This week Philadelphia’s Sunny Days are Always SunnyThe gang mocked Hollywood’s wakingness by trying to make an anti-racist movie that could be enjoyed by people of modern moral and ethical standards.
The episode, “The Gang Makes Lethal Weapon 7”, airs on Wednesday, December 1. The insane characters attempt to build a lethal weapon. Lethal Weapon 7 These will be cancelled even though the self-made sequels to their original films were pulled by local libraries. Because Mac (Rob McElhenney), was wearing blackface, they won’t get cancelled. Sunny The episodes were also taken from FX, Hulu and FX.
Mac bows “magnanimously”, and he plays the role again. He expects to be applauded.
Mac: I’m doing something anti-racist, and I think I deserve praise for that, do I not?
Dee: It’s not a good idea to tell people that you aren’t racist.
Mac: Why am I doing this?
The gang tries to find a “diverse” cast, but do not know any black people. So they hire a black prostitute, a black pimp named Pepper Jack and bring in a “woman of color” as an assistant director who ends up being Persian.
Then, they include the “Karen”, a white woman who looks like a villain but is socially acceptable by 2021.
Dennis: Okay. Here comes our new villain, guys. We hope that it succeeds.
Pepper Jack: (Phone ringing) Hold that thought, son. My shit be blowing up. Please talk with me.
Karen: Can you excuse me? Karen: Excuse me?
Pepper Jack: What is it, butch?
Karen: It’s Karen. Karen White. And I also live here, so I’m sure you don’t. And if you don’t leave right now, I will call the police, and I will tell them you attacked me.
Mac: This is just what I don’t get.
Dennis: Well, one of the last socially acceptable groups to villainize are entitled white women.
Charlie: MM. You’re just making me feel uncomfortable. Are you sure what I am referring to?
Dennis: Is it really fun?
Charlie: That’s not fun.
Mac: No. Mac: No. She’s cunt.
Dennis: We want your movie to be enjoyable.
Persian woman: She is a bit cunty. This is too true.
Dennis: Damn it, guys. It was my sincere wish that this would work. I really did, but maybe putting up any group of people as villains these days is potentially problematic. It’s hard to say.
Persian woman: Perhaps-maybe villains shouldn’t be human beings, right?
Charlie: Wait, you’re totally right. Right? Like wh– Like what if we make the villain, like, a big dog or something, right? Or a bunch of raccoons stacked up in a trench coat? You get the idea? (Gasps) Or a trench coat full of bees flying around? That would be scary to me. Imagine that.
Mac: Bees! The coolest thing about bees is that they are beautiful.
Charlie: Bees are frightening
Mac: What about, like, a plague? It is an act of God. The Bible’s best villains were all acts of God.
Frank: A tsunami. (Overlapping agreements)
Dennis: But, do you know what? It’s a tide wave, let’s say. This feels more racially neutral. — I don’t want to say that all waves are Asian.
Charlie: You want waves to be, right?
Dennis: You are neutral.
(Overlapping chatter, agreement) -Yeah. Not-not culturally…That’s good, that’s good.
The actors are able to play the roles of the new villain in the tidal waves and the woke offensive mission.
Don Cheadle actor Tidal wave You wonder where that came from.
Pepper Jack: No country in particular. It’s just an act of God I suppose.
Don Cheadle actor: No God specifically, just the universe or whatever.
They realize that the woke movie they have made is terrible. Dennis suggests the tidal wave moves to a field that’s been decimated by climate change. Finally, Dennis explains why he thinks they should still try to make a stupid woke movie — he wants to have sex with a younger generation of women. He had tried to score with 20-something women on both the left and right but had no luck. Finally, he had decided to “listen.”
It is a funny flashback where he listens to a twenty-something, awake woman. He realizes that he has to just repeat what she said because she doesn’t know what she was talking about.
Dennis: This generation is more socially active on both sides of the aisle, so… The first time I was engaged.
Anna: You agree, I think?
Dennis: Yes. It is important that we allow other people to have a voice once in a while.
Anna: Well, yes, but even by saying, “Allow,” you’re implying that you have all the power.
Dennis: I was thinking you meant that I had the power.
Anna: Are you twisting my words?
Dennis: No. I’m just, uh… (Chuckles) I’m just trying to understand what the hell you’re talking about. I-I can’t follow.
Anna:(Scoffs) See? It’s exactly what the elderly do.
Dennis: What about the elderly?
Anna: Uh-huh.
Dennis: I’m 26… But my rational thinking and my desire for an open dialogue were a dead giveaway. It was all starting to make sense. See, this generation doesn’t even understand half the shit that they’re saying. They’re not more ethical than we. They simply want to be perceived that way. Who could blame them? I mean, they’ve spent their entire adult lives only 280 characters away from being tweeted into oblivion. Either way, I took a new tack…
Anna: We need to use our privilege as much as we possibly can to protect people. It is impossible to not see this.
Dennis: We need to use our privilege to protect people as much as we can. It is hard to see it.
Anna: Who will if we don’t?
Dennis: We don’t have to, but who will?
Anna: Exactly. We need a revolution.
Dennis: Exactly. A revolution is what we need… Simply regurgitating back to them exactly what they’re saying to each other in their ridiculous echo chambers is all they want. We can then get exactly what we want.
The gang ends up creating a mess of film. The actor who had played Don Cheadle makes a successful documentary exposé about working with the clueless gang on “an inferno of quasi-wokeness and, uh, good old-fashioned racism. Out of the, uh, smoldering ashes, however, I pieced together a cautionary tale. An exploration, not of what is gained by learning, but of what is lost by staying ignorant.”
This episode had a lot of laughs because it mocked a variety of left-sacred cows. This episode was a refreshing departure from the norm of comedy that is afraid to take chances. Philadelphia’s Sunny Days are Always SunnyThis was refreshing air.
A second episode of SunnyThat show premiered on Thursday December 1st, as “2020: a Year in Review”. It used the controversy surrounding the 2020 election to make jokes. The gang’s high jinks involve inadvertently being responsible for vote count delays in the presidential election in Philadelphia, providing the hair dye that infamously dripped down Rudy Giuliani’s face during a press conference, and creating the costume the QAnon Shaman wore for the Capitol riots.
The gang discusses the candidate that they wanted to win during the episode.
Charlie: I mean, people have been dragging our guy’s name through the mud, saying he wasn’t fit for office.
Dee: Yeah, calling him a narcissist, saying he was mentally ill, and that all the people who showed up for his events were idiots.
Charlie: Yeah, but that’s ’cause they’ve never seen the guy onstage. He’s electric onstage.
It turns out the candidate they are talking about is Kanye West.
This episode is funny because it uses politics to make people laugh, and not for ideological purposes. It is rare to find this in Hollywood these days.
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