On My Block: The Final Mystery

Recent signers:
Samuel Gyula Horváth and 13 others have signed recently.

The Issue

On My Block wasn’t just a show—it was a story about friendship, trauma, growth, and survival in Freeridge. While the series officially ended after Season 4, many of its most important storylines were left unresolved. Even with the spinoff Freeridge, the original characters’ arcs remain incomplete. We are asking Netflix to consider a limited Season 5, reunion special, or movie—not a full reboot—to give proper closure to the characters and stories that were clearly set up but never finished.

Why a continuation is needed
1. Spooky’s unexplained death

Spooky left the gang, was preparing to become a father, and planned to move to Portland. Despite completing a powerful redemption arc, he was killed off-screen with no explanation of who did it or why.

For a character this important, his death lacked meaning, accountability, and closure.

2. Jamal & Monse’s unresolved relationship
Jamal admits to Ruby that he has feelings for Monse. Monse never finds out. Jamal acts noticeably awkward and emotional around her throughout the final season.
During the final season, Monse wakes up in bed with Jamal (or “Hamal,” as Abuelita would say).

Yet the show never explores:

How Monse felt realizing she was in bed with Jamal
How Jamal processed crossing that emotional line
Whether it changed their friendship or meant something deeper
This moment was not a joke or shock value—it was intentional setup with no payoff.

3. Monse’s repeated cycle with Cesar

Throughout the series, Monse repeatedly returns to Cesar despite being hurt every time by new drama and new relationships. The show never clearly resolves whether Monse: Finally breaks this cycle
Chooses herself Or continues repeating the same pattern
This leaves her emotional growth incomplete and sends a confusing message about toxic relationships.

4. Monse constantly leaving Freeridge

Monse leaves Freeridge multiple times across the series: Present in Season 1 Leaves, returns, then leaves again by Season 4
These exits begin to feel like avoidance rather than growth, and the show never commits to a clear, intentional ending for her character—whether that means staying, leaving for good, or returning with purpose.

5. Ruby & Jasmine’s unclear future

Ruby and Jasmine grow into one of the healthiest relationships on the show, yet after the time jump:
We don’t know if they stayed together If they broke up
Or if they attended the same college or different ones
Their relationship deserved clarity, not ambiguity.

6. Jamal’s grief after Abuelita’s death
Abuelita was Jamal’s emotional anchor and one of the few adults who truly understood him. After her death, the show never explores: How Jamal grieved
How it changed him
How it affected his relationships and future

We see the result—but never the journey.

7. Abuelita’s map
The final episode introduces a map created by Abuelita, clearly setting up a new mystery and a possible reunion of the group. Instead of closure, the show ends on what feels like the beginning of another story—one that never happens.

8. The Freeridge spinoff reinforces unfinished business

While Freeridge focuses on new characters, it keeps the original world alive by: Showing Abuelita’s twin Showing Ruby’s mom and dad in the very first episode
Showing other OG parents
Mentioning the original kids without ever showing them

Seeing the parents—but not Jamal, Monse, Ruby, Cesar, or Jasmine—confirms that their stories still exist but remain untold.

Why a limited continuation makes sense: We are not asking for multiple seasons.
A short, focused season, special, or movie would: Reduce production costs
Make cast participation more feasible
Provide proper closure to long-running arcs
The storylines listed above were clearly set up by the show itself and never resolved.

Closing Statement:On My Block didn’t fail because fans wanted more—it ended with too many meaningful questions unanswered. From Spooky’s death to Jamal’s unspoken love, from Monse’s emotional cycles to Abuelita’s final mystery, the show left its most important characters suspended in limbo. Even the spinoff acknowledges their presence without completing their journeys. We are asking for one last run—not for nostalgia, but for closure, growth, and respect for the story that meant so much to so many people.

Sign this petition if you believe the Core Four deserve a real ending.

16

Recent signers:
Samuel Gyula Horváth and 13 others have signed recently.

The Issue

On My Block wasn’t just a show—it was a story about friendship, trauma, growth, and survival in Freeridge. While the series officially ended after Season 4, many of its most important storylines were left unresolved. Even with the spinoff Freeridge, the original characters’ arcs remain incomplete. We are asking Netflix to consider a limited Season 5, reunion special, or movie—not a full reboot—to give proper closure to the characters and stories that were clearly set up but never finished.

Why a continuation is needed
1. Spooky’s unexplained death

Spooky left the gang, was preparing to become a father, and planned to move to Portland. Despite completing a powerful redemption arc, he was killed off-screen with no explanation of who did it or why.

For a character this important, his death lacked meaning, accountability, and closure.

2. Jamal & Monse’s unresolved relationship
Jamal admits to Ruby that he has feelings for Monse. Monse never finds out. Jamal acts noticeably awkward and emotional around her throughout the final season.
During the final season, Monse wakes up in bed with Jamal (or “Hamal,” as Abuelita would say).

Yet the show never explores:

How Monse felt realizing she was in bed with Jamal
How Jamal processed crossing that emotional line
Whether it changed their friendship or meant something deeper
This moment was not a joke or shock value—it was intentional setup with no payoff.

3. Monse’s repeated cycle with Cesar

Throughout the series, Monse repeatedly returns to Cesar despite being hurt every time by new drama and new relationships. The show never clearly resolves whether Monse: Finally breaks this cycle
Chooses herself Or continues repeating the same pattern
This leaves her emotional growth incomplete and sends a confusing message about toxic relationships.

4. Monse constantly leaving Freeridge

Monse leaves Freeridge multiple times across the series: Present in Season 1 Leaves, returns, then leaves again by Season 4
These exits begin to feel like avoidance rather than growth, and the show never commits to a clear, intentional ending for her character—whether that means staying, leaving for good, or returning with purpose.

5. Ruby & Jasmine’s unclear future

Ruby and Jasmine grow into one of the healthiest relationships on the show, yet after the time jump:
We don’t know if they stayed together If they broke up
Or if they attended the same college or different ones
Their relationship deserved clarity, not ambiguity.

6. Jamal’s grief after Abuelita’s death
Abuelita was Jamal’s emotional anchor and one of the few adults who truly understood him. After her death, the show never explores: How Jamal grieved
How it changed him
How it affected his relationships and future

We see the result—but never the journey.

7. Abuelita’s map
The final episode introduces a map created by Abuelita, clearly setting up a new mystery and a possible reunion of the group. Instead of closure, the show ends on what feels like the beginning of another story—one that never happens.

8. The Freeridge spinoff reinforces unfinished business

While Freeridge focuses on new characters, it keeps the original world alive by: Showing Abuelita’s twin Showing Ruby’s mom and dad in the very first episode
Showing other OG parents
Mentioning the original kids without ever showing them

Seeing the parents—but not Jamal, Monse, Ruby, Cesar, or Jasmine—confirms that their stories still exist but remain untold.

Why a limited continuation makes sense: We are not asking for multiple seasons.
A short, focused season, special, or movie would: Reduce production costs
Make cast participation more feasible
Provide proper closure to long-running arcs
The storylines listed above were clearly set up by the show itself and never resolved.

Closing Statement:On My Block didn’t fail because fans wanted more—it ended with too many meaningful questions unanswered. From Spooky’s death to Jamal’s unspoken love, from Monse’s emotional cycles to Abuelita’s final mystery, the show left its most important characters suspended in limbo. Even the spinoff acknowledges their presence without completing their journeys. We are asking for one last run—not for nostalgia, but for closure, growth, and respect for the story that meant so much to so many people.

Sign this petition if you believe the Core Four deserve a real ending.

The Decision Makers

Petition updates
Share this petition
Petition created on December 27, 2025