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The Ol' College Try is the second episode of Season 5 of Letterkenny.

Synopsis[]

Wayne tries on a new relationship. The Skids get deeper into the Dark Web. The Hockey Players meet their new team.

Cold Open[]

You're having a conversation about your pal's second cousin the other day… — Wayne

Sitting at the Ukrainian Centre bar, the Hicks discuss Dan's second cousin Garrett, who is moving to Los Angeles to earn a living as an actor. Daryl is surprised someone can earn a living as an actor, but Dan confirms.

Wayne interjects to complain about how LA people are always talking about tacos. The others agree, and Daryl complains about them talking about hiking as well.

LA_Tacos

LA Tacos

Katy pronounces it *ellaaay*, and the others mock the accent as well, and all complain relentlessly about the vapidity of conversations with people from L.A. Dan pauses to ask who anyone knows who's ever beens to LA?

What's this about LA? — Reilly, eating a taco


Plot Summary[]

Dan, Katy, and Daryl are playing cribbage in the farmhouse. Wayne buttons his top button as he preparing to go out with Tanis. The others ask if he finds her a little "rough around the edges," her "soil a bit rocky," "her grain a little bit rough for the layin'." Wayne replies there is only one way to find out.

Jonesy and Reilly prepare to enter the hockey arena to show off their gains from all their off-season and pre-season reps to their teammates and to the Coach. Coach interrupts them to say he doesn't see any gains—but it doesn't matter, because the team has folded, because there weren't enough bodies, because it was Senior A whaleshit hockey. He suggests they have three options: play in the next town, retire, or join another team— as coaches— with him.

 	Letterkenny_-_Ships 	 			  

The team has already won back-to-back 'ships, and as they have never won a 'ship before, Reilly and Jonesy get pumped up to win back-to-back-to-back boats. They run off before the coach can warn them they'll need an icebreaker when meeting the team: the Letterkenny Shamrockettes.

Wayne drives up to Tanis' house on the Rez; she spits loudly, startling him. He doesn't say what girls should do, but Tanis presses that he doesn't like it when girls spit.

Preferably not within my line of sight, earshot, and in a perfect world, ever. — Wayne

Tanis spits again, then invites him inside for a meal.

Stewart paces the floor of the basement, waiting. Roald says he has called but the calls go straight to voicemail. Stewart admits that he has no control, and may have a problem. They are interrupted by Everett, clutching a bag he wants to exchange for meth—a bag containing a computer they can use to access the Dark Web.

Everett brings the computer to Stewart's standup desk and demonstrates it. Stewart cannot conceal his excitement about the possibilities to conduct illegal activities. The first site they bring up describes how to cook human meat. As they start to browse, however, they are interrupted by a call from the Hard Right. Stewart wants to ignore the call, but Roald notes that they should be making cool new friends on the Dark Web.

Back at Tanis's house, Wayne sits to remove his boots, startling Tanis because he has crossed his legs. He tells her the less bending over a man does, the better, which sounds homophobic to her, and chiropractic to him. She tells him she swings both ways, and would be open to Wayne inviting another girl— or guy— to join them.

Back in the basement, Everett and the Skids answer the call from Hard Right Jay, telling him they were about to enjoy some Dark Web literature. Jay tells them one hundred percent of humans— the ones on earth, anyway— are cannibals, going back to the Irish potato famine of the 1840s when "thousands of those godless, heathen bogtrotters" migrated to North America.

He points out that when McDonald's opened its first location in 1955, not a single cow was photographed, yet they were serving burgers, and now McDonald's was openly boasting of serving over 999 billion. He praises Donald Trump for, in 16 of his first 100 days in office, bringing the number from 100 percent down to 13. The conversation has gone on for an hour, however, and Stewart has grown impatient.

Tanis burps loudly after her meal, distressing Wayne again. He tells her he does not like it, because it is unbecoming. She objects that men should not tell women what to do.

Meanwhile at the arena, Coach warns Reilly and Jonesy that their new team has a bit of an attitude problem despite their success, and a rivalry for leadership. They charge in and are shocked to find themselves in the women's dressing room. They apologize for not realizing the boys were ladies. Betty-Anne chirps that it isn't a shelter, even though Mary-Anne looks homeless. Mary-Anne replies that it isn't a church, even though Betty-Anne's mitt looks like the back of Christ's head. They continue insulting each other, to the boys' bewilderment.

Wayne and Tanis sit outside by the fire, and Tanis teases him about his turtleneck. They acknowledge that a woman should be with a man she finds desirable, and vice versa, and that they are too different to have a long-term relationship. In the short term, however—like a night—Tanis has not done all the things she had wanted to do. Wayne notes they talked, ate, and sat by the fire, and agrees to stay for the other thing, and they return to the house.

Wayne returns to the farm the next morning; the others are still playing cribbage. He reports that except for the end, the evening had gone so fuckin' poorly. They tell him he has missed taco night— not just any taco night, but an "LA" taco night. They continue to mock people from LA, LA, LA, LA.

That's what I say, I said pull your finger out of your ass. — Wayne


Quotes[]

  • Daryl: So you can earn a living as an actor, you say?
    Dan: Yeah. How do you think Brad Pitt bought all those paintings and became so passionates about architecture?
  • Wayne: Tacos, tacos, tacos. It's fuckin' fish steak or carnitas wrapped in tortitas. How good can it fucking be?
  • Wayne: What the actual fuck was that?
    Tanis: What?
    Wayne: Well, you're standing, breathing, and smoking, so the other thing.
    Tanis: The spitting?
    Wayne: Some barefaced, uncultivated version of it, yes.
  • Tanis: You hungry?
    Wayne: Am I hungry?
    Tanis: Yeah, that's what I said.
    Wayne: I'm immediately concerned that sensation may never reestablish itself, but what a ride it's been.
  • Wayne: To borrow a phrase from my stance on social media, I don't follow.
  • Tanis: Boots or no boots, don't you think it's a little fruity-loops for a man to be sitting like that?
    Wayne: On the contrary, I'm sitting like this because the less bending over a man does, the better.
    Tanis: Hmmm, sounds homophobic to me.
    Wayne: Sounds chiropractic to me.
  • Jay: Thirteen percent of human beings are cannibals, eh?
    Everett: Thirteen percent sounds right.
  • Tanis: Well, men shouldn't shackle women. We made Prohibition happen. Watch your step.
  • Betty-Anne: What are you two doing?
    Reilly: Sorry, boys… Ladies!
    Jonesy: We didn't know you were ladies, boys! Umm, not ladyboys. We didn't know you were ladies!
  • Betty-Anne: Your mitt looks like Babe Ruth's ball glove from the dirty '30s, if 20 more dudes spat chewing tobacco in it.
    Mary-Anne: Your mitt's actually a work of art, Betty-Anne. Like Salvador Dali's melting clocks, but instead of melting clocks, it's melting salad bowls of off-pink ice-cream.
  • Wayne: You see the elephant?
    Tanis: You mean next to the bus crash?
    Wayne: That's the one.

Callbacks and Running Gags[]

Introduced[]

  • Ellaaayy
  • (whispered) the Dark Web
  • Sitting is quietly murdering you
  • She Up To Somethin

Recurring[]

Cultural References[]

  • "The Old College Try" is an idiomatic expression for making a desperate attempt at a seemingly impossible task. It was popularized by preacher Billy Sunday in a 1917 column, who attributed it to New York Giants manager John McGraw saying it of an outfielder just out of college who attempted but missed a heroic catch.
  • Actor Brad Pitt is known to be an art collector, and the fate of his collection, which includes works by Banksy and Canadian artist Marcel Dzama, was a subject of much gossip during his divorce from actress Angelina Jolie. He also expressed an interest in architecture and in the application of architectural principles through his "Make It Right" charity, with more mixed results.
  • The hockey players' pride at "saying no to the juice" because it "ain't fucking baseball" refers to the doping scandal that plagued Major League Baseball in the mid-2000s, in which widespread use of performance-enhancing drugs was publicized, implicating numerous superstars and resulting in an investigation by the U.S. Congress. Steroids were not banned until 2005 and human growth hormone until 2011.
  • Celebrity gains: Wayne Gretzky, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, Shania Twain, 1987 film Planes, Trains and Automobiles
  • The so-called "dark web" consists of material on the Internet that is hidden from the public and can only be accessed through the use of special software or configurations. It is sometimes conflated with the "deep web," a broader term for content that is not indexed by search engines or requires special authorization to view.
  • "Hard Right Jay" appears in front of a green, black and white flag which is reminiscent of the flag of "Kekistan," a fictional country invented by users on the 4chan discussion forum represented as the ethnic origin of "shitposters." It was adopted by elements of the "alt-right" and is now associated with that element.
  • Tanis says "we made Prohibition happen," "we" meaning women. Prohibition, the 1920–33 period during which the production, sale, and consumption of alcoholic beverages was banned throughout the United States, was passed into law after decades of campaigning by groups like the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU).
  • Upright Citizens Brigade, or "UCB," and the Groundlings Theatre, are two prominent rival improv theatre schools based in Los Angeles, many of whose alumni have become successful comics and actors.

Trivia[]

  • Driving down La Cienega Boulevard to La Tijera Boulevard to get to Los Angeles International Airport only makes sense from a string of neighborhoods in West LA north of LAX, from Ladera Heights to Baldwin Hills.

Music[]

According to Tunefind, the following songs are featured on this episode:

  • Purple City by Joker & Ginz (Coach offers Reilly and Jonesy a coaching position)
  • Talisman by Whiney (the Skids get on the dark web)
  • Burning Bridges by Louise Burns (Tanis and Wayne eat)
  • Good As New by Vacationer (closing credits)

Appearances[]

  • Wayne
  • Daryl
  • Dan
  • Katy
  • Reilly
  • Jonesy
  • Coach
  • Stewart
  • Roald
  • Everett
  • Hard Right Jay (Jay Baruchel)
  • Betty-Anne
  • Mary-Anne

Locations[]

Gallery[]

→ See 50 images from The Ol' College Try at Images from The Ol' College Try.

External Links[]

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