Jezz interviews Jason Voorhees about his notorious career at Camp Crystal Lake, while the crew struggles to keep the set intact as Jason’s therapy session takes violent turns. Beefy performs a dramatic reenactment of Jason’s childhood swimming lessons.
Jezz interviews Rick about his newest portal gun modification, but Rick keeps taking swigs from his flask and deciding to ‘improve’ the studio’s technology. The crew tries to maintain order as Rick’s upgrades cause increasingly chaotic interdimensional mishaps.
G-Man discusses his professional frustrations with Gordon Freeman’s refusal to file proper paperwork and follow interdimensional workplace protocols. As the interview progresses, G-Man’s carefully maintained professional demeanor begins cracking under the weight of his pent-up administrative rage.
The infamous assassin droid attempts to share his wisdom on organic-synthetic relations while struggling not to classify every minor inconvenience as a termination-worthy offense. The crew tries to maintain professionalism despite being constantly referred to as meatbags.
What starts as a serious discussion about justice turns into Dredd attempting to arrest everyone for various minor infractions, from Pux’s unlicensed video switching to Gnarl’s unauthorized camera angles. The situation escalates when he discovers no one has their TV broadcast licenses.
In this dramatic conclusion to the ‘Force Daddy’ saga, Rey confronts both Finn and Poe about a particular evening involving Corellian ale and a broken heating system on Starkiller Base. Previous episodes already ruled out Kylo Ren and Luke Skywalker, but the truth might be more shocking than anyone expected.
What starts as a PR campaign to improve Hell’s image quickly derails as Satan keeps recognizing crew members from various crossroads deals and previous employment. Turns out Pux used to be Hell’s IT guy, and Sith still owes Satan money from a poker game in 1986.
What starts as a serious interview about law enforcement and cybernetic enhancement quickly derails as Gnarl can’t stop asking about Robocop’s private components. Meanwhile, Robocop struggles to process the unprofessionalism through his prime directives.
In the most outrageous paternity episode yet, Rey tries to explain how she ended up at a cross-dimensional law enforcement party where both Dredd and Robocop were present. Meanwhile, both officers deny everything while citing various regulations about fraternization between dimensions.
The crew takes their lunch break outside, sharing increasingly outrageous jokes about Jason’s swimming abilities, his fashion choices, and his unusual career path. What starts as gentle ribbing evolves into a full-blown comedy roast session.
The crew takes their break outside to recover from Rick’s chaotic upgrades to their equipment, sharing increasingly savage jokes about Rick’s drinking, his parenting skills, and his tendency to destroy multiple dimensions. The roast session gets progressively more scientific and absurd.
The crew takes their break to decompress from G-Man’s intense bureaucratic energy, acting out his strange behavior and mocking his obsession with proper documentation. Their roast session evolves into increasingly elaborate reenactments of G-Man’s office procedures.
The crew takes their break to mock HK-47’s speech patterns and his solution to every problem being murder, acting out increasingly ridiculous scenarios of the droid’s interactions with everyday situations.
The crew takes their break to mock Dredd’s over-the-top law enforcement style, acting out increasingly absurd scenarios of Dredd attempting to regulate everyday situations. Their roasting evolves into elaborate collaborative skits about Dredd’s personal life.
The crew mercilessly mocks Finn and Poe’s increasingly bizarre excuses about how they both ended up in compromising positions with Rey during a power outage on Starkiller Base. Their roasting session turns into an improvised reenactment of the most ridiculous paternity show ever.
The crew collaboratively acts out elaborate scenes mocking Satan’s management style, his poker debts, and his failed attempts at modernizing Hell’s workplace culture. Their roasting evolves into increasingly complex skits about Hell’s office politics.
The crew collaboratively acts out elaborate scenes mocking Robocop’s directive-driven behavior, his overly dramatic one-liners, and his infamous experiences at OCP. Their roasting evolves into increasingly complex reenactments of classic Robocop scenes with humorous twists.
The crew collaboratively acts out elaborate scenes mocking Rey’s ever-expanding list of potential fathers, her dimensional-hopping exploits, and the absurdity of involving both Dredd and Robocop in the saga.
The crew reflects on their most memorable moments from the season while getting progressively more intoxicated on cheap wine. Between endless bread sticks and questionable pasta choices, they share behind-the-scenes stories about their infamous guests.