[s1e2] Rabbits Apr 2026

He marvels at the "high-tech" ways the casino keeps people glued to slots—optimization techniques he likely helped create—yet he’s currently being "played" by the very social systems he tries to control. A Somber Note to End On

The episode concludes with the news that Whitney’s pregnancy is , meaning there will be no baby. The reaction between the two is telling: Asher is genuinely despondent, while Whitney immediately starts listing the "positives" of not being parents yet. It’s a chilling reminder that their marriage is less of a partnership and more of a series of misaligned projections and performance art. [S1E2] Rabbits

To get into a secure office, Asher weaponizes Whitney’s pregnancy, sharing a fake moment of "intimacy" with his old boss to gain access to security footage. He marvels at the "high-tech" ways the casino

Was she genuinely expressing art, or was she just testing how much Whitney would endure for the sake of looking "evolved"? Let me know in the comments! It’s a chilling reminder that their marriage is

Whitney Siegel (Emma Stone) is a masterclass in performative altruism. This week, we see her desperately trying to "buy" a friendship with local Native artist Cara Durand. Whitney isn’t just looking for a friend; she’s looking for a to validate her presence in Santa Fe. The dinner scene, where Cara lets Whitney pay for multiple meals while clearly seeing through her patronizing behavior, is a brutal look at how Whitney uses her wealth to mask her own isolation. Asher’s "Rabbit Hole"

While Whitney plays at art, Asher (Nathan Fielder) is spiraling into a heist. Desperate to kill a news story that could ruin their HGTV image, he goes down a "rabbit hole" at his former casino job.