![]() The cast seems to have shared some of that bond the officers of the Nine-Nine shared. They delivered big laughs, but they also made the audience feel as though these characters were much closer than just work colleagues. The likable cast of Brooklyn 99 was always clearly a big factor in the show's popularity. The whole Brooklyn 99 team comes to accept one another for who they are and what they have to do with their lives, and the family values are driven home at the very end with one final exclamation of " Nine-Nine!" The last conclusion between Jake and Boyle contributes as well, with Boyle finally accepting that being a father is what Jake needs to focus on and that it doesn't mean an end to their friendship. ![]() By the end of the conversation, however, the two accept their differences, causing Rosa to uncharacteristically express her affection for Amy. This is brought to the forefront in the final exchange between Amy and Rosa in which Amy struggles to understand Rosa's contentment with solitude. The ending of Brooklyn 99 highlights the importance of accepting your family members for who they are and what they have to do as individuals. The whole episode is a well-established family tradition for the Nine-Nine, but it also stresses some specific points of the familial theme. The theme of family has always been prominent throughout the show, and the Brooklyn 99 ending ties this together perfectly. ![]() The dissatisfaction serves as the ideal setup for the characters to reunite every year for yet another heist. Because all the double-crosses led to the most unlikely and least worthy victor, there still isn't a true two-time heist winner in the Nine-Nine. Hitchcock becoming the Grand Champion of the Nine-Nine by buying the prize for $40 is a hilarious anti-climax to all the effort. The final double-cross is Holt's, who leads the team to the site of their first arrest under him which allows Bill (Winston Story) to betray the whole team and lock them in a storage container, ultimately leading to Hitchcock's surprising win. This betrayal is particularly characteristic of Amy because it showcases her love and prowess for detailed planning - of both the party and the ruse. Even Jake and Amy's romance can't stop the competitive nature of these heists as Amy employs her ex-boyfriend, Teddy (Kyle Bornheimer), and plays on Jake's insecurity to convince him that he has been in a coma for seven years to get the location of the heist target. Believing his perfect goodbye destination, the Brooklyn Bridge, to be arbitrary and meaningless, she plans her own farewell party at the team's favorite bar. The next major double-cross comes as Amy chloroforms and dupes Jake in a con reminiscent of Mission: Impossible.
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