Khloé takes True to visit Tristan in Boston, but the trip takes an unexpected turn when Tristan asks for another chance. Khloé calls her therapist live on camera—a first for the show—and decides to co-parent without reconciliation. “I deserve peace,” she says. “Not a project.”
Scott Disick sits down with a grief counselor to discuss the loss of his parents, which was filmed during the show’s early seasons. The episode follows his journey from “Lord Disick” to a present father. In a moving scene, he apologizes to Mason, Penelope, and Reign for his past behavior on camera.
In a one-on-one interview with no producers in the room, Kris Jenner watches a supercut of her most manipulative moments—crying on command, pitting daughters against each other, and exploiting private pain for ratings. She admits, “I created a monster, and her name was the show.” She asks for forgiveness from her children. The silence that follows is deafening. keeping up with the kardashians s20
Tagline: “20 seasons. One family. The end of an era.” Series Overview After nearly two decades, 20 seasons, countless spin-offs, and a cultural revolution, Keeping Up with the Kardashians returns for its most emotional and self-aware season yet. Season 20 is not about building new brands or launching new products—it is about looking in the rearview mirror. As the family prepares to say goodbye to the show that made them household names, the cameras capture raw, unfiltered moments of vulnerability, reconciliation, and nostalgia. From Kourtney’s blissful new chapter with Travis Barker to Khloé’s ongoing journey of self-love, from Kim’s legal battles to Kylie’s quiet evolution as a mother, this season asks one question: Who are we when the cameras stop rolling? Episode Guide Episode 1: “The Beginning of the End” The family gathers at Kris Jenner’s Palm Springs estate for what is supposed to be a casual lunch. Kris drops a bombshell: after 20 seasons, E! has agreed to let the family end the show on their own terms. Emotions run high as Kim admits she’s relieved, Kourtney says “I told you so,” and Kendall worries about losing their platform. Khloé breaks down crying, realizing the show has documented her entire adult life.
Vulture : “The Kardashians pull off the impossible: a satisfying, tearful, self-aware ending that will leave you missing them the moment the screen fades to black.” Should you watch? Absolutely. Even if you’ve never seen an episode, Season 20 works as a standalone meditation on family, fame, and knowing when to say goodbye. Khloé takes True to visit Tristan in Boston,
Kourtney and Travis plan a low-key courthouse wedding, but Kris insists on a “small” $2 million celebration. The episode follows Kourtney’s struggle to maintain her boundaries while Travis tries to mediate between his fiancée and his future mother-in-law. In the end, they compromise: two weddings—one intimate, one for the cameras.
The family sells their old Calabasas compound—the one from the early seasons. As they walk through the empty rooms, they share memories: Kim’s first magazine cover taped to the fridge, the infamous “stop being poor” fight in the kitchen, the staircase where Khloé found out Lamar was in the hospital. They take one last family photo in the backyard. “Not a project
Kris reveals she has kept a vault of unaired footage from every season. The family sits down to watch clips they’ve never seen—including a young Rob dancing in the background, a fight between Scott and Kourtney that was too dark to air, and a tearful confession from Lamar Odom. The episode serves as a poignant reminder of the pain behind the glamour.