Warning: Spoilers ahead for Season 5 of โYouโ
Joe Goldberg has been narrating and justifying his murderous ways for five seasons in โYou.โ
So when the Netflix thriller’s fifth and final season was released, Joe, portrayed by Penn Badgley, reflected on his actions and punishment. But what did they mean?
Over the course of five seasons, Joe killed 21 people. At the end of โYou,โ he was arrested, put on trial and convicted of multiple murders, before spending his final days alone in prison.
Wearing a red jumpsuit, he is all by himself, reading a book when he receives fan mail. He then begins to narrate how in the end, his punishment was even worse than he imagined: a life of solitude and loneliness.
What are Joe’s final words in ‘You’?
Known for his obsessive behavior towards women, Joe is now left all alone in a prison cell. With nobody to love and be held by, he believes his punishment is โunfairโ โย and goes on to share his final words.
โItโs unfair, putting all of this on me. Arenโt we all just products of our environment? Hurt people hurt people. I never stood a chance,โ he says, receiving fan mail. โWhy am I in a cage when these crazies write me all the depraved things they want me to do to them?โ
โMaybe we have a problem as a society. Maybe we should fix whatโs broken within us. Maybe the problem isnโt me. Maybe itโsย you,โ he concludes, looking straight at the camera. ย
What do Joe Goldberg’s last words mean?
What exactly did Joe mean when he said that society was the problem? Was it not Joe? Badgley thinks there’s more to it than meets the eye.
โItโs both. Itโs a cop out from him but itโs also true because, at the end of the day, heโs not real and we are,โ the actor told Entertainment Weekly. โAnd so weโve been watching a show about him and he no longer exists, so it is about us. It couldnโt be about him. Heโs not real. So thatโs kind of plain and simple to me.โ
So weโve been watching a show about him and he no longer exists, so it is about us.”
Penn Badgley on Joe Goldberg’s final words
Badgley said that it depends on what viewers wanted from Joe, a romantic stalker who isn’t afraid to kill anyone who gets in his way.
โDo we need to see him change? What would actually be the conditions for him to change meaningfully? Is that what anybody wants to see?โ Badgley asked. โThat would actually be a very different show with a very different pace and tone and ethos, and it wouldnโt be as popular as it is. So itโs frustratingly true, I think, his statement in the end.โ