Colleen Hayes/HBO

It's such a perfect ending. And I hate saying that because I want more. I want a season three! But how do you feel about all that? Do you consider this a series finale, do you want to do more?

I would love to do more. In 2005, that was an ending, that was definitely an ending because I guess now we see that those episodes were a piece and these episodes where a piece and then if we do more then we will be doing that piece.

I would love to see Jane's documentary. The Assassination of Valerie Cherish.

Laughs. Oh god, that title. When we would talk about doing a movie, sometimes Michael would say, 'What if we did a movie? And he would say, 'Oh, let's call it The Assassination of Valerie Cherish.' And I would say 'OH GOD! Maybe Paulie shoots her but she doesn't die.'

I loved the moment where Paulie wandered toward the stage to accept the Emmy and then thought better of it.

Yes because Sean [Hayes] was already accepting it and in that moment, Paulie became Valerie. And by the way, not that he ever wasn't. Maybe that's why he always hated her, because he saw himself in her, wanting, just as much as she did but unable to admit it.

The Juna and Valerie moment at the party, where Juna confronts Val for hurting her, and that hug…It was a huge moment. I really thought Val was going to lose it and finally let go and realize what a horrible thing she did.

She can't handle it. She would never recover if she had to fully take in everything that's going on. She can't. She has things to get through, and she just had this big fight with Mark and she's sort of focusing on that. That was too much for her and she was just thinking, ‘I can't, I can't look at all this. I know you're upset about that but I can't look at it.'

There are some subtle and not so subtle messages throughout this season about how Hollywood treats women, and how they are treated as either whores or furniture. Do you think all that has gotten better?

In TV, definitely. There have always been roles for women in TV. And women who are the leads of shows. Always. In TV.

To me it was really that Paulie personally had some issues with women.

Yes. I never see it as an industry conspiracy. Recently I was hearing that Jennifer Lawrence was paid the least of any of the men [in American Hustle]. Does that mean Amy Adams, too? Well, oh, that's weird? Why does that happen? Those women are not the draw? People are coming to see Bradley Cooper and Christian Bale? I mean, if that's a fact then that's a fact, but is that a fact? I guess is my question.