You’ll know it when you see the sheep. Oh, you’ll know.
The kitchen standoff where no one trusts anyone, culminating in a single, perfect line: "Ask me something only I would know." the boys s04e06 bdscr
The standout scene is a quiet, brilliantly acted confrontation between Annie (Starlight) and a duplicate of her. It forces Annie to confront her own self-doubt and anger, turning the Shifter into a psychological mirror rather than just a physical threat. Erin Moriarty delivers her best work of the season here, playing two versions of the same person with distinctly different "tells." Of course, this is still The Boys . While the shape-shifter plot hums with genuine suspense, Hughie’s storyline is pure, unapologetic depravity. The Tek Knight party is a fever dream of rich-people grotesquerie—human furniture, liquidized organs as canapés, and a running gag involving Hughie’s sheep costume that goes to the darkest, funniest, and most uncomfortable place imaginable. You’ll know it when you see the sheep
The Boys proves once again that it can do John Carpenter paranoia, David Cronenberg body horror, and gross-out Farrelly brothers comedy all in the same hour—and somehow make it feel cohesive. Don't watch this one on a full stomach. Or near a sheep. It forces Annie to confront her own self-doubt
After last week’s heavy, gut-punching exploration of trauma (and that shocking Tek Knight cave scene), The Boys pivots hard into paranoia-fueled suspense. Episode 6, "Dirty Business," is the show at its most deliciously schlocky and clever—a claustrophobic, shapeshifting nightmare wrapped in 80s horror aesthetics and capped with the season’s most disturbing use of superpowers. The Setup: A Party of Predators The episode primarily splits into two tracks. First, Hughie goes undercover at a hyper-exclusive, ultra-wealthy "soirée" hosted by Tek Knight (Derek Wilson, chewing the gothic mansion scenery). Dressed in a latex sheep costume (yes, really), Hughie must navigate a den of corrupt elites while Butcher, half-feral and ticking down his tumor-induced clock, runs a parallel, brutal operation.
The second track involves Frenchie, Kimiko, and a surprisingly vulnerable Mother’s Milk dealing with the aftermath of Neuman’s escalating political game. But the real star of the hour is the B-plot involving . The High: Paranoia as a Weapon A Supe who can perfectly mimic anyone’s appearance and voice isn't a new concept, but The Boys weaponizes it with terrifying precision. When the Shifter infiltrates the team, the episode transforms into a tense, bottle-episode thriller. The writers cleverly use the audience's knowledge against them—we know someone is fake, but not who, and every friendly gesture becomes suspect.