The best stonemason comedy ever hidden in the iconic sitcom

Robert Scucci | publishing
Any role played by Bill and Ted, Cheech and Chong and Chong, Beavis and Buthead, Harold and Kumar, and Seth Rogen usually define Stoner comedy, but the most interesting Stoner story ever might actually belong to Fresil. Season 11’s “High Holiday” is an unexpected masterclass for getting wave gravy, driven by the flawless on-screen chemistry between David Hyde Pierce’s Niles Crane and John Mahoney’s Marty Crane. The hidden gem of this episode lingers long on the weeds while implanting one foot into reality, never being copied since then.
Yes, the most interesting stonemason duo I’ve ever been happy to watch in all the media are Niles and Marty Crane.
High holidays have perfect settings
The premise of “high holiday” is the perfect premise: Niels, since his father’s statement is always “good kid”, Niels decided it was time to rebel. His plan? On a quiet night, in Frasier’s place, on a quiet night, bought pot brownies from Roz and Ingest “in the purest form”.

When the temptation hit, Marty was a retired policeman who never touched the diet of marijuana, had brownies and swapped it out with Nervosa in the cafe. Not knowing the switch, Niles took a small measurement of “dose” from the alternative, and convinced him that he was about to change his mind. Meanwhile, Frasier finds himself the only sober (if Sherry doesn’t count) observer, which will unfold in his apartment.

I think Niels is actually very sober, but the placebo is in full swing. Why did he still overexplode his debris so dangerously?
Why Stoner Comedy Works in Fresil
By inserting classic plaster comedy attitude into the world Fresil“High Holiday” flipped the script. We are not watching a pair of cute stupid fools who wake up and bake these moves every day. We’re looking at Niles, what a man should do if he’s “too vulnerable”. Preparing for lunch pairings of Chilean bass and aggressive Zinfandel, he has no clues about Marty will soon barge after sandals occupy.

Marty, blisfully unaware that he was the one who was actually too brittle, stumbled into Frasier’s apartment, shocked by his giant, who had so many rounds on his long walk home that the giant could cross the building.
Niles mistakenly thought that his state might have changed, and Marty’s attention was too distracted to notice that he was dipping his grilled fries into a bucket of chocolate pudding.

As the night leaves on the “Superior Holiday”, Frasier discovers his trousers’ unrestrained father and asks where the pants are, finally putting them together. Marty calmly replied: “Fridge” and then pulled out a notepad to the clumsy Frassier with complete sincerity: the refrigerator pants explained.
A realistic straw comedy
Putting its humor in the weirdness inherent in the characters, Fresil’s “High Holiday” and Harold and Kumar went to White Castle Surreal climax, including CGI cheeseburger dancing on a cartoon background, suggesting that marijuana use will put you into a tech colored dream of kale mess. By taking a more solid approach, Fresil The laughter emanates from the misleading sense of rebellion and subsequent misunderstandings.