Anthony Norman is your typical Gen Z employee: 25, just a little wayward, and struggling to discover a full time job.
You may’t precisely fault him for the place he’s in. Unemployment charges are high. AI is making a disaster for younger folks attempting to enter the workforce. Hiring has slowed. And a number of other corporations—together with Amazon, Block, and Meta—have embraced tech’s newest period of layoffmaxxing, with some slicing their employees by 20 p.c.
So when Anthony lands a temp place at Rockin’ Grandma’s Scorching Sauce, a small enterprise in Southern California, he’s simply pleased for what he assumes is an everyday gig: helping with odd jobs and serving to plan the annual retreat.
What Anthony doesn’t know is that he’s truly the mark of Jury Responsibility Presents: Firm Retreat, the second season of Prime Video’s experimental docu-comedy the place one particular person unwittingly participates in a staged sitcom (the first season, which blew up on TikTok and snagged three Emmy nominations, was a few faux jury trial). Everyone seems to be an actor aside from him.
Anthony joins the workforce throughout a second of transition. The founder, Doug Womack, is making ready to step down. His son, Dougie Jr, is subsequent in line, and since not everybody thinks he’s match to run the household enterprise, he needs to show that he’s greater than an unqualified nepo child—“the Bronny of sizzling sauce,” he says. Having simply returned from a four-year stint in Jamaica “jamming” with a lodge foyer ska band referred to as the Jive Prophets, the retreat is supposed to be a check for Dougie Jr.
The season trades within the monotony of cubicles and watercooler discuss for Oak Canyon Ranch, a comfortable resort and recreation middle nestled within the grassy suburb of Agouria Hills—about an hour drive northwest of Los Angeles—the place the employees convenes for varied actions: workforce constructing, a consumer cookout, motivational audio system, and a expertise contest. Determined for “one week with out Cocomelon” and her three children, Jackie Angela Griffin, the distribution and logistics rep, is able to get away.
Like all workplaces, Rockin’ Grandma’s is a circus of eccentricity and ego. Accountant and bourbon fanatic Helen Schaffer has been “cooking the books for 26 years.” Receptionist PJ Inexperienced has goals of being a snack influencer. Sourcing supervisor Anthony Gwinn, who at one level confuses a flesh gentle for a water thermos, is jokingly nicknamed “Different Anthony” regardless of working on the firm longer. Kevin Gomez, head of HR, has flashes of Michael Scott: He’s an overeager, comically delusional, hopeless romantic who loves his job and Amy Patterson, the shopper relations coordinator. “Scorching Sauce is having a second,” he tells Anthony in the course of the onboarding course of. “You don’t see this sort of factor taking place with ketchup.”
On day two, desperate to show his instincts as CEO, Dougie Jr. calls an audible and brings in an “feelings and vulnerability knowledgeable”—she’s the Walmart model of educational Brené Brown—who confusingly leads the group by a dialog on how you can navigate uncomfortable situations.
It’s good follow for Kevin’s failed proposal to Amy—they’ve truly by no means been on an actual date minus the one time he went out together with her and eight of her different girlfriends on her birthday. A humiliated Kevin makes a fast exit from the retreat middle, with cans tied to the again of his automotive, and Anthony is compelled to step up.
“I obtained a promotion,” he says, improvising on the fly to raise morale by embracing the function of “Captain Enjoyable.”
At the same time as folks have struggled to seek out that means of their work—or just discover work—TV’s fixation with the American office has all the time been well-liked with viewers. Mad Males examined the existential toils of promoting executives. Severance has contemplated autonomy, along with plenty of different very weird shit. And no collection has explored the pleasant chaos of office hijinks higher than NBC’s The Workplace, which adopted the oddball employees of Dunder Mifflin, a Pennsylvania paper firm.
