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What makes this episode so brilliant—and painfully relevant—is its hyperbolic take on corporate technophobia. the it crowd the internet is coming
Discovers his "true self" in women's trousers and devises a plan to market pepper spray to save the team's reputation. It is a single, static HTML page
Seeking self-confidence for his struggling board game review show, Moss follows Douglas's bizarre advice and begins wearing women's slacks Seeking self-confidence for his struggling board game review
: Jen accidentally throws a cup of coffee over a homeless person, and Roy gets into a heated argument with a "small person" barista. Both incidents are caught on camera and shared online, leading to the pair being branded as bullies and "social pariahs".
Meanwhile, Roy is dealing with a crisis of social perception. After being knocked off his bike and rescued by a group of attractive women, he realizes he forgot to tell them about his "tiny, naff" bike lock. In a moment of panic, he tells them the bike is his. However, he quickly realizes he has inadvertently taken the place of a "Window Licker"—a derogatory term the show uses to explore the fluidity of social status and pity.