I agree with Sydney2011. I loved the scenes between Matt (Kyle) and Jaimie (Jessi) the most.
While Sydney2011 likes Season 3, episode 8, which was very good, I liked Season 3, episode 10 the best for the scenes between Matt and Jaimie:
1) The scene where Jaimie walks in on Matt folding a blanket was mesmerizing, and the music was perfect.
2) Then there was the scene were Jaimie asks Matt what happens when things become "normal" - does that mean Amanda? - and he says he doesn't understand how he can have feelings for more than one person. Then Jaimie asks if he has feeling for her and he says she shouldn't have to ask. The immediate look of acceptance in Jaimie's eyes was priceless! She looks for Nicole, so as not to get caught for what she is about to do, then she pulls Matt in for a big kiss. (This scene emotionally hit me the hardest!)
Those 2 scenes showed that Jessi was Kyle's soul mate, something Jessi knew all along but Kyle had to realize due to his attachment with Amanda. Amanda was pretty and pure, but Jessi was so much more!
So, we finally get to the point were the show is actually heating up and that's the last episode! Does he choose Jessi or Amanda? We don't know but I like think he chose Jessi.
It appeared to me, and I'm sure to others, that the show would continue because, if not, why bother leaving episode 10 with Michael Cassidy being Kyle's brother? Makes no sense.
In answer to a negative post here about the show, I would like to say this: I believe the acting in Kyle XY was every bit as good as any other similar series, such as Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Angel, Firefly, Roswell, etc. These are supernatural TV series, and not real life. That seems self-evident to me but apparently not to all.
Finally, the message Kyle XY sends to viewers is how important a good family and acceptance (accepting Jessi) are to the health of our children as they grow. In the real world we need much, much more of this kind of behavior, this kind of thinking. Too many families fail because the adults in them are broken, perhaps having endured broken families themselves. Modeled behavior is extremely important but too often overlooked.
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