
After watching the season finale of the FX show, Atlanta yesterday, I've never been more connected to the show's creator, Donald Glover. As expected, the first season was funny, weird, smart and fresh-which would describe Mr. Glover.
Let me explain the significance of the ending in the season finale. Warning: Spoilers ahead.
First, the show begins with Earnest "Earn" Marks waking up alongside his baby's mama, Vanessa, in her bed. He's crashing at her place. We learn early on that Earn dropped out of an Ivy League school and returned home to Atlanta. What's next for Earn? No one knows yet, but what we do know is that he has no place, let alone a bed, to call his own.
Among his meager possessions are some headphones. Whenever he has some "alone time" (or whether he's walking the streets on riding the bus), he's listening to rap music - it's his passion. As he's walking, he's following the path towards his future. Where's he's going? Don't know, but he knows the path doesn't go through Princeton. He knows he wants to do something that involves music. Since his cousin, Alfred, is known around the city as the popular underground rapper "Paperboi", Earn suggests he becomes his manager.
Alfred reluctantly agrees to this arrangement.
What does a Music Manager do and how does he make money? At this point, the only thing's for certain about Earn following this path is...

This is how I felt moving to Hollywood a few years ago to pursue a career in acting. I know I wasn't going to be in TV shows and movies if I stayed in Indiana. When I did arrive to Hollywood, I didn't really know which path to take to be a working actor. For a while, I was wandering down this career path-a path that seems like a waste of time for a lot of people-trying to meet people and trying out things in hopes of something "clicking". Something to let me know I was on the right path to greatness.
It had me feeling like a Nomad, which is how Earn lives his life throughout the season. Since he can't sleep in his own bed at his parents' house (they kicked him out of the house for dropping out of school), we watch Earn waking up in different places and in different beds (or couches sometimes) in various episodes. In fact, if a particular episode centers around Earn, the opening scene shows him waking up in a different location.

As a Music Manager, Earn's starting from the bottom. As Paperboi's manager, he sets up the rapper's participation in a celebrity basketball game...


...with JUSTIN BIEBER...



...involvement in a roundtable discussion on B.A.N...


...and guest appearing at local nightclubs...with invisible cars.
Misadventures do ensue from these and other occurrences, but hey, there's no one surefire way to being a successful Music Manager. Trials and errors are learned, but you keep pushing and working.
At the end of the finale's episode, Paperboi gets pleasure in handing Earn a roll of cash-the 5% fee he's earned from his managerial services. It took a while, but his services have finally been rendered.
Earn then goes to Vanessa's place and hits her off with most of the cash for her and their baby. She sees the fruits of his labor and they have dinner together (maybe for the first time ever) as a family. She offers him to stay for the night if he needs to. He kindly declines, leaves, puts on his headphones, and walks off.
He comes to a storage unit in a storage facility, opens it, and turns on a lamp to reveal a cot and other personal belongings. He lies down on the cot (FINALLY, A BED OF HIS OWN). He then takes the $200 left of his 5% fee from where he initially stored it in his shoe, turns off the light, and goes to sleep.
The storage unit might not be much. The cot might not be much. $200 might not be much. Earn might be starting from the bottom, but most of us start there. Most creative career goals start like that, but I know I'm on the right path towards my future. Just as sure as the clicking sound the lamp makes when Earn turns it off, he's sure things are now starting to "click" for him and his career. Just like Earn, I'm sure, too.







