Abbott Elementary S02e05 Dvd5 -
Melissa hides the heater in her supply closet. Barbara “accidentally” assigns Melissa lunch duty outdoors. By the end, they’re sitting back-to-back, shivering, until Jacob awkwardly brokers peace by giving them his heater (which he doesn’t need because he “runs hot from anxiety”). Watching “Juice” on a standard DVD5 (single-layer disc) actually suits the episode’s theme. There’s something appropriately low-res and gritty about watching Abbott Elementary on physical media that mirrors the show’s mockumentary aesthetic. You don’t need 4K to feel the cold.
What follows is a masterclass in bureaucratic comedy. Janine spends the entire episode on hold with “Philly Vending Solutions,” only to discover that the school’s contract is so predatory that they can’t change prices without a buyout. Gregory watches from the sidelines, simultaneously amused and attracted to her futile determination.
Until then, we’ll keep watching. And laughing. And crying a little.
Tags: Abbott Elementary, Season 2 Episode 5, Juice, TV Recap, Quinta Brunson, School Funding, DVD5
This isn’t just a joke. The broken heating becomes the central metaphor for the episode: The A-Plot: Janine vs. The Vending Machine Janine, ever the optimist, decides that the vending machine companies are exploiting the school. A juice box costs $2.50. A bag of stale chips? $3.00. Her mission? Get the prices lowered.
Melissa hides the heater in her supply closet. Barbara “accidentally” assigns Melissa lunch duty outdoors. By the end, they’re sitting back-to-back, shivering, until Jacob awkwardly brokers peace by giving them his heater (which he doesn’t need because he “runs hot from anxiety”). Watching “Juice” on a standard DVD5 (single-layer disc) actually suits the episode’s theme. There’s something appropriately low-res and gritty about watching Abbott Elementary on physical media that mirrors the show’s mockumentary aesthetic. You don’t need 4K to feel the cold.
What follows is a masterclass in bureaucratic comedy. Janine spends the entire episode on hold with “Philly Vending Solutions,” only to discover that the school’s contract is so predatory that they can’t change prices without a buyout. Gregory watches from the sidelines, simultaneously amused and attracted to her futile determination.
Until then, we’ll keep watching. And laughing. And crying a little.
Tags: Abbott Elementary, Season 2 Episode 5, Juice, TV Recap, Quinta Brunson, School Funding, DVD5
This isn’t just a joke. The broken heating becomes the central metaphor for the episode: The A-Plot: Janine vs. The Vending Machine Janine, ever the optimist, decides that the vending machine companies are exploiting the school. A juice box costs $2.50. A bag of stale chips? $3.00. Her mission? Get the prices lowered.