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In the 2015 premiere of "Schitt’s Creek," a riches-to-rags comedy, the Rose family arrive in the tiny titular town wearing the designer clothes of their past life as protective gear. But over the show’s six seasons on Pop TV, viewers have seen the once wealthy Roses - Johnny (Eugene Levy) and Moira (Catherine O’Hara) and their adult children, David (Daniel Levy) and Alexis (Annie Murphy) - scrape their way from being penniless exiles in a town they’d bought as a joke to being elemental members of the community. They’ve found gratifying work, made real friends and fallen in love.
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Most of all, they’ve formed a true family, having come to Schitt’s Creek as strangers to each other. In the end, "Schitt’s Creek" has turned out to be a show about love.
Created by father and son Eugene Levy and Daniel Levy as a co-production with CBC, "Schitt’s Creek" will have its series finale on April 7. To end the show at the peak of its popularity was their choice. "It just didn’t feel like it was worth the risk to take it any further." "I at no point wanted to compromise on quality or storytelling," Levy says in an interview with Variety. After getting a two-season renewal at the close of Season 4, Daniel Levy began plotting the series’ conclusion.
He always knew how he wanted to conclude the story, and had 28 episodes over two seasons to do so. But they would never be able to buy the kind of closeness that they have by the end of the series." "The goal was at the end of this show, this family will realize the value of love," Levy says. "Money can temporarily bandage a lot of things.