S02e04 Dthrip — You
What follows is a masterclass in comedic tension. Joe, who views every woman through the lens of potential romance or victim, is forced to go through the motions of a shallow hookup date. Lucy is blunt, sexually aggressive, and utterly unimpressed by Joe’s bookish charm. She’s there for one thing, and Joe’s internal monologue fires off rapid-fire disgust.
This discovery is a turning point. For all of Joe’s monstrous actions (stalking, murder, kidnapping), he operates under a twisted moral code. Henderson is a predator of the innocent, a type of monster even Joe despises. The episode ends with Joe taking one of Henderson’s trophies—a chilling callback to his own cage—signaling that the comedian is now in Joe’s crosshairs. Episode 4 is a sharp critique of performative Los Angeles culture. The D.T.H. app represents transactional, hollow intimacy, while Henderson’s comedy represents how fame protects abusers. Joe, the ultimate fraud, is ironically the only person who sees through both facades. you s02e04 dthrip
Best Moment: Joe’s horrified internal monologue during the D.T.H. dinner. Worst Moment (for Joe): Watching Love flirt with an actor who owns a juicer. What follows is a masterclass in comedic tension
In a moment of genuine heroism (or self-preservation), Joe follows Delilah to the party. Here, the episode pivots hard. The bright, satirical LA dating scene gives way to the dark underbelly of Hollywood power. Joe discovers that Henderson drugs young women. Delilah is almost one of his victims, and Joe is forced to act. He doesn't kill Henderson—not yet—but he breaks into the mansion, saves Delilah, and finds a hidden room filled with videos of underage girls. She’s there for one thing, and Joe’s internal