About this episode
Season Endings and Real-World Goodbyes
This week on the podcast, Brian and Darryl break down the Season 1 finale of HBO’s A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, reflect on the season as a whole, and celebrate the life and career of actor Robert Carradine.
Did the finale land the joust, or did it pull up short at the lists? And where does this first season rank among HBO’s growing Westerosi saga?
Plus, we say goodbye to a certified nerd icon.
Episode Index
Intro: 0:07
News Bites – Robert Carradine: 5:30
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms – Season 1 Finale Review: 13:47
Season 1 Retrospective: 40:12
Final Thoughts: 46:52
News Bites
Robert Carradine (1954–2026)
Robert Carradine, best known for his role as Lewis Skolnick in Revenge of the Nerds, has passed away.
Carradine was part of the legendary Carradine acting family, son of John Carradine and brother to David and Keith Carradine. While he built a long résumé in film and television, he became a generational touchstone for playing the underdog genius in the 1984 cult classic Revenge of the Nerds and its sequels.
Beyond that franchise, Carradine appeared in projects such as The Long Riders, Lizzie McGuire, King of the Nerds, and numerous television roles across decades. He embodied a very specific cinematic archetype: the smart outsider who eventually wins.
For an entire era of fandom, he helped make “nerd” aspirational.
We tip the pocket protector in respect.
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms – Season 1 Finale
Episode Title: ‘The Morrow’
Director: Sarah Adina Smith
Writer: Ira Parker & Ti Mikkel
Network: HBO
The Season 1 finale brings Ser Duncan the Tall and Egg’s first major Westerosi chapter to a close. Lyonel invites Dunk to move to Storm’s End, but Dunk believes that he brings only bad luck. Baelor’s body is cremated at his funeral. Dunk finds Valarr, who questions why his father died, but Dunk was left alive. Raymun reveals he has married the prostitute Rowan, alias Red. Maekar informs Dunk that Aerion will spend time in the Free Cities to atone. He laments that Baelor would have been a good king and invites Dunk to Summerhall, where Egg can be his squire; Dunk declines, which Egg overhears. In a flashback, Dunk asks Arlan why he was never knighted. Arlan retorts that a true knight always finishes a story. In the present, Daeron tells Dunk to mentor Egg to prevent him from becoming like Aerion. Egg discovers that his hair is regrowing. He takes a knife to Aerion’s bedroom, but Maekar calms him down. Dunk asks Maekar if Egg can squire for him on the road, but Maekar refuses. Raymun buys Sweetfoot back for Dunk, who then gifts her to Raymun. As Dunk leaves Ashford, Egg arrives, and they depart together. Egg suggests that they travel to Dorne. An angry Maekar later realizes that Egg is gone.
Key themes explored:
– Honor vs. ambition
– The weight of legacy
– The quiet tension of noble poli