The ‘Clickbait’ Finale Explained: Here’s Why Viewers Are Losing Their Minds

You never could have predicted this.

Warning: Major spoilers for Clickbait on Netflix. Seriously, we’re revealing the entire ending.

If you thought you were going to be able to predict the ending of Netflix’s latest original series, Clickbait, then you were dead wrong. LOL, dead.

Yeah, as we knew from pretty early on, the show's main character, Nick Brewer (Adrian Grenier), doesn’t survive, but his demise isn't what you think. Here’s the premise: After Nick is captured, his kidnappers post a video to the internet claiming he's been abusing women. They say if the video reaches 5 million views, he dies. Naturally, it doesn’t take long for the hostage tape to go viral, leaving his sister, Pia (Zoe Kazan), and wife, Sophie (Betty Gabriel), desperate to find him and prove his innocence.

But it turns out Nick wasn’t even killed by his kidnappers. It was all a catfish situation. After a woman named Sarah (Taylor Ferguson) dies of suicide after being dumped by her online “boyfriend,” her brother, Simon (Daniel Henshall), kidnaps the man he thinks is responsible: Nick. But there’s a twist: In reality, Nick’s lonely coworker, Dawn (Becca Lish), used his likeness and details from his life to catfish a string of women on the internet in a desperate attempt to feel loved and seen.

Once Simon realizes Nick isn’t his man, he lets our guy go. However, instead of going straight to the police, Nick tracks down the source of all his trauma: Dawn. When confronting her about her toxic online behavior and promising to expose her, Nick is murdered by her husband, Ed (Wally Dunn). Nick was completely innocent and the real villain was some bored housewife and her husband. 

Since landing on Netflix, Clickbait creator Tony Ayres has been bracing himself for criticism for this unpredictable ending. “I would stand by why we did it and what we have to say in doing it. The key to this format is it gives us an opportunity to really get in the skin of the characters and to understand why people do what they do,” Ayer told Entertainment Weekly. “I think that there is something interesting and valid in talking about the invisibility of older women. I think there’s something interesting about why Dawn does it. But I’ve got my bike helmet on, so I’m ready for the response.”

So what did people think? Well, it’s fair to say they didn’t see it coming. 

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While a twist ending doesn’t necessarily mean a show is well-written (how can you guess the ending of a show that leaves you no legitimate clues?), it seems fans of the Netflix thriller weren’t too disappointed. Ayers can probably take the helmet off. 


This story originally appeared on: Glamour - Author:Condé Nast

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