In the final minutes, Monty and his friends pin down Tyler Down (Devin Druid) in the school bathroom and violently sodomize him with a broom handle. The scene is graphic, prolonged, and brutal. Afterward, a bloodied Tyler retrieves the arsenal of guns he has been collecting all season and drives to the school dance, intent on a mass shooting.
The season’s legacy is paradoxical: it tried to be responsible (adding trigger warnings, expanding the “Beyond the Reasons” aftershow) while simultaneously pushing boundaries of on-screen teen violence further than any mainstream show before or since. 13 Reasons Why Season 2 is not a good season of television in the traditional sense. It is bloated (13 episodes, many too long), tonally inconsistent, and occasionally exploitative. Tyler’s assault alone disqualifies it from being called responsible or tasteful.
The problem? The book had no sequel. Season 2 was an entirely original creation, tasked with an impossible mission: continue a story that was already resolved, justify its own existence, and navigate a minefield of controversy after mental health experts criticized Season 1’s graphic depiction of suicide.