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Captain's Log

The Week in TV, 8/14/25

Keeping up on the heavy TV season in August

There won’t be nothing new on our schedule until September, and the August slate is pretty thin, so I’m counting on our beloved commenters to pick up the slack for a while.

Catching up

Digman! – “A Sari Sight” – Rip Digman and crew have two plots that are tied together but are slightly separate. After a Zane Troy (TV special) expedition undercovers the real Cleopatra, the world is stunned to discover… she’s mid. And looks almost exactly like Saltine. Well, Saltine is also running for president of the Assistant Arky Union, as part of her goal to become a full-fledged arky one day. Elections, of course, are popularity and attractiveness contests, and being branded as mid is making it tough for Saltine to gain headway against her opponent, the much hotter Carl Crunch. Agatha remembers an artifact she learned about in her youth, a sari crafted in a color never elsewhere seen by humanity, that makes whoever wears it immediately appear as a 10 to everyone. Guess what the team is going to get up to (if today’s featured image didn’t tell you already).

Meanwhile, Quail Eegan’s secret society of museum owners is trying to push a bill through Congress that would outlaw permission slips, but there’s an obstinate Senator from South Dakota (Amy Sedaris!) who’s only willing to vote for the bill if Zane Troy will sleep with her.

This was pretty fun. I tried to keep the best jokes and plot twists out of this writeup, but as I recall it was full of good lines.

It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia – “Overage Drinking: A National Concern” is the kind of episode you can only do when you’ve been on the air for twenty years. Calling back all the way to the show’s third episode, the Gang once again finds teenagers drinking in their bar, except this time two parents come to pick up one of the teenagers… and those parents are Trey and Tammy, the high-school stars of “Underage Drinking: A National Concern.” (Just as impressively, the same actors are back, and they’ve had pretty steady work since, although Jaimie Alexander being a lead on Blindspot and playing Sif in the Marvelverse is surely the more notable career arc of the two.)

Naturally, Dee picks up on some marital tension and she and Dennis decide to pick up where they left off and try to bang Trey and Tammy. Meanwhile, Charlie enlists Mac to help him track down Frank, which Mac is happy to do because he’s bored with the underage-drinking rehash. A lot of meta-commentary in this one about stories and what’s entertaining, framed as the adventures the Gang is either getting themselves involved in or spectating on. (“Teen drama’s forged in lust. Adult drama’s forged in sadness.”) There’s also a final twist at the end that may be surprising, or may not if you’ve seen the season promos (or just picked up on the subtext of Frank’s tape). Anyway, I think we’re heading into two more episodes, and having seen the titles, I’ve been waiting for this since I saw said promos and I’m actually excited for where this is going to go.

What’s new?

Bob’s Burgers, “Mr. Safebody” – The titular plot involves Arnold, a boy in Louise’s class (voiced by Damon Wayans Jr.), who just got his green belt in karate and wants Louise to help him film a promotional video advertising his bodyguard services. Louise is reluctant, and then the kids find themselves in trouble and alone at an abandoned high school with some high school bullies, and Arnold… does not exactly rise to the occasion, although ultimately some clever thinking from him saves the day.

The B-plot involves Teddy’s fixation on a “90s mainstream alternative rock” radio station in town and Bob’s annoyance with it, and the biggest disappointment to me is that they didn’t use real songs for this plotline.

And there’s very little for the next four sections, so I’m gonna skip straight to…

Old favorites

I put on a few Simpsons season 5 episodes with commentary. I’m a big fan of David Mirkin’s general sarcasm and the ridiculous comments he adds; for example, let’s take “Bart Gets an Elephant.” After Barney walks out of the tar pit, lights a cigarette, and catches fire, with nothing more than a simple “Ow,” Mirkin comments “That’s a lesson we like to teach children, that fire is actually not that dangerous.”

And you?

I’ll just turn it over to you at this point.