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Glee Season 6 Finale Spoilers, Plot Recap: Cast Leaving Show With Emotional Farewell

A scene from the two-hour finale of 'Glee' on March 20, 2015 on Fox. | FOX

As expected, Fox came up with an emotional two-hour season finale for "Glee," which came to a close on Friday after six long seasons.

The final episode took us back to 2009 when Glee Club was first founded at the William McKinley High School, which included a memorable performance of Journey's "Don't Stop Believing."

Instead of telling it again through Finn Hudson's perspective, the first hour of the finale showed what prompted the other characters to join New Direction.

The flash back culminated in an edited version of the performance that packed an emotional punch featuring Cory Monteith, who tragically died in a Vancouver hotel in July 2013.

The second hour brought Glee fans back to the present day with Will Shuester passing New Directions to Sam Evans, who wants to make McKinley High as a fine arts school.

Aptly titled "Dreams Come True," it saw how New Direction's beloved members made their dreams come true with Rachel Berry winning a Tony Award for Best Actress after making it on Broadway.

Aside from a successful career, Berry also married Jesse St. James, now a director at Broadway, and pregnant as the surrogate mother for Kurt Hummel and Blaine Anderson.

Both became successful actors in New York while Mercedes Jones found a career, who is described the next Beyonce. Tina Cohen-Chang and Artie Abrams are back together and gaining traction in the indie film world.

Perhaps the most amazing of all was when the finale revealed that Sue Sylvester is on her second term as vice president in the Jeb Bush administration.

The scenes may have pleased faithful fans of the show but it definitely raised eyebrows of some, who observed that "Glee" sang the same swan song as NBC's "Parks and Recreation, which ended last month.

This did not turn off Entertainment Weekly's Jeff Jensen, who said the show chose an arrangement that hit all of its feel-good notes with more brass, sass, and messy gusto.

"The ballsy, blunt force optimism was inspiring and incredible at the same time. It was a radical act of daydream believin' that was about pleasing loyal fans and provoking everyone else," he said.