BoJack Horseman season 3

[2] Jill asks BoJack to retrieve a love letter from Cuddlywhiskers' house, but he and Diane find an orca stripper dead in his pool.

BoJack and Diane find Cuddlywhiskers in a hut up in Ojai, where he explains that he gave up his material desires after he felt nothing when he won an Oscar and dedicated himself to helping addicts.

BoJack attends a film festival in the Pacific Ocean, where he is forced to wear a helmet that prevents him from speaking and cannot understand the native tongue.

He spots Kelsey there for her new film and writes a halfhearted apology note for getting her fired; however, he is swept onto a bus by a school of minnows and taken out of the city before he can deliver it.

BoJack forms a kinship with the infant and tries to return it to its father, a series of hijinks leading them through the deep sea and a taffy factory.

BoJack accidentally causes one of the brides to have doubts about her marriage, and he reinvigorates her by talking about his own feelings on love, which depresses him and leads him to have sex with a dejected Emily.

Margo Martindale is revealed to have been hiding out in the Escape From L.A. and stealing food from his kitchen, and eventually takes the boat to flee from the law.

BoJack is contacted by the actor who played his son on Horsin' Around, Bradley Hitler-Smith, who wants to do a sequel series about his character.

Rutabaga Rabitowitz and Vanessa Gekko, having started their own agency together, compete with Princess Carolyn to land their horse actors in a new David Pincher movie.

The site's critical consensus reads, "Skillfully puncturing the idea of celebrity and our culture's bizarre obsession with it, BoJack Horseman's third season continues its streak as one of the funniest and most heartbreaking shows on television.

In some ways, that's a shame: The second season had a tight arc that both deployed some fantastic storytelling and demonstrated the show's myriad abilities.

"[7] The fourth episode, "Fish Out of Water," received critical acclaim and has largely been considered the highlight of the season.

Bojack's production designer Lisa Hanawalt talked about the episode in an interview with Vox, stating: "I'm so delighted with what we were able to do ... everyone [on the show] knew it was our Fantasia.

We see BoJack suffocating as he grapples with the idea that he will never reach his own definition of greatness, that it is too late to turn his life around, that his best days are behind him and his worst ones ahead.

Strachan further explains: "For a brief moment, it feels as if BoJack has finally had a revelation that could last―that he will stop his self-destructive ways, learn to prioritize the people he cares about and beat his depression forever.