Online Previews Workaholics 3x1 The Business Trip
The guys have 6 hours to get Blake a passport, or they'll miss their Thanksgiving trip to Hedonism II. Free Download Video Workaholics 29th May 2012 Episode On Comedy Central Tv Online Tv Live Streaming Video .Online Watch Workaholics Full Episode Watch Stream HD Video on Internet TV . The boys are back in this weeks episode of Workaholics on Comedy Central. While hanging out after work in a public park, the three decide to take a large statue of a dragon. I say take because they arrive at the conclusion that since their taxes paid for the park, they paid for the dragon (and therefore rightly own it). After bringing the dragon home it gets stolen by a group of high school posers. In order to get it back the guys dress as posers and go undercover at their local high school.I honestly found myself laughing out loud throughout the entire episode. When the three arrive at the high school they decide to change clothes. One of the characters wears a pair of JNCOs and a Blink-182 shirt, another acts like a young thug, and the other a stereotypical pothead. Their undercover identities alone are hilarious and even after they get busted the hilarity ensues.It looks like season 2 is off to a great start. The first season was so good that I was a little skeptical about the return. To my surprise it looks like Workaholics will be going strong for awhile. If you haven't seen Workaholics and fall into that 18-35 demographic, I suggest you check out next weeks episode.I read in an interview on Lithium Magazine that they were being compared to "The Trailer Park Boys." First off, that's really cool since that show is filmed a few hours from here. That show is the best and until I read that interview, I never even thought of the similarities, but I can see it now. Three guys acting as a bit exaggerated version of themselves, but all the while having a blast and making people laugh. I love it.Anyway, back to the review. This season came back with a bang and kept it's pace throughout the season. I can't ever say I saw a boring Workaholics episode. And when your watching a comedy series, it's not always spot on, every show has it's ups and downs, but so far the Workaholics hasn't been anywhere but up in my opinion.The "befriending a predator" episode was gold. I almost spilt my spleen (or something else just as important) laughing at it.“You love ten-year-old boys, right?” “Ten to twelve.” I know, I know, but come onn.It was hilarious. It's one of my favorite episodes and I still go back and re-watch it often.“Workaholics” star Anders Holm got married to his high school sweetheart, Emma Nesper, earlier this month, not long after he turned 30.
“I’m wrapping it all up, grown-man status,” the Evanston native said during a phone interview a few weeks before the wedding. But fans should not expect Ders, the character Holm plays in the raunchy Comedy Central series, to grow up when the second season begins at 9:30 p.m. Tuesday.
In "Heist School," Ders, Adam (Adam Devine) and Blake (Blake Anderson) go back to high school after something is stolen from their lawn. "We ... kind of sleuth our way into a high school and find out who took this specific cold-blooded object off of our lawn and get it back, or crack some skulls in the process."
Nope, it doesn't sound like the slacker stoners who live, play and avoid work together are growing up at all.
“If it was up to my fiancée, I’m sure he’d grow up a little bit, but then the checks would stop,” Holm said. “So I’ve got to remain a buffoon or else I don’t think the show will go much longer.”
You can call his character a buffoon, but don’t call the show a “gross-out comedy.” Created by Holm, Devine, Anderson and Kyle Newacheck, the fourth member of their troupe Mail Order Comedy, as a web series. “Workaholics” caught the attention of Comedy Central, who brought it to TV in April for a successful first season.
Holm prefers to call the series “game-changing,” and gave me a deadpan ribbing for my using the term “gross-out.”Season 2 you can expect more full-frontal; just a lot more homo eroticism. What else? Oh, there’s kind of like a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles thing that’s gonna go down. … Oh, Karl has a wedding, so that’s going to be the finale of the season. …
We give up drinking for a week and all hell breaks loose, and we’re like at each other’s throats, and like get into some physical altercations. And then we have to meet with the HR guy and go through a pretty rigorous alcoholics substance abuse program type thing. The guy who plays our HR rep is Mitch Hurwitz of “Arrested Development” fame, the creator of “Arrested Development.” He says he’s at the end of the show and we were looking for somebody to play this part and he reached out to us, and we were like. “Uh yeah, we’d love to have you.”
He’s like perhaps the funniest dude on Planet Earth. Just like nonstop smarter-than-you jokes. You’re just like, “OK, wow, so you’re playing at that level and I’m down here. It’s nice down here but God, how is it up there? It must be nice.”
That’s pretty cool that people are coming to you guys.
Yeah, it was amazing. What I keep forgetting is that the show airs, you know? You remember when you go to a bar and there’s like 30 20-year-old dudes who are like, “I’m going to buy you a shot!” And you’re like, “I just had seven with all those dudes, but that’s cool.” But then you forget that your peers, for lack of a better word, watch it and judge it. So you get some cool people who write comedy that are like, “Hey, I really like the show.” Or someone will call you and go just talked with so and so and they’re so into the show. It’s like, “Oh, shouldn’t they be out doing something way cooler than watching our show?”
It’s fun to hear people who you look up to like what you’re doing. Because I don’t think of it as anything except for a job, you know? I bury myself in it so I’m like, “Oh, it’s work.” … I forget people see it because I’m so absorbed by it. It’s just like a cool bonus. So I can’t imagine being like a janitor and someone being, “Oh my God, like I went to that school that you clean. That was pretty clean.” And you’re like, “Oh thanks, I appreciate that.”
Have you found it’s a lot different than when you guys were existing only on the Web, either your approach to the work or the reaction to the work?
No. Obviously our audience has, you know, probably doubled. [Laughs.] Our audience has expanded by like 400 times. And there’s Twitter now, which is like instant verification of how bad or how good your material is, which is always good…
I would say that the reactions or the way we approach the work is pretty much the same. We do what we think is funny. Now we have somebody giving us notes, being the network, but they’re usually good notes and they don’t have many. It’s not one of those horror stories that you always hear about where there’s some like jaded TV creator, or like TV show creator that’s always bitching about the networks and how horrible they are and they’re just killing the show. It’s not that really at all.
Only in Season 1, we had an episode where the guys wanted to do a get-rich-quick kind of scheme. ... Blake’s character is like, “What if we came up with a flame-retardant American flag?” You can never burn an American flag. And we’re like, “Oh, that’s really cool.” So throughout the episode we’re just burning American flags because we’re trying [to test it]. It’s like research and development. And we burned like 70 flags. Comedy Central wasn’t too keen on that.
Oh my God. It’s not that gross to us. I think that’s the thing, is that it’s like when you’re grandpa sees your iPad, he’s like, “I don’t understand this.” And it’s like, “Well, you’re just behind the times.” I think we are ahead of the times, so it may come across as gross, but in 10 years it’s not going to be that gross. It’s going to seem pretty dated, I think. What’s not to like?
[Totally deadpan] No, of course. You know how everyone says that every story has been done, it’s just they’re getting done different ways? Well, as TV and music and all that stuff, as like restrictions are lifted and you can finally say “bitch,” or do this story that you couldn’t have done 10 years ago, I think it’s just kind of like the flood gates have been opened.
And like you watch a show like “Curb [Your Enthusiasm]” where he gets pubic hair in his throat, you’re like is that gross? You’re like, “Well, it’s pretty [bleeping] gross.” But it just hasn’t been done before. I’m sure it would have been done 10 years ago if somebody let them.
I think we’re just doing stuff that would have been done 10 years ago. It’s just stuff that guys joke about all the time, but you can finally see it on TV now, you know?