The writing in this show is so frustrating
I really want to like this show. I love the characters and I love the brother love/hate thing Sam and Bucky have. They shoudl have gone the sitcom route.
However, the writing is killing me.
1. For the majority of these last few episodes they were in desperate pursuit of the Flag-Smashers and then they decide to stop everything and go home after Cap kills that guy. They spend the rest of the episode running around the US free as birds even though they aided a different terrorist in breaking out of a high-security prison and traveling around Asia and Europe with him. The new Cap almost goes to jail but Buck and Sam? Go work on that boat, boys.
2. Then they were so guilt-ridden over Sharon and how they got pardoned and totally forgot about her for seven years while she was on the run, yet now that they are back fixing the boat can't be bothered to try to get her home. It's not like she didn't help them when they were on the run and saved their lives.
3. Bradley (the older super-soldier that was experimented on) says that the only reason he got out of jail was a nurse had sympathy and lied about his death. This is a guy that, in his own words, was poked and prodded and experimented on for thirty years, yet a quick signed note and he slips out of prison and nobody is the wiser? There would be a line of 100 different doctors and scientists that would want to dissect that cadaver. And since he's in hiding where does he move? South America? Nope... Baltimore, which is 40 miles north of the nation's capital where the Pentagon, FBI, CIA and every other intelligence agency in the US is located.
4. The whole 'fix the boat and let's sell it no fix the boat we need to keep it nobody wants the boat and now it's fixed no let's keep it' has been going on for five episodes. The whole idea that Sam needs to ask neighbors for money is silly. He could call Nike or Delta Airlines and immediately get a sponsorship worth millions. He could do a couple of corporate appearances and make a hundred grand. The show makes a point that he's a world-famous hero. At the very least he should have a phone full of voice-mails from people who would pay for him to come to their kid's birthday parties.
The show's writing doesn't feel thought out or tight, the tropes are obvious and played out, and there doesn't seem to be a structure of "if we do A-then-B-will-happen-to-get-us-to-C." For instance, it's lucky for Sam his buddy comes out of nowhere to point out Sam's gallivanting around the globe chasing terrorists was a waste that really went nowhere because he has suddenly has an app for that which shows where the Flag Smashers will be hitting next.