Fans of ZEKE AND LUTHER know season three will be the series’ last chapter, a finale meant to leave a lasting impression. Disney XD frames this final arc as a celebratory exit, balancing the show’s trademark humor with a sense of closure. The hour-long finale, There’s No Business Like Bro Business, promises high-octane stunts, surprising guest appearances, and moments fans have chased since the first episode. Across its run the show has trusted in the stubborn optimism and goofy chemistry of two friends who skateboard for a living while chasing bigger dreams. As the countdown to closure begins, the creators lean into what made Zeke and Luther feel authentic: friendship tested by ambition, loyalty tested by opportunity, and a never-say-die spirit that kept viewers turning in week after week. The finale aims to honor those elements with a blend of laugh-out-loud humor and heartfelt beats that resonate with audiences who have grown up alongside the skate crew. In a season built to captivate a broad audience, the last chapters promise to celebrate the things that drew fans to Disney XD in the first place.
Zeke is played by Hutch Dano and Luther by Adam Hicks, two friends who dream big. The plot finds them submitting a video to a reality show contest, a stunt that sends them straight to Hollywood with hopes of winning the grand prize and earning a spot at Nationals. En route to an uncertain future, the friends meet Vin Jackman, portrayed by Steve Krueger, a rising actor who offers a doorway into a different kind of fame, and his girlfriend Courtney Mills, portrayed by Debby Ryan, known for Jessie, a connection that adds sparkle to an otherwise chaotic adventure. The encounter pulls Zeke and Luther into a whirlwind where talent, luck, and a little bit of chaos mix with the kind of chemistry only true friends share. The pair quickly learns that the world outside their hometown brings new pressures, bigger egos, and temptations that push them to question what they really want from life.
Not long after, Zeke lands his first acting job and Luther’s rap skills capture the interest of a major record producer. The boys face a crossroads where a fast lane in entertainment competes with the slower joy of skateboarding, their evergreen dream. They weigh opportunities against the bond that has kept them united since childhood, wondering whether fame makes the heart grow louder or simply shifts the conversation. This is where the finale places its focus: balancing personal growth with loyalty, choosing paths that honor a shared history while still leaving room for individual ambitions. The emotional core rests on a simple question: can friends grow up together without drifting apart when the bright lights call them away?
Audiences can expect a blend of playful stunts, sharp banter, and genuine moments as Zeke and Luther navigate the consequences of near-instant fame. The show has always thrived on fast-paced plots and bigger-than-life optimism, and the finale uses that energy to give a satisfying sense of closure. The broadcast window remains accessible for fans across North America, with the finale set to air at 6 pm tonight and a morning replay at 11 am on Disney XD. Canadian and American viewers will want to check local listings for exact times in their time zones, but the message stays simple: the adventures of these two skateboarders, now chasing acting careers and music, reach a big, cinematic moment that honors both the brand of fun and the power of friendship. Viewers should expect surprises, callbacks to favorite moments, and a finale that honors the long-running joke and the real-life resilience of the two friends who stuck together through it all.
Photos accompanying the episode materials are courtesy of Astral Media and Disney XD.