However, the comedic gold lies in Gregory’s quiet "I told you so." Williams plays Gregory as a man physically restraining himself from saying "I told you so" out loud, while his eyes scream it in 72-point font. The dynamic between Janine and Gregory shifts here from "flirty nemeses" to "weirdly domestic partners in crime." When Gregory quietly prints out coloring pages of dinosaurs to salvage the day, it isn't just a nice gesture—it’s him learning to bend his rigid rules for her. The title is a pun. On the surface, it refers to the "full rip" of a dinosaur from the earth. But thematically, this episode is a full rip of Janine’s pedagogical idealism.
There is a specific kind of chaos that only happens in a Philadelphia public school during the final week before winter break. It’s a sticky cocktail of sugar rushes, glitter explosions, and the grim realization that nobody has taught a single lesson in three days.
Stream Abbott Elementary on Hulu/ABC. And for the love of Mr. Johnson, don't teach extinction before Christmas. abbott elementary s01e10 fullrip
Season 1, Episode 10 of Abbott Elementary —titled "FullRIp"—understands this chaos intimately. But more than that, it delivers the most surprising gut-punch of the series so far: the realization that Janine Teagues might actually be wrong. The episode kicks off with Janine (Quinta Brunson) brimming with her usual relentless optimism. She is tasked with filling the final day before break with an educational activity. While her colleagues are showing The Polar Express for the 47th time (looking at you, Ms. Howard), Janine decides to teach the kids about extinction.
For nine episodes, we’ve rooted for Janine because she cares. She fights the system. But in "FullRIp," the system (in the form of Gregory’s logic) wins. Her lesson failed because she prioritized her need to feel like a good teacher over the emotional reality of her students. That is a hard truth for a character built on hope. However, the comedic gold lies in Gregory’s quiet
Gregory points out the obvious: teaching first graders about the permanent, irreversible end of a species is a "bummer" right before a holiday. Janine, ever the idealist, ignores him. Predictably, the lesson goes sideways. The kids don't learn about climate change or asteroids; they learn that Janine is "going extinct" because she has "no husband."
Tyler James Williams. His physical comedy while watching Janine crash and burn is Emmy-worthy. On the surface, it refers to the "full
Her foil? The Veloci-pastor of Philly himself, Mr. Gregory Eddie (Tyler James Williams).
