
It's always in the middle of a season that shows get their most experimental and play around with novel ideas the most. Sure, that may prompt a misstep here or there, but it's when shows don't have any mandatory exposition to work through and get to experiment that we get to see things at their most ambitious and potentially-rewarding.
Among one of the most popular ideas is that of flashing back to the olden times, and it's also an idea that yields the most iffy results; more often than not, there's just nothing fun about it, and it becomes an episode of the show that just feels deprived. So it was a pleasant surprise that "A Frontier Story" not only pulled through, but executed the idea flawlessly.

This finds them on a strangely quixotic adventure to, again, find the center of the earth, filled with three-eyed Natives and bounties to exploit, but it quickly detours into a hilariously microchastic nougat feud almost immediately. Leading up to that point, though, is equally fun.


And yes, the details of the documentary are just as absurd as the characters describing them. It's just a multitude of nougat-oriented historical anachronisms, documenting the trajectory of both families and their contributions to American history. I mean, here's an excerpt. It's amazing. I couldn't write enough to do it justice:

"After the explosion of the Hindenburg, Rhark III was able to sell nougat to zeppelin engineers as a non-flammable alternative to hydrogen. Unfortunately, nougat does not float, but the Nougatburg still did explode, killing 1501 persons."
All of this is set to peaceful public-access-documentary music and accompanied by fake photographs of every event, and it's perfect. Oh, and there's also the fact that every member of the Linkis/Rhark dynasty inevitably meet up at the nougat pump to kill each other in any broad multitude of ways from dynamite to telekinesis. It's the sort of hilariously stupid concept that I could only dream of writing. A few deaths later, after discovering the magical taste of nougat by... coincidence... both families partner up and marry (Yes, Linkis V is actually a womano), and it's revealed that the little girl who goes to Rhett and Link's house in the beginning is their daughter trying to peddle some nougat.

With all that said, there's no way to hide that "A Frontier Story" is filler, but dang it, if it isn't amazing.

-This episode's song, "Down With America," is a bit of an interesting beast to try to discuss, taking the form of a grossly-animated, not-even-Schoolhouse-Rock edutainment music video. I have my issues with the presentation, though they stem more from a lack of resonation so many as an understanding of what's being parodied, so I won't beleaguer that too much, but the increasing darkness of the song, in which Linkis and Rhark outline their goals of enslaving underground Natives and subjecting themselves to idolatry, is sublime, especially with the ignorant cheerfulness of the presentation. It satirizes how much history is sugar-coated, and it's perfectly executed.
-The Renaissance / Rent-a-Séance mix up at the start of the episode was a great, weird little moment to start the episode with.
"Mr. President, it would be an honor for you to completely unload your scent glands on my tree!"'
-"Wow, we've never seen a real Native person before. Only white people playing them in theatrical productions."
-"We Americans don't go around eating stuff out of the ground! We prefer natural foods like cheeseburger, and cheeseburger casseroles, and cheeseburgers without cheese."
-"That's not a contract! This is a- actually this is also a gun."
-It's worth noting that, on top of Vanessagawea, a lot of other Buddy System regulars made return appearances as historically-imbued counterparts. Ignatius was particularly hilarious trying to navigate the law rulebook to find a sentence for Linkis and Rhark ("Woman who wants to vote: nuh-uh. Child who doesn't want to work: nn-nnn."), while Dylan made another chirpily odd appearance as the old-timey mailman.
-Oh yeah, there's also the ultimate twist that nougat is actually three-eyed underground people waste.

For the last Buddy System review of "Virtual Rhettality," CLICK HERE.
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