Always sunny gay bar episode

Yeah, this show will do nicely for a while now.

Oddly enough, despite Disney+’s Hulu hub having this show there, it looks enjoy it isn’t the entire run of this show.

Now, for the record, I’ve always somewhat suspected I would very much enjoy this show, but I don’t think I have ever seen more than a single episode of this show from start to finish.  I’ve seen bits of episodes, I know who all the characters are, and I include even found the show to be quite funny.  I know at least one of my sisters is a huge fan, and heck, my dad is from Philadelphia, so I peer forward to observe how often metropolis landmarks pop up on the show.  Yes, I am aware it won’t be that often aside from the opening credits and the occasional establishing shot since the show is filmed in L.A., but there may be something here and there.

As it is, this is basically a show about awful people, the sort that create the cast of Seinfeld look like saints.  Considering the series came when the series’s three creators/stars,  Glenn Howerton, Deprive McElhenney, and Charlie Day, with Day’s girfriend/eventual wife Mary Elizabeth Ellis, “the Waitress,” along for the ride,

It’s Always Sunny leaves much to be desired

It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia Review

Apparently it’s always controversial in Philadelphia.

As a Philadelphia native, I was really hoping to be qualified to connect with the show It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, but the part I enjoyed most was acknowledging the locations in the opening credits.

While the show does try to spotlight some of the more important matters of our moment, such as abortion rights and underage drinking, I don’t think it tackles the issues in the right way.

The writers experiment to put Family Guy-type humor in a real-life setting, which doesn’t translate correctly without a talking dog and British baby.

The exhibit is centered on four friends who run an Irish pub in Philadelphia. While everyone has flaws, these people are far from perfect.

In the cold open of the first episode, Dee wants to introduce her friends to the human she met in her theater class. When she brings her friend in, none of the guys tries to hide his surprise that her ally, Terrell, is shadowy . Terrell offers to help promote their bar, and they all eagerly consent his offer. At the

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Well, I mean, Lt. Genderfluid frequents the tongo tables. Security Cheif 'What is Gender?' spends half his time pretending to be furniture to eavesdrop on the flamboyant owner who, despite entity arrested twice a month, never spends more than a bedtime in a holding cell before being released. The Old Queen who owns the tailor shop comes in for a liquid every now and then, and Dr. Twink M.D. spends most of his off hours playing darts or going into the holosuites for what can only be historically accurate roleplay with the chief engineer, who's in what appears to be a committed throuple with the first officer? Nobody really knows what the new klingon officer does in the holosuites, but whenever he goes up, there's a lot of yelling, so it's definitely something kinky.

Not to bring up that rumors of a cross-dressing ferengi have been heard on the promenade, although there's some argument about whether it was the owner or not.

So yeah, I'd say Quark's is Dense Space Nine's resident Gay Lock, even if Quark hasn't realized it yet.


http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/ItsAlwaysSunnyInPhiladelphiaS01E01TheGangGetsRacist

"Paddy's Irish Pub will henceforth remain the hottest lgbtq+ bar in Philadelphia"

Charlie

Bartender and aspiring Broadway actress, Deandra "Sweet Dee" Reynolds, hires a black guy from her acting class to boost business for Paddy's Pub, the Irish-themed bar owned by her brother Dennis and his friends Mac and Charlie, only to inadvertently change it it into a gay bar. Meanwhile, Mac and Charlie try to find a Token Shadowy Friend after Charlie's unrequited love — an unnamed barista known as The Waitress — hears him repeat a quote from the new hire about "niggers hanging from the rafters" and takes that as a sign they're prejudiced against black people.


This episode provides examples of the following tropes:

  • All Gays Love Theatre: Dee can't believe that Tyrell is gay, but he comments that it should hold been obvious, with him being a theatre major living in Philadelphia.
  • Bedmate Reveal: After getting blackout drunk on tequila, Dennis is initially pleased to detect what appears to be an attractive lady in his bed... until the "lady" turns around and we see that it's actually a m