The Last Of Us' 'The Price' Broke Me More Than Any Episode So Far, And Here's Why
SPOILER WARNING: The following article dives deep into two of the most important moments from The Last of Us Season 2, Episode 6. If you have not yet used your Max subscription to catch up on the apocalypse, I recommend you make like a survivor approaching an abandoned building and proceed with caution.
I am not much of a gamer, but as a fan of zombie movies, I was very excited for the debut of HBO's series adaptation of the PlayStation hit, The Last of Us, and I can certainly say I have not been disappointed. That being said, I could not say the apocalyptic TV show had a personally emotional effect on me… until I saw the sixth episode of Season 2, 'The Price.'
Not only can I confidently say that no program on the 2025 TV schedule (or in any recent year that I can think of) has left me as shaken as The Last of Us with this particular episode, which consists of flashbacks that bridge the gap between seasons. No other episode of this show has left me in such a state of heartbreak and lasting ponderance, which is really saying something when you consider how this show thrives on tragedy. Allow me to explain why it took this long for the series to break me.
One of the most talked-about moments from The Last of Us Season 2, Episode 6, sees Joel (Pedro Pascal) and Ellie (Bella Ramsey) come across a bitten Eugene (Joe Pantoliano). Joel promises him and Ellie that he will wait for her to come back and bring the ailing man to Jackson to see his wife, the local therapist Gail (Catherine O'Hara, who cried a lot while filming this episode), one last time. Unfortunately, Joel breaks that promise and shoots the man dead before Ellie returns.
'Joey Pants' makes a great case for his second Emmy (which he previously won after shaking up the cast of The Sopranos in Season 3) with this despairing performance that, quite frankly, I am not sure would have had as much of an effect on me if I were not married. Hearing him respond to Joel's promise that he would deliver his last words for Gail with, 'No, I need her last words for me!' and begging for her face to be the last thing he sees really got to me because I would be pleading the same. For my wife to be the last thing I see before I pass is all I can hope for, too.
Stream The Last of Us on Max for less by bundling
Unless you watch The Last of Us the traditional way, when it airs on HBO, you probably catch up on video game adaptation by streaming on Max, which costs $16.99 per month with a standard plan. However, you could be bundling your subscription with your Disney+ and Hulu account for $29.99 per month, which saves you $6.99 on Max, plus the same price on two more great streaming platforms each.View Deal
I could have never anticipated that, after witnessing Eugene's devastating final plea (a welcome change from the Last of Us video games, from what I hear), 'The Price' would tap into my emotions any further. Lo and behold, I was wrecked by the final scene, when Ellie confronts Joel about ruining the chance for a Cordyceps cure by rescuing her from the Fireflies, and he explains he did it out of love for her and would do it again if given the chance. What really did me in was when he tells his surrogate daughter that, if she has children of her own, he hopes she does 'a little bit better than me,' echoing his own father's words from the cold open.
At the moment I write this, I am not a parent, but my wife and I intend to have children sometime soon, and yet, to be perfectly candid, the idea of bringing a child into this world terrifies me. Clearly, I have less hazardous circumstances to contend with than Joel did (and I pray it stays that way), but I nonetheless agonize over, not just keeping my children safe, but also doing right by them in a just manner. Thankfully, Ellie's admission that she would be willing to try to forgive Joel for his actions gave me hope that, as long as my approach to parenting comes from a place of love, we will be all right.
Inevitably, I have found many reasons to compare this series to a show similar to The Last of Us, The Walking Dead, and even found a similarity between Joel's murder and another tragic character death. However, that hit series never got to me like this show has for the reasons above. So, for my money, The Last of Us reigns as TV's superior zombie apocalypse series for now.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNET
an hour ago
- CNET
Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers for Aug. 2, #783
Looking for the most recent Connections answers? Click here for today's Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands puzzles. Today's NYT Connections puzzle could be tough. That purple caregory throws out a term for a kind of word that many people have never heard of before. Read on for clues and today's Connections answers. The Times now has a Connections Bot, like the one for Wordle. Go there after you play to receive a numeric score and to have the program analyze your answers. Players who are registered with the Times Games section can now nerd out by following their progress, including number of puzzles completed, win rate, number of times they nabbed a perfect score and their win streak. Read more: Hints, Tips and Strategies to Help You Win at NYT Connections Every Time Hints for today's Connections groups Here are four hints for the groupings in today's Connections puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group, to the tough (and sometimes bizarre) purple group. Yellow group hint: Hold together. Green group hint: Formal way to describe an informal activity. Blue group hint: Get to the alley. Purple group hint: Opposing meanings in one word. Answers for today's Connections groups Yellow group: Attach with adhesive. Green group: Polite terms for sex. Blue group: Bowling results. Purple group: Contronyms (words that can mean opposite things). Read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here Are the Most Popular Letters Used in English Words What are today's Connections answers? The completed NYT Connections puzzle for Aug. 2, 2025. NYT/Screenshot by CNET The yellow words in today's Connections The theme is attach with adhesive. The four answers are adhere, affix, glue and stick. The green words in today's Connections The theme is polite terms for sex. The four answers are congress, commerce, intimacy and relations. The blue words in today's Connections The theme is bowling results. The four answers are foul, spare, split and strike. The purple words in today's Connections The theme is contronyms (words that can mean opposite things). The four answers are cleave, garnish, oversight and sanction.


CNET
an hour ago
- CNET
Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers for Aug. 3, #784
Looking for the most recent Connections answers? Click here for today's Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands puzzles. Today's NYT Connections puzzle could be tough. But the purple category is pretty fun, at least if you're fascinated with musical groups and their names. Read on for clues and today's Connections answers. The Times now has a Connections Bot, like the one for Wordle. Go there after you play to receive a numeric score and to have the program analyze your answers. Players who are registered with the Times Games section can now nerd out by following their progress, including number of puzzles completed, win rate, number of times they nabbed a perfect score and their win streak. Read more: Hints, Tips and Strategies to Help You Win at NYT Connections Every Time Hints for today's Connections groups Here are four hints for the groupings in today's Connections puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group, to the tough (and sometimes bizarre) purple group. Yellow group hint: Do what I do. Green group hint: Athletic games. Blue group hint: New trend. Purple group hint: Think music and animals. Answers for today's Connections groups Yellow group: Emulate. Green group: Sports. Blue group: Mania. Purple group: Single animal in a creatively spelled band name. Read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here Are the Most Popular Letters Used in English Words What are today's Connections answers? The completed NYT Connections puzzle for Aug. 3, 2025. NYT/Screenshot by CNET The yellow words in today's Connections The theme is emulate. The four answers are copy, echo, mirror and parrot. The green words in today's Connections The theme is sports. The four answers are cricket, golf, polo and squash. The blue words in today's Connections The theme is mania. The four answers are bug, craze, fad and fever. The purple words in today's Connections The theme is animal in a creatively spelled band name. The four answers are beetle, bird, gorilla and monkey. (The Beatles, The Byrds, Gorillaz and The Monkees.)
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Sabrina Carpenter's Man's Best Friend Tracklist Is Here and It's Petty, Perfect, and Absolutely Deranged
Sabrina Carpenter is in her pop provocateur era, doggedly defiant, scandalously cheeky, and completely unbothered. After nearly breaking the internet with her single 'Manchild' and igniting a culture war with her risqué album cover, the 25-year-old pop phenom has now unveiled the full tracklist for her highly anticipated sixth studio album, Man's Best Friend, due August 29. And let's just say: she's not playing nice. A Tracklist Tailored to Chaos Carpenter revealed the titles of the album's songs one by one over the past week, orchestrating a cheeky scavenger hunt that involved fans posting selfies with puppies and holding signs showing off the individual track names. It was playful, intimate, and unmistakably Sabrina. Today, the full 12-song lineup was finally unleashed in its entirety. Here's the complete tracklist for Man's Best Friend: Manchild Tears My Man on Willpower Sugar Talking We Broke Up Again Last Night Nobody's Son Never Getting Laid When Did You Get Hot? Go Go Juice Don't Worry I'll Make You Worry House Tour Goodbye With song titles that read like messy texts from a relationship autopsy, the album promises a cocktail of romantic disillusionment, sarcastic rage, and emotional chaos all tied together with Carpenter's now-trademark wink. 'Manchild' Sets the Tone and the Charts on Fire The album's lead single 'Manchild' dropped in early June and instantly set the tone for what Man's Best Friend is about: toxic relationships, immaturity, and the feminine art of calling bulls**t with a catchy hook. Written alongside frequent collaborators Amy Allen and Jack Antonoff, who helped sculpt the sound of 2024's Short n' Sweet, 'Manchild' debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it her second chart-topper following 'Please, Please, Please.' The hit blends bubblegum melodies with biting commentary, a balance Carpenter has perfected in recent years as she's stepped fully into her pop star power. The Controversial Cover: Canine Allegory or Cultural Grenade? While Carpenter's music has been celebrated for its fearless femininity, it's the album cover of Man's Best Friend that truly set tongues wagging. The original artwork depicts Carpenter on all fours, being yanked by the hair by a man in a suit, imagery that sparked immediate online outrage, accusations of misogyny, kink-baiting, and even religious offense. In typical Sabrina fashion, she responded not with an apology but with art and shade. She dropped an alternative black-and-white cover showing her peacefully resting her head on the shoulder of a suited man. Her caption? 'here is a new alternative cover approved by God.' A Pop Star Who Knows Her Audience and Her Moment Sabrina Carpenter's rise from Disney darling to Gen Z's reigning pop antihero hasn't been accidental. With every glittery diss track and tongue-in-cheek video, she continues to rewrite the rules of mainstream pop stardom. And she does so with a firm grasp on social media virality, the cultural zeitgeist, and how to turn backlash into Billboard domination. In a tweet celebrating the full tracklist reveal, Carpenter gushed, 'thank you to all my beautiful perfect fans that helped me reveal the tracklist for Man's Best Friend the final track reveal is… track #2 'Tears' can't believe the album will be in your ears in exactly 4 weeks ♡' If the public response to Manchild and her last record is any indication, Man's Best Friend won't just be heard, it'll be felt, fought over, and probably memed to oblivion. The post Sabrina Carpenter's Man's Best Friend Tracklist Is Here and It's Petty, Perfect, and Absolutely Deranged appeared first on Where Is The Buzz | Breaking News, Entertainment, Exclusive Interviews & More. Solve the daily Crossword