Although Logan’s absence from the Gilmore Girls ending may seem strange, it makes perfect sense for the show’s story. The cast of Gilmore Girls have been through a lot of heartache over the years as Lorelai and Rory tried to find their respective Mr. Right. Lorelai dated Max Medina, Jason, and even Christopher before finally breaking up with Luke, and Rory dated Dean, Jess, and Logan without ever breaking up with any of them. While fans still debate which boyfriend was best for Rory, there’s no denying who she seemed most likely to date.
While Jess’ final Gilmore Girls appearance proved he was more mature than Stars Hollow gave him credit for, it was Logan who dated Rory during the show’s final seasons. Gilmore Girls seemed to be setting up an ending in which Rory would settle down with the rich, party-loving kid until she rejected Logan’s proposal in the show’s penultimate episode. This seemed like the right choice for Rory, who covered Barack Obama’s election campaign for a newspaper upon graduating from Yale. However, Rory A year in the life History casts doubt on this decision.
Why Logan had to leave after Rory rejected his marriage proposal
Logan and Rory getting together would never have worked
Rory suggested that she and Logan could stay together and try a long-distance relationship, but Logan declined that option for two reasons. On the one hand, his pride was hurt when she turned down his proposal, and on the other, Logan struggled with the idea of monogamy even when the couple was not in a long-distance relationship. Logan was smart enough to know that things wouldn’t work out between him and Rory in the long run, so it was best for the two of them to break up after she turned down his proposal.
Logan’s logic was that the couple shouldn’t be together if they weren’t going to get married.which is hard to argue, given how historically flighty both characters have been. Although some Gilmore Girls‘The most infamous storylines occurred in the show’s final season, this twist was based on something resembling reality. Instead of condemning them to the pain of trying, failing, and further resentment or holding back, Logan gave the couple a relatively clean break. After all, a failed marriage proposal is as good a time to end a romantic relationship as any.
It made sense not to have Logan around for the Gilmore Girls finale
Logan’s presence would have been awkward at the end of Season 7
In retrospect, Logan leaving Gilmore Girls bBefore the ending itself is a smart and thematically appropriate choice. The penultimate episode of the series brings an end to Rory’s time at Yale in every way, wrapping up the Doyle and Paris stories, as well as the Logan subplot. This way, the ending, although it has a few more goodbyes, can focus more on new beginnings and Rory’s future. Focusing on her relationship with Logan, especially at the end, would have distracted from this uplifting coda. As a result, the show was also able to center its most important relationship.
The ending did justice to the original premise of Gilmore Girls focusing on Lorelai and Rory.
One of the biggest problems Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life it was the revival’s failure to recognize that Lorelai and Rory’s relationship was the center of the series, not their love lives. In contrast, the ending did justice to the original premise of Gilmore Girls focusing on Lorelai and Rory, and the fact that Lorelai’s relationship with Luke needed more screen time meant that abandoning Logan was a perfectly timely decision. So Logan leaving Gilmore Girls in the penultimate episode it was not only the right decision, but essential to balance the events of the finale.
What happened to Logan after Gilmore Girls
Logan and Rory shared an affair within a year of their lives
When the time comes Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life began, Logan was engaged to a wealthy heiress and Rory had a boyfriend, Paul, whose existence she often struggled to remember. Despite that, Logan and Rory had an affair the whole time Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Lifeculminating in Logan’s friends taking Rory on one of their trademark wild nights in the revival’s final episode, “Fall.” Although Gilmore Girls: A Year in the LifeThe story’s problems were numerous, the treatment of Rory and Logan’s relationship was exceptionally controversial.
Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life proved that Rory had never truly abandoned Logan.
Rory’s decision to turn Logan down initially seemed like a wise choice, as she prioritized her own career and future over her romantic life. However, Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life proved that Rory had never truly abandoned Logan, and the pair were trapped in a toxic situation.No conditions”dynamic for the following decade. This contributed to the feeling that Rory was stuck in a rut as a character, stuck in the same mindset she’d lived in since high school. Unfortunately, this revelation soured the smart choice to cut Logan from the original Gilmore Girls end.
- Cast
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Lauren Graham, Scott Patterson, Sean Gunn, Keiko Agena, Matt Czuchry, Alexis Bledel, Yanic Truesdale, Kelly Bishop, Melissa McCarthy, Edward Herrmann, Liza Weil, Jared Padalecki, Milo Ventimiglia
- Release date
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October 5, 2000
- Seasons
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7