This is the censored version of the review, with no n*de photos or explicit discussions.
God offers one thing: Eli and Baby Billy attend a service at Locust Grove Baptist Church. where Rev. Seasons preaches. The sermon: when people pray, they're really asking God to give them stuff. But God only offers one thing: His love. Yawn -- Baby Billy is bored. His church offers razzle-dazzle.
The Family Dinner: Next, Gideon goes to work for Martin, ostensibly to learn church operations, but really looking for a new way to steal a million dollars. Jesse disapproves, hurt that they decided on this new job without consulting him.
Gideon is discussing his stunt work: because of his slim frame, he stunt-doubles for women a lot: it's called "wigging." Jesse disapproves of him "pretending to be a woman." Amber defends him: it's just for the stunt, because "he's very manly," not feminine, not gay. Notice Kelvin's reaction: he does not like this conversation at all. He keeps his head down, worried that someone will apply it to him.
But the industry is moving toward having women stunting for women, so no more wigging. Jesse mocks him: my son is sad "cause he can't pretend to be a woman for money anymore." He's really pushing the hegemonic masculinity here: behavior that men are expected to engage in, and punished if they fail: being important/ in charge, aggressive, stoic, politically and socially powerful, muscular, and heterosexual.
BJ thinks that "representation of marginalized peoples is a big deal," so if a script calls for a woman to fall off a building, a woman should do the stunting. Amber disagrees, promoting stereotypic gender polarization: "only men should jump off buildings."
Finally Kelvin has had enough, and changes the subject: "Wasn't Baby Billy supposed to be here tonight?"
The party devolves into a fight between Jesse and his son Pontius. He blames Pontius's bad behavior on Gideon leaving: "Actions have consequences."
Kelvin's Basketball: After things calm down, Judy and Kelvin find Jesse in the back yard, crying, the super-masculine guy exhibiting "feminine" emotion. He asks if they have come to make fun of him. Judy: "Well, Kelvin has."
Notice that Kelvin is carrying a basketball. Where did he get it? Did he bring it with him, as a "welcome home" gift for his adult nephew? Did he pick it up from an off-camera basketball court?
This is the only time in the series that Kelvin exhibits an interest in any team sport, or any athletic activity other than acrobatics and bodybuilding. I wonder if he is trying to project a stereotypic masculine image in response to the talk about "acting like a woman."
The Naked Thugs: Baby Billy and Tiffany are alone in the satellite church, when thugs burst in, presumably sent by Rev. Seasons, and start destroying the place. They hide, but the thugs find them (maybe you shouldn't pray so loudly?), and prepare to attack. At that moment, Eli appears with a gun. He forces the thugs to strip and run naked through the mall.
The act is meant to "unman" the thugs, suggesting that, although they are physiologically male, they are no longer "men." It serves as a counterpoint to the gender polarization displayed by Jesse and Kelvin earlier. Being a man is not a matter of pectoral muscles or sex organs: it is a performance. The end.
See also: The Naked Thugs: Danny McBride thinks we "wont like these dicks."
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