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In the grand tradition of “The Daves I Know,” “Terriers,” and “Roses,” McCulloch treats us to a new bizarro anthem.
At least their bottoms are in tip-top shape. Cory diligently goes straight to the sign-shop source for the answer only to discover the sign was an April Fools’ Day prank that all the -orys took far too seriously. In one of his last roles, the late Kenneth Welsh guest stars as a surly kitchen staffer blaming it all on the government. With all the posh folly of “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” the group tries and fails to rationalize just why the rule is so. “Dipping Areas” heroes Rory, Tory, Dory, and Cory are back to resolve another restaurant quibble - this time over an “Employees Must Wash Hair Before Pooping” sign.
Sadly, this 1995 corduroy wheeler with 200,000 miles on her is less fast and furious. Channeling Danny Zuko meets deadbeat dad, McKinney challenges McCulloch to a good old-fashioned race - his vintage car against McCulloch’s Kleenex-and-Cheeziesmobile.
“Speed Racer” is mainly an extended sight gag of McCulloch out for a rip - only instead of on a Harley, it’s in his worn-out armchair. The funniest moments come from Foley and McDonald’s combative chemistry and Foley touting the “dream” home’s clear red flags as perks. He and Foley play a couple with mismatched home-ownership ambitions arguing over Foley’s impulsive decision to buy a rickety new home and sell their abode. So, too, will you leave this sketch for much stronger Foley-McDonald romances to come.ĭrag experts that the Kids are, “Surprise” shows us the prettiest that McDonald has looked as a woman. She, deserving much better than a husband who gets his hand stuck in the bird feeder, ultimately leaves McDonald for Thompson’s hot lifeguard. It’s a beautifully shot black-and-white short concerning McDonald’s long-winded complaints to his serene wife as played by Foley in drag. “Much Too Much” is a stronger production than an overall sketch. “Gut Spigot” doesn’t have the same money momentum as their past schemes, but it goes to show that the Calgary cohort of the Kids is capable of selling anything. McKinney can’t help but slip back into Glenn from Superstore as he and McCulloch do their darndest to promote their problematic innovation as both a weight-loss device and fuel substitute for “Amuricah’s” cars. Who likes to boogie and learn about new products? McKinney and McCulloch’s snake-oil salesmen return for the gross-out scheme “Gut Spigot,” a faucet shoved into your gut to drain fat like it’s tap water. Honorable mentions go to Catherine O’Hara microdosing, Kenan Thompson crashing someone’s house, and Will Forte writing poems about his mother’s death even though she’s very much alive. Mark Hamill’s standout segment captures it best: He’s stoked to be in a Kids in the Hall episode, then bummed that it’s only for a quick, remotely shot cameo. “Friends of Kids in the Hall,” a means for longtime friends and fans of the Kids to support the revival from a distance, doesn’t live up to the rest of the show. “Friends of Kids in the Hall” (Donovan, Charlene, Ron, Aaron, Jillian, Michael, Lainie, Sasha) Second, multipart sketches such as “Super Drunk” and “Don and Marv” are grouped together. First, there are spoilers ahead, so be warned that twists and dongs will jump out on this list as much as they do in the season. Yes, favorite characters including Buddy Cole return and you can bet that Shadowy Men on a Shadowy Planet’s twang-a-lang-a-lang-a-lang opens every episode, but the Kids equally delight with new personas, absurdities, and avant-garde moments in the mix.Īcross eight episodes, Dave Foley, Bruce McCulloch, Kevin McDonald, Mark McKinney, and Scott Thompson skewer their sexagenarian status, impolite and evil Amazon money, cops and other hateful babies, gay culture, straight culture, cultural appropriation, doomsday, and so much more that we just had to rank every single sketch in the revival.
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They got more than that: With their new season, Canada’s alternative-comedy greats deliver surprising laughs, justify their return, and make a compelling case for their revival series to continue. The Kids in the Hall’s legion of pricks waited 27 years (or one 501 streetcar in Toronto) for season six of head-crushingly good fun.