Those Who Can’t (TruTV)-“Escape Room”-Far more than in the first season, this show has become about terrible people (a la “Seinfeld” or “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia”) who are not just oblivious but downright destructive to their environment. At the same time, the episode points out the flaws of such a categorization: If Sweens (Jerry Minor, one of SNL’s better one-season wonders) thinks that “the quartet” is the scourge of the school’s well-being, he needs to cast a wider net. Lesley is running high-end rackets; Rod (despite one episode where he went clean) was fired for defiling the school shed and showing up drunk, the doctor twins are a pharmacy for illegal drugs, and there’s the creepy guy with the cats. There’s also the problem that Fairbell is too mentally deficient to truly be categorized as a trouble maker. This seems to be a common trope in TV such as Jason Mendoza (“The Good Place”), Amir (“Jake and Amir”), or Matt (“NewsRadio”) and none of those shows really deal with the characters as if they need to be treated for mental illness.
Moving on, Sweeney makes a power play to get “the quartet”
fired through isolating them through an imaginary escape room team-building
exercise and then mobilizing the staff to air out their grievances to Quinn. As
can be expected, Quinn’s man crush on Loren and company hinders his
objectivity. On top of that, he really wants to do an escape room exercise of
his own which is a comic riff that last throughout the entire episode and gets
funnier as it goes along.
Once in the escape room, the gang pretty immediately resort
to cheating and immediate destruction: A pretty literal manifestation of how
bad these characters have become. Here’s where I’m starting to think having the
gang at least try to solve the puzzle might have been a better use of a plot
about an escape room. Use what you got, people! Then again, there’s a certain shock
value that it took the group precisely zero seconds to resort to cheating.
Comedy is funny sometimes in that there aren’t necessarily wrong answers (which
makes me kind of superfluous, huh?).
What’s more important here is the dynamics between the group
as the hierarchy of the characters (Loren/Shoemaker > Abby > Fairbell) carries
through their interactions as well as the topic of who was and wasn’t invited
to the party.
Meanwhile, Leslie steps it up (always a good thing) in a rare act of selflessness and advocates for the quartet as the union rep in some of the episode’s best dialogue. The day of course is saved by none other than Rod who’s discovered in a backroom under the impression that he’s in a consensual relationship with the school mascot costume.
Meanwhile, Leslie steps it up (always a good thing) in a rare act of selflessness and advocates for the quartet as the union rep in some of the episode’s best dialogue. The day of course is saved by none other than Rod who’s discovered in a backroom under the impression that he’s in a consensual relationship with the school mascot costume.
Aside from an uneventful second act (basically the gang
breaking things), this episode represents Sweeney as a worthy foil. Better luck
next week, Sweens.
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