Jason Sudeikis says ‘Ted Lasso’ Season 3 critics ‘don’t have imaginations’

Jason Sudeikis is defending “Ted Lasso” from haters.

The 49-year-old star and co-creator of the Apple TV+ series addressed criticisms of the show’s third season in an interview with reporter Jeremy Egner, featured in his new book, “Believe: The Untold Story Behind Ted Lasso, the Show That Kicked Its Way Into Our Hearts,” which is out today.

During the interview, Egner suggested to Sudeikis that “a small but vocal group of dissenters” criticized “how the [show’s] core cast had been scattered into different storylines,” complaining that the narrative had become “too diffuse and unfocused” — particularly with regard to Keeley and Nate’s arcs.

Sudeikis disagreed with the critics’ assessment and said some viewers lack “imaginations.”

“Ted Lasso” AP

“Much like live theater, the show, especially Season 3, was asking the audience to be an active participant,” the star replied, according to TVLine. “Some people want to do that, some people don’t. Some people want to judge—they don’t want to be curious.”

“Ted Lasso” fans will recognize Sudeikis’ allusion to Coach Lasso’s motto: “Be curious, not judgmental.”

“I’ll never understand people who will go on talking about something so brazenly that they, in my opinion, clearly don’t understand,” Sudeikis added. “And God bless ’em for it; it’s not their fault. They don’t have imaginations and they’re not open to the experience of what it’s like to have one.”

Jason Sudeikis, left, and Hannah Waddingham in a scene from the season three finale of “Ted Lasso.” AP
From Left: Jeremy Swift, Hannah Waddingham, and Juno Temple on “Ted Lasso.” Courtesy of Apple

Referring to how the show’s characters ended the season, the Emmy winner said, “Everybody’s in better shape than when they started. Like a good Boy or Girl Scout at a campsite, we left it better than we found it. And if you don’t see that in that show, then I don’t know what show you’re watching.”

The third season of “Ted Lasso” was thought to be its last, though lately, rumors have spread that a fourth season is on the horizon.

According to Deadline, Warner Bros. Television — which produced the hit series — picked up the options on original cast members Hannah Waddingham, Brett Goldstein, and Jeremy Swift.

Brendan Hunt, Brett Goldstein, Nick Mohammed and Jason Sudeikis in a scene from the season three finale of “Ted Lasso.” AP
Cristo Fernández, kneeling left, Kola Bokinni, standing foreground left, Toheeb Jimoh, standing foreground right, and Phil Dunster, kneeling foreground right, with other cast members performing “So Long, Farewell” from “The Sound of Music,” in a scene from the season three finale of “Ted Lasso.” AP

In August, “Ted Lasso” co-creator and executive producer Bill Lawrence exclusively told The Post that the fate of a possible season four rested in Sudeikis’ hands.

“You can ask anybody that wrote on the show, or acted on the show, or produced the show, and we will all say the same thing, which is, that’s up to Jason Sudeikis,” Lawrence said while promoting his latest Apple TV+ show “Bad Monkey.”

“Because, by the way, he’s not just Ted Lasso himself and the writer co-creator — but he’s the one that would have to uproot his entire life and family, you know?”

Filmed in the UK, “Ted Lasso” required Sudeikis, who is based in the US and shares two kids — son Otis, 10, and daughter Daisy, 8 —  with his ex-fiancée, American actress Olivia Wilde, 40, to relocate across the Atlantic to work on the show.



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