Entertainment

Dropout’s Game Changer Season 7 Episode 3 Summary: Seal and Jokers

Spoiler Alert: Details follow for season 7, episode 3 of “Game Changer”, which premiered on 5 May on Dropout.

The bit-o-meter is dead. The seal numbers are sung twice. And three comedians have just bare their souls (and navels) in what is perhaps one of the most hilarious sincere episodes of “Game Changer”.

Season 7, episode 3 of Dropout’s Genre-Lartende Series, entitled ‘Earnest-Est’, is a fever dream of vulnerability, theatricality and chaos-the species that only Sam Reich van Sam Reich from host and outages can fertilize.

This week’s participants – Ally Beardsley (she/she), Zac Oyama (he/him) and Lisa Gilroy (she/her) – are not strangers for the dropout – Universe. But nobody was prepared for what Sam had in the store: a sincerity -based glove where the only way to win was to drop the pieces and dig in their tender comic cores.

The bit-o-meter dies, so sincerity lives

The episode opens with the debut of the bit-o-meter, an alleged construction from 1956 that was designed to measure comic obligation. It breaks immediately – as if the comic God’s self knew what would come. With Bits Banned, Reich explains the true game: wrongly at the expense of everything.

Challenge one: Explain how a TV works. ZAC delivers a Dad-Tier explanation about signals and boxes. Ally Spins historical nonsense about 17th-century bisting technology. Lisa runs the cord with poetic absurdity. The tone is set: sincerity is king, but a little flair doesn’t hurt.

Challenge two: Show your navel. Not metaphorical – literally. Each participant lifts his shirt and monologues with Ted Talk -Nive -Great Power. Ally turns them into a symbol of maternal connection and hatchback memory. Lisa refers to confused nerve endings and anatomical identity crises. Zac shrugs: “It’s okay.” It is perhaps the most honest sense in the episode.

And that is before the show really runs the dial.

To take off

$ 15,000 for seal, and worth every cent

Halfway through, Reich reveals a karaoke microphone and announces a historic milestone: the first licensed number of Dropout. Yes, they paid $ 15,000 to use Seal’s “Kiss from a rose”, immortalized by “Batman Forever” (1995).

See also  Lizzo shows off weight loss in fishing nets in Sexy IG photos

It is certainly one of the most drop -out for the money that once spent a bit. But tell sources Variety That fans can expect even more extensive (and expensive) stunts later this season.

Zac, vocal from his reach but called emotionally, croons as a late-night diving beam closer. Ally throws Paw Patrol in the texts – and lets it work in one way or another. Lisa channels Pure Ballad Energy and locks eyes with Reich in what can only be described as a flirty confrontation. What is more painful: none of the players seemed to know the song. I am That Now old?

Yet Lisa wins the Ronde. And possibly the custody of Sam’s heart.

Although it may not be the most expensive only item for which the team has ever paid, it is definitely the craziest.

Santa Claus, Therapy Sessions and a Hammer of $ 400

If the seal was not enough, enter Paul F. Tompkins as Santa Claus and invites the players to share their deepest Christmas wishes: Lisa asks for more kindness towards women in the industry. ZAC requires a trail bike. And Ally goes for a hammer of $ 400. Industrial quality. The seriousness was real.

The sincerity continues to stream through a vulnerable therapy discussion, in which participants tackle frankly jealousy, self-criticism and suppressed anger. It’s funny, yes – but also in that quiet “maybe I should go back into therapy”.

Poetry and Compliment Dual

With a spaghetti Western music guidance and a sepia tone, complete with a visual effect of Tumbleweed, turns in pairs, staring at each other and came closer until they were nose to nose. The comics exchanged more sincere compliments while they tried not to laugh. Ally told Zac that one day he would be a great parent, while Zac admired her carpentry skills. Zac won that round.

See also  Joe Biden calls Secretary of Defense 'black man' and struggles to remember his name

Zac then took Lisa. The Canadian comic called his freckles ‘cute’ (it is difficult to say if ZAC even has freckles). Zac praised her breakout on the comedy scene. Lisa Triumphs.

For the love of the theme, Sam Lisa and Ally Square had finished, with ally who praised Lisa’s courage as a femme comic strip. Lisa made Ally with a concise: “You just have the most beautiful blue eyes.”

The next on the docket was a spontaneous poetry slam (including berets) in which they had to write in one minute.

Zac’s “this old dog” pulled our hearts talking about a canine, which is waiting for a “sunny veranda for his best friend.” He gathered a lot of fingers.

Lisa, who seemed to mutate her beret in the chef’s hat of ‘ratatouille’, collected ‘exhaling’, with a smoky, romantic atmosphere that seemed embedded from an experience in the past. Ally supplied a haiku-like reflection on parents, children and ‘a view’. Ally won the Ronde.

Moments like these must be stored in Amber.

Freestyle Rap Vecht about Sam

In the midst of the episode, “Game Changer” ensured that we remind that sincerity does not mean that the slander skips the slander. Enter the Freestyle Diss track round, where each participant had to deliver a rap who had to deliver none other than Sam Reich himself – accompanied by a live beatboxer called Antonio. What followed was a chaotic roast session wrapped in rhythm and regret. After what felt like an eternity of breaks, Ally came in hot with ‘the cat in the hat’. Zac, leaning in vulnerability with rhyme, delivered Zingers who limits self -help. And Lisa, once the over -performer, balanced smooth current with genuine punctures (“fuck you sam! … you four -to -it bitch!”) That felt strange … Free?

It was Cringey, Cathartisch and Completely Delightful – the perfect lyrical removal of a CEO that built a show to be offended on Beat.

“Why so serious?” – Because there is choreography

See also  Questions we need answered every week after the supposedly innocent season 1

Then, just as things seem to be established in a soft rhythm of healthy absurdity, Sam pulls the Joker card. Literal.

Each participant dont full of heathland ledger make -up – spotty lipstick, green cardigans, the entire gotham package – and performs a serious acting audition as the joker.

Lisa’s Joker is partly motivating speaker, partly Chaos Goblin. Ally is going to fall the full method, eyes and with disturbing energy. ZAC, clearly a product of improvisation training, finds a joker who only breaks to ask: “Line?”

Then, because this is ‘Game Changer’, Reich plays ‘Kiss from a Rose’ again. Don’t worry, that is not another $ 15,000, people – the same price as they are used twice – all because of sincerity. We are gifted, a group chorey lot number in the entire Joker Regalia.

There are spins. There are near-sn notes. Ally touches emotional catharsis somewhere around the bridge. Lisa becomes a tragic pop-joker hybrid. Zac nails a surprisingly graceful pirouette. It is theater child chaos at its most beautiful.

Final score: Lisa wins, but sincerity takes the crown

When the eyeliner dries and decreases the laughter, Lisa Gilroy comes forward as Victor of the episode. But the real winner is sincere self.

“Earnest-Est” is a master class in comic vulnerability-from which with pieces take a rear seat and be seen (really seen) the joke, the goal and the glory. The game design of Reich, built to challenge the best of dropout, again shows that absurdity and authenticity are not opposed – they are dance partners. Sometimes in Joker -Make -up. Sometimes to seal.

Next week: a new game, new chaos and perhaps (perhaps) less emotional breakthroughs. But we wouldn’t count on it.

A new episode of “Game Changer” will be released around the other Monday at 7 p.m. and 4 p.m. PT on the dropout of the streaming platform.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button