@@bonefisher12 yeah, that makes sense. If you’re getting a sketch comedy legend to be in your sketch comedy show, you probably give him a little more freedom than most other people.
"If I don't have triples, then the other stuff isn't true either" idk why but this guy aggressively using the threat of the ice cream lie as leverage to continue living this fantasy is just amazing. adds a level of sinister intent to the character
Its even funnier when you realize that the barracuda, roadrunner, and nova all look incredibly similar. The man has about 9 seemingly identical looking cars.
My dad is about Bob's age and has a really great looking '67 Chevelle. But, has dreamed of also owning a 66 Nova- Nearly identical but slightly smaller- same drive train set up, suspension etc. lol. Sadly, I'm no better.... I just realized I have triples of the miata (all beaters but... yeah).
“But she’s beautiful, but she’s dying” said in one fell swoop with like actual emotion while simultaneously conveying Bob is making this shit up on the spot is just great. Onion-like line delivery
reminds me of a deleted scene from 'Eastbound and Down' where Will Ferrel is shouting to a character to add lines in on the spot, I think it's when Stevie says he slept with a 90 year old and Will shouts 'say...but that's not even the oldest'. I almost get the feeling they did numerous shots with Bob adding new bits in each time trying to get Tim to crack up (fully aware Tim writes the show and it's likely he wrote Bob's dialogue but still).
FUN FACT: "One fell swoop" is a Shakespeare reference. Likely one of the earliest pop-culture references to still exist in the modern lexicon. Sort of like how young adults today use the term "brokeback" as a prefix to imply guy-on-guy action but many don't actually know what it's referencing. Sorry, I couldn't think of a non-gay modern example. Make of that what you will. I just hope in 300 years, people will still be saying "triples makes it safe, triples is best" to invoke a comical yet earnest sadness without actually knowing why.
I think my favorite little moment is at 1:37 when Bob says he also has triples of the roadrunner and Tim's reaction is like "this is getting too much, man" and Bob instantly handwaves saying "But just those two"
That would be incredible. I wish shows did stuff like that like crossovers but actually good. Mitch herwitz, the creator of arrested development, wanted to have Tobias get a job on House in arrested development then be an a bad actor with a few lines in the house for a few episodes.
@@trexeight I don't know about that in all seriousness 🤣 I'm not a House fan but I feel like a meta AD crossover would have been a weird move for a drama. Community did almost exactly that with Cougartown, though. There's compilations of the clips from both shows on youtube.
When I was a kid, everyone called me insane because I would write elaborate crossover fanfics based on tenuous references. Now it's a multimillion dollar industry with tons of demand. And I'm FINE with this! This is FINE!
Whoever liked my comment, thank you. I care way more about this than I should. I keep coming back to this comment section to check. It's just... I wrote a 40 page fan fic... and I posted it to deviantart... and nobody replied. At all. And I feel like I held in a sneeze. And its been like this for months...
Two things I love about Bob Odenkirk: 1. The emotional transition that happens when he says “Tell her about my wife,” which makes your heart absolutely break for him. 2. The way he accents the word “cream” in “ice cream.”
I think about his pronunciation of ice cream constantly. It randomly reminded me of how many people in the south pronounce insurance INsurance. That's a favorite of mine.
I just realized that Tim goes through the five stages of grief in this sketch. Denial when Odenkirk mentions that he owns classic cars. Anger when Bob is talking about his doubles and triples. Bargaining by asking for the check and asking him to stop. Depression when Bob is so insistent about his dying wife. And acceptance, that Bob has classic cars and doesn't live in a hotel.
I love that you never quite know like you don't know if Tim's going to take it to the point or if it's going to be somebody else I fucking love it that don't know how to drive sketches definitely one of my top favorites from this new season
I just read an article that a ton of Bob’s lines were improvised in this sketch, which I think makes it even better than it already is. The way him and Tim play off of each other’s energy, and by the end Tim is so supportive of “his friend” I never would have guessed
Once you know that, it seems like it should've been obvious. The dialog is so absurdly repetitive, there's no way it would've read that funny on the page. But honestly, I think that's WHY this sketch feels so inspired. It literally was.
1:44 The best part is when the Mysterious Stranger tosses Dad a bone by saying "only those two", as if he knew this could escalate and wanted to signal he's got this under control. It's the little details.
@@blindsidexv6244 eh there's no good reason to fill your kid's head with bs like that though. You could just be honest and say it's not good to have ice cream too often or say we'll get ice cream another day or something. The lie just makes them mad at you later when they repeat it to their friends and get made fun of lol
@@SJNaka101 Yeah but that's like a classic experience if done well and over little things. Like my dad, when we pulled into town after listening to his CDs real loud would say "Got to turn it down now, that guy is sound police." And pointed to whoever was closest. Literally only did it in regards to music when we got into town. It was a lie, people drove about with their sound systems all the time and it wasn't a super strict area with actual "sound pollution" laws, but it's a cute memory I have of him. Not to mention it locked in my head one of his best qualities inadvertently, his thoughtfulness. Because the truth was that he knew only assholes and teenagers drive around subjecting others to their loud ass music, thinking they're cool. That's my take though. I can see why some convenient lies are more damaging. Like switching out a childs dead pet with another identical one or telling them that their pet went to a farm. Kids, not that young but not that old, should learn about the truth of life and it's fleeting beauty eventually. Not to mention, learning from your friend that your beloved dog is dead and not in a farm instead of from your parents, I imagine, would be awful. Although if anyone does hear you say your dog went to a farm and then tells you the truth to seem smarter, that's a real asshole.
Bob Odenkirk is going to be okay. He owns every type of classic car. He’s rich and he doesn’t live in a hotel. He just got doubles of the Nova. He’s going to be fine.
This is honestly one of the best sketches I've ever seen. Tim at the end saying he has triples of the Nova, triples of the Roadrunner, and triples of the Barracuda... So damn good
What if Tim identifies with Bob? Tim sees his future in Bob's sad state of loneliness. Note at the beginning of the sketch, Tim is trying to get his daughter back home to her mom and sister. Maybe there is a joint-custody divorce thing situation. It was only when Bob started fantasizing about having a wife that Tim began to sincerely play along.
It’s great because it’s simple in its premise, but that premise leads to a wild complexity in the actual situation. Odenkirk’s character is participating in a lie, and then uses his knowledge of that lie as leverage to force the dad into participating in his own fantasy, and it’s hard to say whether it’s the dad’s sympathy for the man’s desperation or the dad’s desire to not be revealed as a liar that is driving his compliance more, but in either case he has now become complicit in a wildly more egregious lie to his daughter than he ever intended, and on top of all that you realize after stepping back that the daughter is actually the biggest victim of this whole affair even as she’s just an object for these two guys to wage their Cold War of duplicitousness around. Fucken genius, IMO.
The she's beautiful but she's dying instead of she's beautiful and she's dying is equally underrated. just really drives home the fact that his story can go any which way at any minute lol.
When the music kicks in, and Bob says "tell her- about my wife" and swallows and clenches his fist, the look in his eyes makes me want to cry out of laughter but also sadness
Funny but sad at the same time. I think that's why this show works. It knows how to tug at the heart strings sometimes. You realize that now he's showing empathy to the lonely diner patron.
the acting from robinson and odenkirk is just so good in this! The way he gets just a little choked up asking tim to tell his daughter about his "wife" just sells that his character wishes this was true so well!
I love seeing Odenkirk in random episodes of sketch comedy shows. Mr Show helped lay part of the groundwork for shows like this, so it’s pretty cool that he’s still so into doing it.
Didn't know Bob was in the hospital. Glad to hear he's ok. I'm actually more concerned for Rhea; me developing a crush on an actor is the equivalent of 20 black cats crossing their path. Just a parade of black cats! I mean I thought I might have hexed Stephen Merchant too, but his life actually got better since I set my eyes on him. So I guess my conviction that my gaze is bad luck is just my imposter syndrome talking. But still I'm faithful that story about the stray dog they found on set was an omen of some kind. How many more bipolar messages do you think I can leave in this comment section before someone kicks me out? All I want is for someone to ask me what the fuck I'm talking about. That's all I want.
Do you have anymore Barracuda's you could sell a guy? See, I sold my backup Barracuda to a guy under the assumption that another guy was selling me his FIRST Barracuda, but then another buyer snatched up the deal. I'm very rich so it would be a great opportunity for you.
@@taylorh79lol yeah the desperation in his face as he attempts to reason his way into only having triples of just those two, like "come on lemme have those"
Thats what i love about this Show. Basically there is always one "crazy" person in the Sketch, and you can always hear that its written in Tims Voice, but he lets someone else play that Part from time to time (like the old man pitching car ideas) and it always kills.
I love how as he’s talking about going for days alone in his cars he cuts himself off to clarify that he has a wife coz he feels like he’s making himself sound like he lives a lonely life Cracks me up every single time
Bob Odenkirk has said before that the key to playing a comedic character, especially in short sketch comedy, is to play them as a fully believable and real character no matter how ridiculous. So he put in just much emotion into this as he did in the most dramatic moments as Saul Goodman, and that's beautiful.
i think the new season does a crazy good job at bringing in emotion to these sketches. they're just as funny but it feels like a more honest depiction of humanity
This is one of those sketches that is alright when you watch it the first time but it isn't until you watch it a few more times again that you realize how genius and comedic gold it is.
@@ejd8711 😂😂😂 idk why but i literally died when i read that 😂 stoned panic attacks are nightmares tho sorry that happened but on the bright side someone at least derived some enjoyment from all the suffering lmao
What an arc. Also shows just how foundational the soundtrack is. It has the ability to deliver subtext more powerfully than any other element being presented - enough to contradict the narrative being presented. It might be the director’s most influential tool, to help tell you how to feel. I know it’s fundamental because I’ve seen both of my kids watch a new film at 2 yrs old, and know exactly when something sad or scary is taking place (despite the visuals not yet revealing it) just because the music was telling them.
I wonder if it's a nod to Walter Matthau in Dennis the menace when he's telling Gunther they're going to go to the ice cream store, very similar affect
Goddamn. These sketches always have that moment where you begin to empathize with the insufferable person. It's genius. This made me more emptional than it should have.
The more I watch this and just pay attention to the daughter’s expressions, the more I believe that by the end she too has caught on to what this man is going through and is doing her best to play along for his sake
I love how he notices that Tim is getting upset that he adds a second set of triples in his fantasy so he assures him it's just those two, but he wanted more so he conjures up the phone scenario so he can have another triples set.
One of the best sketches across both seasons. Odenkirk kills it.
yeah but it's a missed opportunity to have him yell "GODAMMIT!"
agreed. did you know this is the only skit with improv? when bob odenkirk came onto the show he was the only one allowed to do improv, cause he's bob
@@bonefisher12 bob is bob
@@bonefisher12 yeah, that makes sense. If you’re getting a sketch comedy legend to be in your sketch comedy show, you probably give him a little more freedom than most other people.
They joked it was a cosmic jumbo on set
triples makes it safe. triples is best.
triples is best*
If he doesn't have triples then the other stuff's not true either
I triple-liked this. That way it's safe.
I say this line way too often and know one knows what I’m talking able
this is what I said when I got my booster shot
I like how the sketch switches from Tim wanting Bob to shut up about his imaginary life to Tim realizing Bob needs this.
"Tim realizing Bob needs this."
Yep, that's when this skit went from being funny to "holy crap this is genius."
His wife is gonna get better.
@Maester Gryphon I definitely have triples of my wife. In talks to get triples of the kids too.
Such damn good writing and acting. The best comedic acting is between people who are impossible to break, trying to get each other to break.
@@Farticuss and he definitely does not live in a hotel
"If I don't have triples, then the other stuff isn't true either"
idk why but this guy aggressively using the threat of the ice cream lie as leverage to continue living this fantasy is just amazing. adds a level of sinister intent to the character
I like when he says "tell the kid" 😂 his tone and mannerisms when he says it gave me a very threatening vibe, so funny
"this guy"? SAY HIS NAME!
Heisenberg?
What?!
Triples is best.
Its even funnier when you realize that the barracuda, roadrunner, and nova all look incredibly similar. The man has about 9 seemingly identical looking cars.
This. Is. Everything
omfg I looked it up and you aint lying fuck that elevated this sketch
Yeah but if one gets scratched the rest are still prestine
My dad is about Bob's age and has a really great looking '67 Chevelle. But, has dreamed of also owning a 66 Nova- Nearly identical but slightly smaller- same drive train set up, suspension etc. lol. Sadly, I'm no better.... I just realized I have triples of the miata (all beaters but... yeah).
Those are just the ones he has triples of. He also has every other kind of classic car. Because he's rich, and he doesn't live in a hotel
“But she’s beautiful, but she’s dying” said in one fell swoop with like actual emotion while simultaneously conveying Bob is making this shit up on the spot is just great. Onion-like line delivery
reminds me of a deleted scene from 'Eastbound and Down' where Will Ferrel is shouting to a character to add lines in on the spot, I think it's when Stevie says he slept with a 90 year old and Will shouts 'say...but that's not even the oldest'. I almost get the feeling they did numerous shots with Bob adding new bits in each time trying to get Tim to crack up (fully aware Tim writes the show and it's likely he wrote Bob's dialogue but still).
FUN FACT: "One fell swoop" is a Shakespeare reference. Likely one of the earliest pop-culture references to still exist in the modern lexicon. Sort of like how young adults today use the term "brokeback" as a prefix to imply guy-on-guy action but many don't actually know what it's referencing.
Sorry, I couldn't think of a non-gay modern example. Make of that what you will. I just hope in 300 years, people will still be saying "triples makes it safe, triples is best" to invoke a comical yet earnest sadness without actually knowing why.
"My friend doesn't live in a hotel"
I think my favorite little moment is at 1:37 when Bob says he also has triples of the roadrunner and Tim's reaction is like "this is getting too much, man" and Bob instantly handwaves saying "But just those two"
Haha I know I love it. He realizes he's just about to push it too far then regains control of the situation because he really needs this
They should put this in black and white and make it the opening for Saul Season 6. We all know this is the logical endpoint for Jimmy.
That would be incredible. I wish shows did stuff like that like crossovers but actually good. Mitch herwitz, the creator of arrested development, wanted to have Tobias get a job on House in arrested development then be an a bad actor with a few lines in the house for a few episodes.
@@trexeight I don't know about that in all seriousness 🤣 I'm not a House fan but I feel like a meta AD crossover would have been a weird move for a drama. Community did almost exactly that with Cougartown, though. There's compilations of the clips from both shows on youtube.
When I was a kid, everyone called me insane because I would write elaborate crossover fanfics based on tenuous references. Now it's a multimillion dollar industry with tons of demand. And I'm FINE with this! This is FINE!
Whoever liked my comment, thank you. I care way more about this than I should. I keep coming back to this comment section to check. It's just... I wrote a 40 page fan fic... and I posted it to deviantart... and nobody replied. At all. And I feel like I held in a sneeze. And its been like this for months...
Hurwitz was very funny in Community too as Kooglar!
the desperation in bob's voice when he says "TELL THE KID." about how his imaginary dying wife is gonna pull through gets me cackling
You cackling, and me crying.
And the cars.
She’s good right ?
That voice and his "GODDAMNIT" are his secret weapons, been nailing those since Mr. Show, lol.
2:13 they make it pretty clear he HAS a wife.
I love how every skit in this show goes on for slightly too long, so they stop being funny and start just getting really really sad. Actual genius.
Genius………..
Just like SNL, except in this case it's by design
@@AWatts420 Fuck yeah, man. SNL is an unfunny, self-parody, at this point. Only Weekend Update is regularly, somewhat, enjoyable.
Bob Odenkirk is the master at taking a funny scenario and pushing it to the limit where it suddenly gets really sad and you want to give him a hug
Big disagree. Some of them go on too long to stop being funny and then they always get funny again. Always
The line delivery on “she’s gonna get better” is out of this world 😂
It's like top 5 best delivered lines I've ever heard
and I'm rich
For me it's the swallow when he says "tell her about my wife"
And the "I dont live in a hotel" coming out of nowhere
She won't get better tho
Two things I love about Bob Odenkirk:
1. The emotional transition that happens when he says “Tell her about my wife,” which makes your heart absolutely break for him.
2. The way he accents the word “cream” in “ice cream.”
the way his voice raises with "can you believe it?" kills me in a funny and sad way at the same time
"Thats How i know about ice C R E A M stores!"
iceCREAMstores
I think about his pronunciation of ice cream constantly. It randomly reminded me of how many people in the south pronounce insurance INsurance. That's a favorite of mine.
Two things I love about Bob Odenkirk:
1. Bob.
2. Odenkirk.
I just realized that Tim goes through the five stages of grief in this sketch. Denial when Odenkirk mentions that he owns classic cars. Anger when Bob is talking about his doubles and triples. Bargaining by asking for the check and asking him to stop. Depression when Bob is so insistent about his dying wife. And acceptance, that Bob has classic cars and doesn't live in a hotel.
Woahh
Nicely done
Holy shit
Meta AF
Haha. Pretty much, huh?
The level of empathy and emotion I feel for Bob’s character here is actually hilarious in and of itself. What a great sketch
But he has triplicates....
@@rikjamesguitare and... and I don't live in a hotel.
It's a rare sketch lol cause Tim is the normal one here
one of his best skills is how seamlessly he can go from playing the weirdo in one sketch to the straight man in the next.
His one with Will Forte was brilliant lol
Same with the Howie scene from season 1
Idk it's weird to lie to your kid about ice cream machines.
I love that you never quite know like you don't know if Tim's going to take it to the point or if it's going to be somebody else I fucking love it that don't know how to drive sketches definitely one of my top favorites from this new season
I like how Bob realizes he’s pushing it and he negotiates a deal for the fantasy to have triples of “just those two”
That's one of my favorite parts too. I also love the delivery of "And I don't live in a hotel (my friend doesn't live in a hotel)" "And the cars".
“but she’s beautiful. But she’s dying” lol
When his voice cracks saying “hanging in there”is gold
The swallow and look, the look back. Actually got tears in my eyes.
I was just about to comment the same thing. I'm taken aback at how absorbed I became.
with you, pal.
I just read an article that a ton of Bob’s lines were improvised in this sketch, which I think makes it even better than it already is. The way him and Tim play off of each other’s energy, and by the end Tim is so supportive of “his friend” I never would have guessed
Once you know that, it seems like it should've been obvious. The dialog is so absurdly repetitive, there's no way it would've read that funny on the page. But honestly, I think that's WHY this sketch feels so inspired. It literally was.
@@CERTAIND00Mit is obvious
1:44 The best part is when the Mysterious Stranger tosses Dad a bone by saying "only those two", as if he knew this could escalate and wanted to signal he's got this under control.
It's the little details.
That part gets me every time.
He actually says “ehu! But just those two!”
This is honestly the best way to deal with someone trying to drag you into their lie.
@Bønzëaux Błëuxgrēn don't drag me into your lie to your kid if you're not prepared for me to get weird with it 🤷♀️
@@amandah393 lol it’s literally over ice cream tho
@@blindsidexv6244 eh there's no good reason to fill your kid's head with bs like that though. You could just be honest and say it's not good to have ice cream too often or say we'll get ice cream another day or something. The lie just makes them mad at you later when they repeat it to their friends and get made fun of lol
Lessons for life.
@@SJNaka101 Yeah but that's like a classic experience if done well and over little things. Like my dad, when we pulled into town after listening to his CDs real loud would say "Got to turn it down now, that guy is sound police." And pointed to whoever was closest. Literally only did it in regards to music when we got into town. It was a lie, people drove about with their sound systems all the time and it wasn't a super strict area with actual "sound pollution" laws, but it's a cute memory I have of him. Not to mention it locked in my head one of his best qualities inadvertently, his thoughtfulness. Because the truth was that he knew only assholes and teenagers drive around subjecting others to their loud ass music, thinking they're cool.
That's my take though.
I can see why some convenient lies are more damaging. Like switching out a childs dead pet with another identical one or telling them that their pet went to a farm. Kids, not that young but not that old, should learn about the truth of life and it's fleeting beauty eventually. Not to mention, learning from your friend that your beloved dog is dead and not in a farm instead of from your parents, I imagine, would be awful. Although if anyone does hear you say your dog went to a farm and then tells you the truth to seem smarter, that's a real asshole.
Bob Odenkirk is going to be okay. He owns every type of classic car. He’s rich and he doesn’t live in a hotel. He just got doubles of the Nova. He’s going to be fine.
Triples, actually. If he doesn’t have triples, then none of the other stuff is true
He doesn't live in a hotel. Tell them.
He doesn't work at a Cinnabon... wait, someone crossed the streams.
_(sotto voce)_ This is Bob fucking Odenkirk!
Also, he was never a lawyer, and has doubles of the barracuda .....wait, sorry, triples of the barracuda. Triples are best
"She asked me to marry her, and I didn't even want to but she's beautiful but she's dying." - Saul Goodman
Shes gonna get better
And I'm rich haha
@@richardthurmond1614 my friend doesn’t live in a hotel
I hope he isn’t talking about Kim!
@@williamdavis8076 Gene Takavic has been having a rough time recently...
Yeah no Kim's gonna be fine. The Sand Pest isn't fatal to adept mentirosas.
This is honestly one of the best sketches I've ever seen. Tim at the end saying he has triples of the Nova, triples of the Roadrunner, and triples of the Barracuda... So damn good
Bravo, Vince!
Who would even want one Nova?
There is something very sweet about Tim's character when he decides to go along with the wife story.
What if Tim identifies with Bob? Tim sees his future in Bob's sad state of loneliness. Note at the beginning of the sketch, Tim is trying to get his daughter back home to her mom and sister. Maybe there is a joint-custody divorce thing situation. It was only when Bob started fantasizing about having a wife that Tim began to sincerely play along.
@@ryansilke Nice comment, there's definitely so many equally fascinating ways to imagine the context
Such a simple and perfect sketch.
so perfect, so unique - doesn't go over the top making Saul bad or evil or scary - just unusual + good acting = hilarious
@@walkwardrobe5587 I think the formula for "I think you should leave" is --> Normal, Normal, Odd, Insane
@@tompentoney16 I feel like it’s more Normal thing + petty/insecure thing = extremely socially inept interaction
It’s great because it’s simple in its premise, but that premise leads to a wild complexity in the actual situation. Odenkirk’s character is participating in a lie, and then uses his knowledge of that lie as leverage to force the dad into participating in his own fantasy, and it’s hard to say whether it’s the dad’s sympathy for the man’s desperation or the dad’s desire to not be revealed as a liar that is driving his compliance more, but in either case he has now become complicit in a wildly more egregious lie to his daughter than he ever intended, and on top of all that you realize after stepping back that the daughter is actually the biggest victim of this whole affair even as she’s just an object for these two guys to wage their Cold War of duplicitousness around. Fucken genius, IMO.
I would respectfully argue it's not simple at all. But it sure is great.
Bob is gonna get better, because we are old friends, he has triples of Nova.
He's okay, his son confirmed 30 minutes ago.
We're the same age, him and I!
and triples of the roadrunner
Bob is gonna be okay and so is his wife, who’s beautiful - but dying.
@@thischannelhasnocontent8629 I like that you're going to every comment to tell people the good news and ease their worries.
2:48 "But she's beautiful, but she's dying" is the funniest delivery.
"and I didn't even want to!" is such an underrated line.
but she's beautiful, but she's dying
@@Pizza_Rat TELL THE KID
The she's beautiful but she's dying instead of she's beautiful and she's dying is equally underrated. just really drives home the fact that his story can go any which way at any minute lol.
When the music kicks in, and Bob says "tell her- about my wife" and swallows and clenches his fist, the look in his eyes makes me want to cry out of laughter but also sadness
"but I do, I mean, I have a wife, tell the kid"
the way he feverishly taps his phone at the end is just wonderful
"And I don't live in a hotel" kills me every time
My friend doesn’t live in a hotel.
he probably does...
@@kyleklontz3214 Yeah, right. His wife is a model!
To have a comedic legend just automatically tune into the chaotic energy of a Tim Robinson character and just nail this scene is incredible!
Bob’s little “and the cars” reminder at 3:10 always sends me
I'm usually laughing too much at that point but I finally caught it, that's amazing lol
😭😭😭😂😂😂
The face Tim makes before he says “yeah, I know his wife...she’s great” 😂😂😂 why he is the goat
Funny but sad at the same time. I think that's why this show works. It knows how to tug at the heart strings sometimes. You realize that now he's showing empathy to the lonely diner patron.
If he doesn't have triples then the other stuff's not true
"Shes gonna get better" is my fav line delivery
"Tell the kid" make the "She gonna get better" delivery makes me laugh every single time!!
Get well soon Bob, we're both same age and we're both rich and have doubles
He's okay, his son confirmed 30 minutes ago.
He’s beautiful but he’s dying
@@gaboh296 I respect the call-back but too soon
And neither of you live in a hotel.
@@thischannelhasnocontent8629 musta been cause he has triples of the Nova
she’s beautiful, but she’s dying
The shock look blinks by Tim of "Awwww, come ON man!"
She's sick but she's hanging in there!
Me
she's gonna get better
I used to have poster of her in my garage 😳
I remember reading someone saying "Anytime Tim isn't the psychotic one in the sketch, buckle up"
the acting from robinson and odenkirk is just so good in this!
The way he gets just a little choked up asking tim to tell his daughter about his "wife" just sells that his character wishes this was true so well!
Is it just me or did season two hit us with some legit emotional scenes?
This, the mall prank, sloppy steaks.
Haunted House, too
@@heatherperleberg7816 jizz
@@heatherperleberg7816 haunted house had me in my feels. I felt like that was metaphor
@@dirtymike3329 A metaphor for what?
@@diccchocolate416 it always reminded me of someone with social issues, sheltered because of them, creating this yearning to fit in.
I love seeing Odenkirk in random episodes of sketch comedy shows. Mr Show helped lay part of the groundwork for shows like this, so it’s pretty cool that he’s still so into doing it.
WE AS A SOCIETY MUST PROTECT BOB ODENKIRK AT ALL COSTS.
He’s in the hospital right now 😞
Bob’s son has confirmed on Twitter that he’s ok
You cursed him.
Didn't know Bob was in the hospital. Glad to hear he's ok. I'm actually more concerned for Rhea; me developing a crush on an actor is the equivalent of 20 black cats crossing their path. Just a parade of black cats! I mean I thought I might have hexed Stephen Merchant too, but his life actually got better since I set my eyes on him. So I guess my conviction that my gaze is bad luck is just my imposter syndrome talking. But still I'm faithful that story about the stray dog they found on set was an omen of some kind.
How many more bipolar messages do you think I can leave in this comment section before someone kicks me out? All I want is for someone to ask me what the fuck I'm talking about. That's all I want.
@@heathercalun4919 I’m high on shrooms and I understand what your talking about heather
also love that it's clearly sunny outside
I watch this like three times a week and it’s still perfect every time
Because you have to have triples
Multiple times a day for me...people think I'm nuts
Triples makes it perfect triples makes it 3 times a week
@@rish8917 bro, if you want to watch it all day every day, thats fine, but for the love of God, don’t let people know that’s what you’re doing.
Bob Odenkirk deserves an Emmy for this. This 3 minute skit has more soul and depth in his character than 99% of tv out there
If I don't have triples, then the other stuffs not true..
The line delivery of “BUT JUST THOSE TWO!” kills me
That first fucking look of minimal horrific contemplation at 00:37 is so on point. Tim is ridiculous.
"...and I don't live in a hotel...." 😢
This sketch was so sad and hilarious at the same time 🤣😢
I felt more from this 3 minute sketch than from all the movies i watched last year. Masterful.
Can confirm he has triples of the Nova now. I sold him my backup quadruple Nova.
quadruples is best
Do you have anymore Barracuda's you could sell a guy? See, I sold my backup Barracuda to a guy under the assumption that another guy was selling me his FIRST Barracuda, but then another buyer snatched up the deal. I'm very rich so it would be a great opportunity for you.
Now YOU’VE got triples of the Nova
@@ChuckBeans61 Quadruples is overkill, now they both have triples. Triples is best.
The little acknowledgment that he may be going overboard with the claim at 1:39 is a stroke of genius.
"but just those two!" is so good
@@taylorh79lol yeah the desperation in his face as he attempts to reason his way into only having triples of just those two, like "come on lemme have those"
Glad he got tripples of the Nova in the end
I cant stop rewatching this sketch. I think it’s become my favorite. This needs a whole spin-off show.
This is the best sketch I've ever seen.
His face when he says, "and I don't live in a hotel..." 🤣
I love that he keeps calling his daughter “buddy”
Thats what i love about this Show. Basically there is always one "crazy" person in the Sketch, and you can always hear that its written in Tims Voice, but he lets someone else play that Part from time to time (like the old man pitching car ideas) and it always kills.
I love how as he’s talking about going for days alone in his cars he cuts himself off to clarify that he has a wife coz he feels like he’s making himself sound like he lives a lonely life
Cracks me up every single time
Bob seeing the world wearing rose-colored glasses..brilliant detail
It's the gulp at 2:19 for me. That is an acTOR!
Bob Odenkirk has said before that the key to playing a comedic character, especially in short sketch comedy, is to play them as a fully believable and real character no matter how ridiculous. So he put in just much emotion into this as he did in the most dramatic moments as Saul Goodman, and that's beautiful.
So much despair in that gulp hahah
Yeees! It's the gulp followed by the exhale and flared nostrils... brings the emotion to life! Crazy good acting.
Hahaaa, so true!
the "tell the kid" soon after the gulp just adds to that gulp!! haha
This is genius. Great look at humanity. Great observations.
I stand by this being one of the greatest sketches of the past 5 years
This is a good idea and I estand by it
honestly getting Bob Odenkirk in your sketch comedy show is like one of the highest honors for sketch comedy.
i think the new season does a crazy good job at bringing in emotion to these sketches. they're just as funny but it feels like a more honest depiction of humanity
You're telling me "he layeth on high" didn't bring a tear to your eye?
RIght out of the gate in the first episode with "I don't even wanna be around anymore..."
This is the most beautiful comedy skit I have seen in ages. It just aches.
2:20 is absolutely devastating 😭😭
This is one of those sketches that is alright when you watch it the first time but it isn't until you watch it a few more times again that you realize how genius and comedic gold it is.
This is one of my favorite skits. The acting is amazing. A lot of people will think it’s stupid I’m sure but it’s hilarious because it’s so realistic.
Absolutely devastating yet funny AF at the same time. These guys get it. ♥
Watching this show high is quite possibly the best experience you could ever have
You don't even have to be and it's still hilarious!
Idk, my gf and I had edibles and binged season 2 and she ended up getting a full blown panic attack
@@ejd8711 😂😂😂 idk why but i literally died when i read that 😂 stoned panic attacks are nightmares tho sorry that happened but on the bright side someone at least derived some enjoyment from all the suffering lmao
@@diablofrench7735 no no, you had the correct response, in hindsight it was pretty funny
@@ejd8711 😂😂😂 that's wassup 🤙 out of curiosity was there a specific sketch that triggered it or just being absolutely 'zooted off the stuff™️' 😂
What an arc. Also shows just how foundational the soundtrack is. It has the ability to deliver subtext more powerfully than any other element being presented - enough to contradict the narrative being presented. It might be the director’s most influential tool, to help tell you how to feel. I know it’s fundamental because I’ve seen both of my kids watch a new film at 2 yrs old, and know exactly when something sad or scary is taking place (despite the visuals not yet revealing it) just because the music was telling them.
That Nova deal’s a sure thing now
😂
The sunglasses and the rings. Such a random but perfect touch.
The glasses too lol
how can a sketch be so sad and so funny at the same time???
If I ever get a chance to do this,
i'm going for it.. 😂
It's like a fun form of blackmail.
I can watch this over and over! Greatest sketch I've ever seen. A brilliantly executed job.
"If I don't have triples, the other stuff's not true" 😂
"He's got triples of the barracuda, triples of the nova, and triples of the roadrunner"
2:39 The shrug at the end of the question is the funniest thing I've ever seen on tv
god I love how Bob says "ice CREAM stores". My wife and I can't not quote that anytime we say anything that remotely sounds like ice cream stores lol
I wonder if it's a nod to Walter Matthau in Dennis the menace when he's telling Gunther they're going to go to the ice cream store, very similar affect
“I love my cars! You know me!”
Only this show can make such an hilarious sketch that somehow hits you in the feels
Goddamn. These sketches always have that moment where you begin to empathize with the insufferable person. It's genius. This made me more emptional than it should have.
Oh man I love this sketch, I come back to it every once in a while for a line or two and end up watching the whole thing
Saul Goodman in his new life as the Cinnabon manger. Enjoying a weekend breakfast
The more I watch this and just pay attention to the daughter’s expressions, the more I believe that by the end she too has caught on to what this man is going through and is doing her best to play along for his sake
The beauty in every single Tim Robinson sketch is the simplicity of the plot.
I cannot stop thinking about this sketch.
me too
I cried the first time I saw this sketch 😂 😭
of laughter or sadness??? Or Both?
yes
I love how he notices that Tim is getting upset that he adds a second set of triples in his fantasy so he assures him it's just those two, but he wanted more so he conjures up the phone scenario so he can have another triples set.
I love that part too. You explained it perfectly and I started cracking up at your comment.
When you said "but he wanted more" 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣
First time watching this. Was not expecting Odenkirk. Blown away
It makes me so happy that Bob Odenkirk was on this show. I'd imagine Tim was a fan of Mr. Show growing up.
I don’t know whose acting is better but these guys are absolutely killing it!
We need triples of Bob Odenkirk ❤️ 💕 💗
Yes, triples makes it safe ♥
"She asked me to marry her, I didn't even want to" 😂😂😂
If Better Call Saul ended with a scene of Saul walking into that diner I’d be ok with it. :)
Now that you mention it, this does really remind me of the gene flash forwards