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The Second Coming (The Sopranos)

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19th episode of the 6th season of The Sopranos
"The Second Coming"
The Sopranos episode
Episodeno.Season 6
Episode 19
Directed byTim Van Patten
Written byTerence Winter
Cinematography byAlik Sakharov
Production code619
Original air dateMay 20, 2007 (2007-05-20)
Running time53 minutes
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Kennedy and Heidi"
Next →
"The Blue Comet"
The Sopranosseason 6
List of episodes

"The Second Coming" is the 84th episode of the American crime dramaThe Sopranos, the seventh episode of the second half of the show's sixth season, and the 19th episode of the season overall. In the episode, the Soprano and Lupertazzi crime families encounter business and interpersonal conflicts, while A.J. Soprano's depression leads him to attempt suicide.

Written byTerence Winter and directed byTim Van Patten, it premiere on May 20, 2007, onHBO in the U.S. With nearly 7.3 million viewers, the episode was the seventh straightSopranos episode to rank number one on theNielsen U.S. cable television ratings and had positive critical reviews. At the60th Writers Guild of America Awards in 2008, the episode won an award for outstanding writing.

Starring

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* = credit only** = photo only

Guest starring

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Synopsis

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Tony goes withSilvio andBobby to a sitdown withPhil inNew York. He offers a compromise about the asbestos removal, but Phil rejects it out of hand. In response, Tony takes Phil's menCoco andButchie off the payroll from another construction project. When they hear of this from the foreman, they viciously beat him up and steal the cash in his wallet.

A drunken Coco notices Meadow in a restaurant. He touches her cheek and makes some lewd comments. She reluctantly tells her father. Enraged, Tony finds Coco andpistol-whips andcurb stomps him. This assault opens a deep rift between theSoprano andLupertazzi families.Little Carmine tells Tony that he will once again broker a truce meeting with Phil, who has shut down one of their joint construction projects. Tony admits, "I lost it, timing couldn't have been worse." But Phil refuses to meet with them when they arrive at his home; from behind a second-floor window, he spews profanities as they walk away.

FBI AgentsHarris andGoddard visit Satriale's and ask Tony to look at some photos. Tony identifiesAhmed and Muhammad.

WhenDr. Melfi seesDr. Kupferberg, he shares with her the results of a recent study which has shown thatsociopaths are not helped bytalk therapy but rather only further enabled by it, perhaps even "sharpening their skills ascon men" in the process.

Meadow reveals that her new boyfriend is Patrick Parisi, Patsy's eldest son, and that, inspired by him, she has decided to enterlaw school.

A.J. remains depressed. Moved byW. B. Yeats' apocalyptic poem "The Second Coming", he tries to kill himself in the family pool. With one foot tied by a rope to a cinder block, and with a plastic bag over his head, he jumps in. But the rope is too long to keep him submerged. He struggles: he can neither drown nor save himself. Tony happens to come home. Hearing shouts, he goes out. He runs and jumps, wearing a suit and tie, into the pool. He saves A.J. and hauls up the cinder block. At first, he is shocked and furious, but A.J. is sobbing; he cradles his son in his lap, saying "Come on, baby, you're all right, baby."

A.J. is put onValium and admitted to a psychiatric ward. At a session withhis therapist and his parents, he speaks of resentments going back to 2nd grade, and quoteshis grandmother at the end of her life: "It's all a big nothing." This session occurs just after Tony's assault on Coco; as he listens, he notices one of Coco's bloody teeth in the cuff of his pant leg. Tony and Carmela both feel guilty about the attempted suicide, and each blames the other.

Tony scornfully rejects Dr. Melfi's suggestion that A.J. was calling for help and, at some level, knew the rope was too long.

Final appearances

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Production

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  • The episode was named after theWilliam Butler Yeats poem "The Second Coming", which A.J. studies in college.[1] Paul Brownfield of theLos Angeles Times observed symbolism between this episode and the poem, namely "bloodshed, sadness and death."[2] Additionally, asAlan Sepinwall pointed out on hisStar-Ledger blog about the show, the Yeats poem was previously quoted in theseason five episode "Cold Cuts".[3]

Music

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Reception

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Ratings

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On its premiere, "The Second Coming" had 7.34 million viewers, leading theNielsen weekly U.S. cable ratings.[6] This was the seventh straightSopranos episode to rank number one on the weekly ratings.[6][7]

Critical reception

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Television Without Pity graded the episode with an A+, with some pointed comments about A.J.'s scenes, for instance: "...AJ has caught plenty of breaks in his life, starting with being born to rich parents who give him pretty much anything he wants."[8]: 1  Reed also responded to A.J. complaining to Meadow about his depression: "AJ makes it hard to have empathy for him."[8]: 3 

IGN rated the episode 8.6 points out of 10, with Dan Iverson commenting: "Never before have we felt more depressed after watching an episode of television."[9]

ForTV Squad, in a review rating the episode six points out of seven, Tom Biro praised the plot developments as "mesh[ing] even more than usual" with drama.[10] Similarly,Matt Zoller Seitz cited this episode as an example ofThe Sopranos being "a consistently pessimistic, often wickedly honest vision of human nature."[11]

Gary Susman observed onEntertainment Weekly: "The looming battle between Phil's crew and Tony's crew...is shaping up as a battle between the old, emotionally stunted, spiritually empty way and the new, more open-minded, struggling-for-meaning way."[1] Susman added that the scene of Coco making lewd comments to Meadow "crossed a line we'd never seen crossed on this show."[1]

Awards

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At the60th Writers Guild of America Awards in 2008, "The Second Coming" won Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series.[12]

References

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  1. ^abcSusman, Gary (May 21, 2007)."Things Fall Apart".Entertainment Weekly. Archived fromthe original on May 29, 2007. RetrievedJune 13, 2025.
  2. ^Brownfield, Paul (May 21, 2007)."'The Sopranos': Tony's lament: 'Why me?'".Show Tracker. LATimes.com. Archived fromthe original on June 6, 2007. RetrievedJune 13, 2025.
  3. ^Sepinwall, Alan (May 21, 2007)."Sopranos Rewind: The Second Coming".All TV. NJ.com. Archived fromthe original on June 23, 2007. RetrievedJune 13, 2025.
  4. ^Italian Folk Songs and Dances. Folkways Records/Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. 1955. Catalog Number FW06915 / FW 6915.
  5. ^Perez, Rodrigo (May 25, 2007)."Ninna Ninna – Sopranos Song Mystery Revealed".The Playlist.
  6. ^ab"'Sopranos' takes top cable rankings spot". Associated Press. May 24, 2007. Archived fromthe original on May 26, 2007. RetrievedJune 13, 2025 – via Yahoo! News.
  7. ^"'Survivor's' ratings keep dropping".Los Angeles Times. May 16, 2007. Archived fromthe original on May 18, 2007. RetrievedJune 10, 2025.For the sixth consecutive week, HBO's 'The Sopranos' was cable's most-watched show of the week...
  8. ^abReed, Kim (May 26, 2007)."The Second Coming". Television Without Pity. pp. 1,3. Archived fromthe original on March 27, 2014. RetrievedJune 13, 2025.
  9. ^Iverson, Dan (May 21, 2007)."The Sopranos: 'The Second Coming' Review". IGN. Archived fromthe original on August 7, 2007. RetrievedJune 13, 2025.
  10. ^Biro, Tom (May 20, 2007)."The Sopranos: The Second Coming".TV Squad. Archived fromthe original on May 25, 2007. RetrievedJune 13, 2025.
  11. ^Seitz, Matt Zoller (May 21, 2007)."Sopranos Mondays: Season 6, Ep. 19, 'The Second Coming'".The House Next Door. Archived fromthe original on June 24, 2007. RetrievedJune 13, 2025.
  12. ^"2008 Writers Guild Awards Winners Announced". Writers Guild of America East. February 9, 2008. RetrievedJune 17, 2025.

External links

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  • David W. Rintels for "A Continual Roar of Musketry" (1970)
  • Herb Bermann & Thomas Y. Drake & Jerrold Freedman & Bo May for "Par for the Course" (1971)
  • Herman Miller for "King of the Mountain" (1972)
  • Harlan Ellison for "Phoenix Without Ashes" (1973)
  • Jim Byrnes for "Thirty a Month and Found" (1974)
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