The horniness continued with “Women’s AA Meeting,” where the entire female cast is at an AA meeting that’s strictly for women — that is, until Jacob Elordi’s character walks in by mistake. Then the rule goes out the window and all the women are hanging on his every word. Elordi’s character tells them he’s been unhealthily using sex as a replacement for alcohol, which only intrigues them more.
Then there’s “Acting Class,” in which a bunch of struggling actors get an inspirational visit from an accomplished actor played by Elordi. The visit quickly stops being inspirational when it’s revealed that the ultra-attractive actor has never had to struggle for anything in his life. He has quite literally never heard the word “rejection” before, nor does he understand the concept of an audition. The struggling actors are jealous and devastated, but they can’t even be mad at the guy because he’s just so handsome.
Even in sketches where Elordi’s attractiveness is not the main focus, it’s still pointed out constantly. The bowling alley sketch ends with Heidi Gardner inviting him home explicitly to have sex, and the “Garret from Hinge” sketch has Garrett referring to Elordi as “Pointy Leonardo DiCaprio.” It’s the sort of thing that makes you wonder: Did Elordi ask the writers to do all this, or did they just sort of force it upon him?