"Atlanta" Streets on Lock (TV Episode 2016) Poster

(TV Series)

(2016)

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8/10
Earn is stuck with a bunch of weird folks waiting to be processed as Alfred starts to feel/see the effects of fame.
Amari-Sali7 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Overview

Episode 2 arguably isn't about pushing the story forward or featuring its stars. It is more so about establishing the people the stars live around and their environment. For whether it is normal people who get arrested for just drinking on their porch, trans folk, or kids acting out what they hear on rap songs, that is Glover's Atlanta.

Trigger Warning(s): Police Brutality | Transphobia

Main Plot (with Commentary)

Topic 1: That Paper Boi Fame (Alfred & Darius)

Be it name recognition or just plain luck, it seems Alfred is processed and on bail in no time. Meanwhile, Earn is left by himself waiting. Yet, with Alfred running into so many who recognize him and with him getting his first taste of fame, he doesn't seem happy. Especially cause Darius keeps telling him about every news outlet or magazine picking up on his story of allegedly shooting someone. But things get a bit real when Alfred sees some kids playing around with toy guns imitating what Alfred raps about to the point he feels he should step in. Something he slightly regrets cause it seems their mom/ aunt was ready to curse him out, but once she realizes he is potentially famous she calms down and gives Alfred her number.

{Commentary}

First off, Darius is a national treasure. He shows up to pick up his boy from holding, wears this weird head wrap for most of the day, and stupidly reveals to a guy in a batman mask where Paper Boi lives. Yet, despite all this, nothing about Keith Stanfield's performance of Darius seems inauthentic. Nothing is overdone or seems like a parody. Darius is just Darius and you may not understand him yet you can't help but accept him since he seemingly means no harm.

As for Alfred, being that we don't know how deep or shallow his lyrics are, it is kind of hard to judge him. He is this big guy who is a bit of a thug, but he isn't a gang banger. If anything, he is a "product of his environment" or whatever the term is nowadays. Yet when he approached those kids, that is when you realized that whatever rap persona he puts out there, that perhaps is more to survive and protect himself than represent who he actually is. Yeah, he may have shot or shot at someone, but that was more so to protect his persona than because he does stuff like that on general principal.

Topic 2: The Things You See Waiting To Be Processed (Earn)

While Alfred has freedom Earn is just listening to weirdos and people watch. Though in general, the episode is filled with weird characters I doubt we will see again. However, Earn gets the bulk of them. For whether it is this old man talking about how he got arrested for drinking with someone he hasn't seen in 11 years; this mentally ill guy named Lee who drinks from the toilet and spits on a cop, leading to him getting brutalized; or this dude who learns his ex is trans, he deals with a lot of interesting characters before he finally gets processed and Vanessa can pick him up.

Sadly, we don't get her full, unfiltered, reaction to having to pick up the father of her child, and roommate, from jail.

{Commentary}

In a way, this episode made me feel like while Glover's name is perhaps what drew you in, what he wants to do is showcase the rest of the talent that is out there. For while most may not think twice about the person who played any of the weirdos we saw this episode, it did give that actor the chance to shine, put something on their filmography, and could be what got them discovered.

I mean, take note of Justice Smith from The Get Down. Who knows how much those 4 small roles helped him get cast as a lead in a series. And sometimes that is all it takes. One person thinking you got the look, voice, or mannerisms which would be perfect for a character. That is the opportunity I think Glover presented not just this episode's guest stars but also a lot of the cast. For, outside of him and the man who plays his father, no one else is a quickly recognizable face. Yet, rather than do like many who finally get the chance for their own show, he shares the spotlight, almost gives away the attention, for he knows there is more work and scenes for him. Let someone else shine.

Highlights

We have around 10 episodes, albeit half hour ones, to get to know Earn, Alfred, Darius, Vanessa, and everyone else. Yet the show spent one just establishing the folks who come and go and are just part of the neighborhood. I thought that was something different, and arguably important, for we need to know what made our leads the way they are and that can only be done by us getting to see the people and things they saw around them. Which can't always be done if they are the center of attention.

Another thing worth highlighting is the life being sculpted for Alfred. He notes he doesn't like eating in public for he feels like an animal in a zoo, he seems to care about kids and in the first episode wanted to hold Earn's baby, and with that, we got to see a softer side to him. Making you wonder, especially considering how calm and collected he acts around Darius if maybe the rap persona is just that. A mask, if you will, that protects Alfred from being taken advantage of or people even thinking they can step to him.
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9/10
Jail is no destination!..
hamidullahgenc12 January 2017
This is like a normal day in life of a black man trying to find his way up... Okay, we can say that being on top is nothing compared to the real, insightful aims in life; but still, it is to be experienced by billions of people.

More to that, a black man's journey upwards will reveal more challenges than the white men 'd encounter. Therefore, in Donald's work we see the story to be as close to the truth as he can possibly do...

The scenes where the dialogues take part between all kinds of "black people" is realistic as their accent as well as their phraseology are in point. Their closer bonds between themselves than their relations with "white" people were portrayed well.

It certainly is a problem in the society that people will divide their ways based on the culture backed up by the skin colour... But still, you feel close to the characters as if you are in those scenes. In a word, this is a success for the show!

The show's originality can be discussed upon as it is not the first show to delve into "rap" or "black lives matter" zone; but its approach is kind of dark and new. We've got to keep its tracks!..

Finally, their acting skills with respect to coolheadednes and aplomb are what anyone would remember this show by!.. Well!..

I give this episode a "8,8." Yes!..

"...Yet We desired to show favour unto those who were oppressed in the earth, and to make them leaders and to make them the inheritors..."

The Gracious Koran, the 5th Verse of the 28th Chapter (called "The Stories"). Amen.
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7/10
Get out of the prison
AvionPrince1611 July 2022
Warning: Spoilers
An episode where we find again Paper Boi in jail but he get released because they paid his caution but Childish Gambino get free much later in the episode by his girlfriend . A nice episode with some nice events . Need to see more the adventures of Paper Boi and his friends in that kind of world. The episode have clearly some moments that we can ask ourself : why they didnt skip it ? Why keep it ? It dont make the story advance in any way . Nice episode anyway.
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10/10
Who Knew Jail Was Fun?
lassegalsgaard-4528413 February 2018
After the premiere episode of "Atlanta," I was excited to see how they would follow it up. With the premiere being something that I had never seen before, and something that was so funny that I didn't know what to do with myself when it was done, I was so excited for the second episode. This time, it is Donald Glover's brother Stephen who is writing, and if the talent runs in the family, this episode could have the potential to be even funnier than the premiere was. I also hoped that the episode would expand on the weird element of the premiere, because while the premiere had some weird moments, it was only the scene in the bus that felt like something out of "Twin Peaks." I hoped that they would be able to expand on that, and after having seen the second episode, I can only say that they managed to do so much more and make this the funnier episode. It's been some time since I have laughed that hard at anything.

Just like the premiere, this episode had such great writing and the perfect amount of comedic moments to up what they did in the premiere, without making it seem forced. The screenplay for this particular episode offers up what every second episode should; it explores more of the world that we were introduced to in the premiere. Glover makes these suburban areas in Atlanta look like one of the weirdest places in all of America, and it's so brilliant, because it makes the audience invested in the place. It's a real place, that in many ways probably mirror the real place very well, but to someone who has never been there, it seems like the weirdest fictional place ever.

I like that the writers are concentrating on develop these characters more than anything else. This episode was very much about developing Paper Boi and make him adapt to this newfound fame. And something that Glover did was put Earn in prison, so the audience wouldn't ask "where is Earn?" while watching. And the prison setting was incredible funny. They made prison seem like the funniest place on Earth, even though there was also a lot of social commentary involved in these scenes. So, there was this great balance of making it very funny, but also very realistic. However, I will say the comedic moments in these scenes were genius.

The further exploration of Atlanta was also great, and we got introduced to so many weird new characters that seems like something out of "Twin Peaks" or "The Twilight Zone." That's a smart way for the showrunners to make the show too serious, even though there are a lot of very serious undertones. It's these small moments with these weird characters that makes the humor, and it might not land for some people, but for someone like me who loves everything that someone like David Lynch does, this is pure gold.

Once again, the performances were really great, and especially Glover who plays every scene very subtle, even though the people he surrounds himself with in prison are not that. There is a very funny conversation between an ex-couple where Earn is caught in the middle of the two, and while he plays it realistically, the two are like something from another place. Some of these people are messed up, and I love that they are.

Glover has really managed to pull me into this show that I didn't have any expectations for. I love everything that I have seen so far, and I cannot wait to watch more and see the insanity that they come up with in the remaining eight episodes.
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6/10
Streets on Lock
Prismark1014 May 2018
Paper Boi and Earn are in the police cells waiting to be processed.

With a song and being on the edge of fame, Paper Boi is processed and gets bail in not time, even a detective asking him for a selfie. Paper Boi feels uncomfortable, later on when he sees some kids playing with guns, he feels the need to give them an anti violence message.

Earn is not so lucky, he does not get bail immediately. He closes his eyes in the cells and gets told off by an officer that he cannot fall asleep until he is processed.

The people in the cells are almost surreal, the standout is the guy who sees his ex-girlfriend not knowing that he was a transvestite.

More funnier than the episode but again feels more like a drama.
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7/10
Bailout
dannylee-7808213 January 2023
Warning: Spoilers
1. Earn and Alfred get arrested 2. Alfred gets a pic taken 3. Earn gets bailed out

There's something about this show in that creates a really unique vibe, something that I've never felt in other shows. I like the surreal dialogues and strange encounters of Alfred as keeps getting recognized with people he runs across with. Some are pleasant, some are not. We can tell he feels this sense of disconnect between who he has to portray and who he actually is. I love Brian Tyree Henry. Even already in episode 2, Atalanta accomplishes quick and effective sketches on various social issues like race, transgender through the eyes of the black community.
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