodes, more adventures and more easter eggs! Who doesnt want that?

  • @KayveePlays
    @KayveePlays 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Bluey should be reviewed by apsiring writers. Its a prime example of why i will always advocate for positive stories and endings. Even awkward ones. We get enough heartache in our lives. Loved ones passing away suddenly or breaking up. While it may seem childish or distant from reality to write for a good ending always then it should be even more unrealistic that real life is always bad. Its never always bad. Its never always good. But nothing will go perfect and so we need things to balance out the bad. From our family, friends and connections. Too the happy endings we invent for things we don't know will go.

  • @yoshifan3077
    @yoshifan3077 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Speaking of bandits, doubt I did remember in the episode stick bird in the ending after he talks to his kids about letting out your anger and sadness and just throw it. He also took his own advice as well, and I felt like that was his doubts about moving which that leads up to the episode the sign.