

“FUCK! I SHOULD HAVE LIED! I should have said there was some reason I couldn’t pay and not just said right away I’m not gonna.” Yes, Leslie.

Maybe if I got a bite of everyone’s meal, but I just don’t want to do it.” Hal, the friend who proposed the game, attempts to diffuse the situation by saying he’ll pay the check, but Leslie is just getting started. Like Pavlov’s dog, upon hearing his name, Leslie immediately replies with an all-time hissy fit: “I’m not paying the bill. The credit card gods can always sense the most vulnerable bank account, and in this case, Leslie is smote with a 10-person tab at a fancy restaurant. “Credit Card Roulette” (Season 2, Episode 5)Ĭredit card roulette is an objectively terrible game. It’s just a 90-second sketch about horse dicks.

But that’s, uh, not the case with this one. Plotlines morph into unrecognizable tangents, the smallest details are latched onto and beaten into the ground until the dotted line from setup to punch line becomes a twisted thread of confusion and hilarity. “Fenton’s Stables and Horse Ranch” (Season 1, Episode 6)Ī trademark of most Tim Robinson sketches is that where they start and where they end up often have nothing to do with each other.
PRANK ME EPISODE 1 SERIES
It wasn’t easy to do-nearly every sketch in the series deserves praise and has an argument for being the best-but after much deliberation, here is a ranking of every sketch in I Think You Should Leave.ĥ3. With the second season of I Think You Should Leave now streaming on Netflix, we asked our staff to sit down, have a sloppy steak, and judge every sketch in the show’s run with the same rigor they would use in a Baby of the Year competition.
