Yasper
- Episode aired Jan 28, 2022
- TV-MA
- 34m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Yasper explains how he tried to get Xavier to help him get his music career off the ground. His version of the events is a toe-tapping musical.Yasper explains how he tried to get Xavier to help him get his music career off the ground. His version of the events is a toe-tapping musical.Yasper explains how he tried to get Xavier to help him get his music career off the ground. His version of the events is a toe-tapping musical.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Nick Drago
- Dancer
- (uncredited)
Charles Fournier
- Dancer #3
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The sheer audacity of making this episode, knowing full well that it would alienate a considerable part of the audience, is admirable. The (varied) musical numbers are exhilarating - you may need to watch them at least twice to catch more lyrics. In fact, I watched the whole episode twice, just like I did the 1st one; Aniq and Yasper are likable and have depth to them, while Brett (the star of the 2nd episode) is an one-note character who is better in smaller doses (and his scenes in episodes 1 & 3 are funnier than anything in his own). I'd give this one 8.5/10.
Ben Schwartz is a gift to comedy, okay? Physicality, line delivery -- he's got the goods. Also, the man can SING. He is in no way re-inventing himself as Yasper, the dorky audio-visual expert who desperately wants to be a big-time pop star. Schwartz knows exactly how to play up the pathetic side of Yasper while also making him goofy and endearing without a trace of irony. He genuinely believes that this dream can happen for him. I mean, if it happened to Xavier, why not Yasper? On the episode, Yasper gets to be the hero of a shallow narrative in which he is deeply invested. Every song he sings is about how close he is to making his fantasy come true. Yasper is so obsessed with Xavier that it's even off-putting to Xavier. Xavier got big and left Yasper behind. Anyone else might hold a grudge, but Yasper just seems to want a favor -- a "blessing," which, coming from Xavier, could actually change his life completely. The thing is, Yasper is so single-minded that he doesn't pay attention to anything that doesn't affect him. Watch how everyone else acts in his version of events -- he misses so many details because he's in his own little world. When did all the other guests leave? Was Jennifer #2 among them, and why would she leave without telling Jennifer #1? Here's the thing -- The Afterparty is so funny, and it has so many throwaway jokes that it's hard to know which ones are actually throwaways and which ones will have major significance down the line. It's fun to speculate. And then there's Chelsea's flask with the red 'X' on it, found near Xavier's body! Uh-oh! Looks like Chelsea is now the prime suspect and next in line for questioning. What secrets will be revealed with her interview? Jon Lajoie, the man behind Yasper's musical numbers, is the invisible MVP of this episode. He's intrinsic to why everyone's having so much damn fun.
Best musical materiel I ever seen in my life, it was amazing and not boring like most musicals are.
I'm sure it will be best episode of this show. Mark my words.
I'm sure it will be best episode of this show. Mark my words.
Mixing a satire with a musical really didn't work for this show. I fell asleep numerous times being bored by this character. Good thing each episode is a completely different perspective.
I'm not a big fan of musicals so that's probably why this wasn't amazing for me but it was still fun and the musical scenes were still funny. They also consistently switched to current time and storytelling which made it flow better and not feel like they just tack on a random twist at the end of the episode.
Did you know
- TriviaBen Schwartz performed all of Yasper's gymnastics and dance moves for this episode, except the worm into handspring move which needed to be shot again and Ben was unavailable for the reshoot.
- GoofsThe detective complains about suspects handling evidence, yet has let them roam free, unhindered, around the crime scene during her interrogations.
- SoundtracksTwo Shots
Written by Jack Dolgen & Jonathan Lajoie
Performed by Ben Schwartz, Sam Richardson, Jamie Demetriou
Details
- Runtime
- 34m
- Color
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