Episode 3.4 concludes with the family in disarray. Both BJ and Keefe have broken up with their partners in the aftermath of a betrayal, Jesse and Pontius are sparring, and the Montgomery Boys are secretly planning a violent retribution.
Title: "Interlude III." The interludes are meant to build suspense by postponing the action for two weeks, plus give us some background on the major characters. Interlude I centered on Jesse, and Interlude II on Kelvin, so I imagine that this time it will be Judy.
Judy and the Gay Boy: Rogers High School, 2000. High school-aged Judy tries to flirt with her crush, art student Trent (Braxton Alexander), by throwing her hair over his desk. He asks her to stop several times, but she says "You know you like it, Stud," embarrassing him in front of the class. Finally he gets even by cutting her hair.
Wait -- why isn't the super-rich Judy in private school?
She doesn't notice until the girls in the restroom laugh at her. Then she storms into band practice and smashes his saxophone, yelling "I liked you, a*hole! I loved you!"
Some fans wonder whether Trent is gay. Of course, lots of straight guys would reject Judy's vulgar come-ons, but Trent wears a pukka shell necklace: according to my research, around 2000, that was a queer code, a way to identify other gay people while leaving the straights oblivious. Plus he's an artist and a musician. "Artistic" and "musical" are often code for "gay."
Y2K is Real: Remember the Y2K panic that Eli and his wife Aimee-Leigh profited from? A reporter from Time Magazine shows Eli the commercial, telling folks that God wanted them to buy Gemstone Brand survival buckets, first aid kits, commode liners, and so on. "So...do you think it's ethical to scare people and then benefit from that fear-mongering?"
"I was trying to help."
"You said that Jesus told you that Y2K was real. Who was wrong, Jesus or you?"
Wait -- most evangelicals are pre-Dispensationalists, believing that all of the Christians will be caught up to heaven in the Rapture prior to the various seals, trumpets, and bowls of the Tribulation. Why would they need survival supplies?
Kelvin's Little Tiny Doll P*cker: College-age Jesse brings his girlfriend Amber home to meet the family. Is she pregnant? Gideon is going to be born in a year or less.
At dinner, Judy criticizes her for coming from a poor family. Jesse yells a slur that is technically a reference to his d*ck!", and she responds "I want a meal, not a snack."
Kelvin laughs: "That was good. She means you have a tiny little titi" (pronouncced tih-tee). Jesse then criticizes Kelvin's "tiny little doll p*cker." It is probably perfectly normal for a prepubescent boy, but Kelvin doesn't know that.
Presumably the adult Kelvin is the same size as Adam Devine, yet the siblings continue to disparage his p*nis into adulthood. How, exactly, do they see it? My sister has never seen mine. The result is a paralyzing fear of intimacy that jeopardized every potential romantic connection before Keefe. And only Keefe's superhuman devotion kept him by Kelvin's side as he vacillated between withholding bedroom stuff nd demanding it constantly.
Background Note: "Titi" is a type of shrub, a type of monkey, your aunt, and an unattractive drag queen.
The Snake Handler. After a scene where Judy bullies Amber and steals her ring, setting up their squabbles in the present, we cut to a service at Peter Montgomery's Pentecostal-like snake-handling church. Actually, he's the only one playing with a snake, while his sons play the guitar and violin, and his wife May-May goes into a filled-with-the-Spirit ecstasy.
Background note: Snake-handling, based upon the injunction to "take up serpents" in Mark 16:17, was introduced by the Church of God with Signs Following during the Great Depression, and spread throughout Appalachia. Today the practice is illegal in most Southern states, including South Carolina, and there are no more than 100 snake-handling churches left.
In Them That Follow (2019), Walton Goggins (Baby Billy) plays the pastor of a snake-handling church.
Gemstone-Montgomery Tensions: At the Gemstone Compound, May-May complains about having to identify herself at the security station, just to put flowers on her father's grave. "You can visit the grave whenever you want," Aimee-Leigh assures her. "We'll have security flag you right on through." But she's not satisfied. Geez, he's been dead since 1995. Haven't you figured out the visitation schedule by now?
Later she bosses Peter around and rejects every effort of Aimee-Leigh to be friendly, suggesting a long-standing feud. We can see parallels in Amber and Judy in the present.
The Gay Pride Shirt: Continuing her harassment, May-May criticizes any idiot who believed that Y2K was real. Peter looks nervous.
Uh-oh, did he sink his money into Gemstone Brand survival supplies?
Yep -- later, he tells Eli that he spent the family's life savings on a warehouse full of Y2K buckets to sell after the world ended, but the world didn't end, and now no one will by them.
So you criticize Eli for profiting from the Y2K panic, but you were planning the same thing. Eli offers to buy his stock back.
More after the break