Erin finally admits she’s terrified of leaving Hawley, not because she loves the town, but because she’s scared she’s becoming just as broken as Vinnie. Vinnie, in turn, admits he sees Jim (Steve Evets) as more of a father than his real one ever was—a confession he immediately tries to blame on “the fungus.”
Just when you think the lads of Hawley have run out of ways to catastrophically fail upwards, Brassic delivers one of its most ambitious, bizarre, and surprisingly tender episodes to date. Episode 5, titled does exactly what it says on the tin: it sends our favorite criminally-inclined misfits on a chaotic, hallucinogenic journey that blurs the lines between therapy, revenge, and a very bad hangover.
Erin finally admits she’s terrified of leaving Hawley, not because she loves the town, but because she’s scared she’s becoming just as broken as Vinnie. Vinnie, in turn, admits he sees Jim (Steve Evets) as more of a father than his real one ever was—a confession he immediately tries to blame on “the fungus.”
Just when you think the lads of Hawley have run out of ways to catastrophically fail upwards, Brassic delivers one of its most ambitious, bizarre, and surprisingly tender episodes to date. Episode 5, titled does exactly what it says on the tin: it sends our favorite criminally-inclined misfits on a chaotic, hallucinogenic journey that blurs the lines between therapy, revenge, and a very bad hangover.