The Premise (2021) s01e03 Episode Script
The Ballad of Jesse Wheeler
[MUSIC LOGO]
[MUSIC PLAYS]
I'm B. J. Novak.
Movies are too long.
TV shows are even longer.
You hear about a new show, it turns out
you're 400 episodes
behind everybody else.
I would never do that to you.
[MUSIC]
This next story takes us to
Victory High, where pop star
Jesse Wheeler returns
and makes a promise
that will change some young lives.
I hope you enjoy "The
Ballad of Jesse Wheeler."
[MUSIC]
[MUSIC PLAYING]
[CAR SIREN SOUND]
- PRINCIPAL WALLACE: Is that him?
- WOMAN: Yeah.
PRINCIPAL WALLACE: Oh
my God. "The Wheels!"
Jesse Wheeler.
Don't worry about that
machine, come on through.
That thing is basically
there for show anyways dude.
Oh my God.
The prodigal song is here.
The pride of Victory High and
the biggest pop star on the planet.
- All for love.
- WALLACE: Oh my God.
I'm Cooper, Jesse's manager.
This is my assistant, Kailey.
Fred over there is
shooting for CNN Heroes.
Jesse I want you to meet
our Phi Beta Kappa club.
That's a GPA of over 3.0. That's a B.
This is Susie Xu and
that's Susie's friend.
Susie was allowed to bring a friend.
[MUSIC]
[AUDIENCE CHATTER]
Look who came to school.
I come to school sometimes.
Sometimes, yeah
[APPLAUSE]
- Ok, ok, all right y'all.
- [CROWD BOOING]
Thank you for that wonderful reception.
Uh
STUDENT: You suck, Wallace.
Are you ready for "The Wheels?"
- [APPLAUSE]
- Jesse
Jesse
Jesse Wheeler!
[AUDIENCE APPLAUDING]
"The Wheels."
- [APPLAUSE]
- Thank you.
[BAND MUSIC PLAYING]
Thank you.
Wow.
From the bottom of my heart,
it feels unbelievable to be
back here at Victory High.
[APPLAUSE]
Man, it's a humbling feeling being here.
Actually, it's not a humbling feeling.
You're not making me feel humble,
you're making me feel incredible.
[APPLAUSE]
Seriously?
Yeah, so
I'm here today because
I've decided to donate
a million dollars to Victory
High to build a new library.
[AUDIENCE MEMBER COUGHING]
But that's not all.
To one hard-working student
What do you call the student
at the end of the year who ah
uh, has the best grade?
You call them a name?
- It's not a mean name.
- Valedictorian.
JESSE: Valedictorian. So, to
whoever is the valedictorian,
you win an all-expense paid trip
to my next concert in
Los Angeles, California.
WOMAN: Yes!
[APPLAUSE]
And then, we'll go
backstage and chill together.
[APPLAUSE]
And then,
I will personally give you
a tour of the Wheeler mansion
- STUDENT: Awoo!
- up at the top of the Hollywood Hills.
- WOMAN: All right!
- [APPLAUSE]
- Yes.
- WOMAN: YES!
And then,
if you want,
I'll fuck you.
[SOUND EFFECT]
[MUSIC]
[CROWD CHEERING]
[STUDENT CHATTER]
He can't offer sex as a prize.
I got to go study.
We got to walk back
what you said back there.
Oh, about the donation?
Right, yeah, that didn't
get that much love.
No, about fucking a student, Jesse.
Are you being for real right now?
That's the part that they liked.
What did you always
tell me that my gift was?
I hear things other people can't hear.
I hear energy.
I hear feelings.
I hear vibrations and
I put that into music.
That was the sound of
the school coming alive.
What if the winner is underage, Jesse?
Then it's after they turn 18.
What if the winner's a dude?
I'd really like to give
this opportunity to a woman.
Can we clarify that it's
like, a woman's scholarship?
Nope.
Fine.
Yeah.
Here's our website
and if you scroll down,
you'll see the message board
where the student messages are.
Okay. Mm-hmm.
What's an "ussy?"
"U-S-S-Y."
Ussy, is that like a selfie
with a bunch of people?
- Read the sentence.
- It says, "I'm going to win the contest,
then I'm going to make him
lick my ussy real good."
Ussy, what's "ussy?"
I think that's maybe a typo.
They forgot a P.
No. This is not good.
[PHONE RINGS]
Ah, superintendent.
PHONE: Wallace, what the hell
just happened in your school?
This is a religious school
board, you understand?
Man, you know these kids, it was a goof.
PHONE: You better hope it was.
- PHONE: If this contest becomes a big deal,
- It won't.
PHONE: you'll be
fired before you can
- cash that first pension check.
- Superintendent
I already know who's going to win.
She's not going be a problem.
Ain't nobody bonking nobody.
WOMAN: Study with us. Fuck "The Wheels."
- SUSIE: Ma
- WOMAN: Study with us.
[FOREIGN LANGUAGE]
Study with us.
Fuck "The Wheels."
[FOREIGN LANGUAGE]
-
- Mom, they don't say that to people here.
I just think it would be
such a statement if I won.
Oh, is that why you want to win?
- People think you're a transfer student.
- [MUSIC PLAYING]
You haven't even been to
school since you were like 13.
What do you care?
CALEB: What do you not care?
That's not a phrase.
Then why did it hurt?
CALEB: I'm going to win,
and I'm going to film it.
[MUSIC]
CALEB: Bye.
[AIRPLANE SOUND]
- [MUSIC PLAYING]
- I don't see how it's all that different
from the standard meet and greet stuff.
Like a selfie or a hug.
Jesse the difference is you offered sex.
Exactly, when is the last time
that sex actually mattered to people?
People have sex for dumb
ass reasons all the time.
- That's true.
- You included?
- COOPER: Oh yeah.
- Why can't I do it one time,
to change people's lives?
Look, people are going to say
I don't listen to
people, I listen to God.
[MUSIC]
Revolutions create by destroying,
- [MUSIC PLAYING]
- and destroy by creating.
Who is this guy? He's awesome.
Mr. Holmes?
Ah
So, you two love birds get that?
Sorry, sorry.
[PIANO MUSIC PLAYING]
[INDISTINCT DIALOGUE]
JESSE: Listen, pastor.
The voice I'm hearing is not
telling me what other people
tell me it should be saying.
For sure.
I hear that.
Can you hit me with
one of those parables?
For sure.
There was this village
years ago.
And in this village,
there lived a chemist.
Every day the chemist, he
would wander the fields,
picking flowers for his potions.
One day, he picked this beautiful poppy,
and he crushed it up and
put into one of his potions.
And do you know what poppies turn into?
- Poppy juice?
- Also known as opium.
Now, the chemist, he put some
of it on his lips to taste it.
He felt totally amazing
and he rushes back to the village
completely overcome with joy,
and he asks this woman
if he can kiss her.
And then she too felt the surge.
First on her lips, and
then all through her body.
Fire. [LAUGHS]
Now hand in hand, they lept
together through the village
back to the chemist's house
where they laughed and they danced.
Do you know what the chemist did then?
He put it on his dick.
That's exactly what he did.
PASTOR: He put it on his dick.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
PASTOR: Word spread through
the village and the chemist,
you know, all of a sudden, he's
got all these women lining up
- to lay with him.
- JESSE: Woof. That's a top story.
- PASTOR: It's not over.
- JESSE: Fire.
PASTOR: Some people, they questioned
if it was fair that the
chemist had this opium dick.
PASTOR: Did the women
want him or his opium?
[EXHALES]
It's all him because he made the opium.
Your talent Jesse
your fame,
the light music that shines through you.
That's my opium dick.
PASTOR: And opium is powerful.
You know, some say that opium
is a religion of the masses.
But even when it's your opium,
it's still not totally yours, is it?
It's God's.
[EXHALES]
WOMAN: Welcome.
I see a lot of new faces here
at the end of the semester,
which is great.
For those of you just joining
us, this is values and ethics.
Tell us what's on the test.
TEACHER: It's not really
about tests in here.
Hi, uh, I'm Abbi
Um, haven't been to school in a while,
but eager to engage
in ethics and values.
- Welcome, Abbi.
- STUDENT: Who's this bitch?
There's a more fundamental
issue at play here.
The central challenge is that
you're teaching a curriculum
that centers on a tradition
formed by thousands of years
of religious worship, but
you're teaching it in an era
where we worship celebrity.
Oh, I like this, is
everyone listening to Abbi?
And, celebrity worship is better.
ABBI: It's an evolution.
Okay, let's put a pin in evolution.
Pop culture is a religion,
it has its own deities,
hymns, rituals,
mythologies, except it's
not based on make-believe and
it hasn't started any wars.
By definition, popular culture
means that the common populace
gets to play a part in defining
it and changing it in real-time.
Except that democratization
doesn't mean it's superior.
It can just be a shallow reflection
of those same unjust structures.
Case in point, a white savior figure
coming into a majority-minority
school and making a promise in
which the prize itself escalates
a value system that places
himself firmly at the top
of the social hierarchy.
Okay, let's move back
towards ethics and values.
I'm sorry, does social justice
not count under ethics & values?
Oh, no, no, that's not what I meant.
It's not a rhetorical question.
It's about whether you
see ethics and values
through a societal lens
or an individualistic one.
Both valid but extremely
different points of view.
And, I'll connect them for him.
Every day around the
world as a maladaptation
of late-stage capitalism,
countless sex workers survive
by economizing their sexual
value through the enjoyment
of the rich and powerful.
Today, notably, we see a person
who is powerful and privileged
acknowledge his body as something
of sexual value to others.
He offers this of his own free
will as a systemic incentive
for the collective benefit
of the disenfranchised.
In that way, it's an
act of social justice
with repercussions far beyond school.
As a step towards
destigmatizing sex work,
revolutionizing the lives
of millions of people
and treating the aesthetic appeal
of status as a collective resource
belonging to the people who created it.
[MUSIC]
This is some bullshit.
I'm going to lose my patience.
These fucking kids are reading.
Stop reading!
Get on TikTok,
Get your phones out right now.
Susie Xu
my favorite student.
Listen up. All our
interests are aligned.
The religious school board
has been on my ass every day
about this contest.
Now, all you got to do
is ace that history fair.
Become valedictorian.
Give a nice, normal speech,
just a regular speech and
then we're going to move on.
I've been thinking.
Well, thinking is good.
What is any of this for?
No, not that kind of thinking.
Am I doing everything for other people?
Hell yeah.
You're doing it for the school.
You're doing it for uh, your parents,
job market, the community.
Yeah, but do I want what I want
because other people tell me I want it?
And why do they want
what they want for me?
Someone else must have made them want.
Right?
I mean, where does it stop?
How does it stop?
Who decides to stop it?
Why did Jesse Wheeler make that promise?
I don't know, just to fuck up my life.
Do me a favor. Just ace
the history fair, okay?
Get into college.
Smoking doobie in your dorm room,
then you ask the wacky questions.
He's the biggest pop star on the planet.
Who's next for Jesse Wheeler?
Our hush hush inside sources at
Victory High tell us the contest
for valedictorian is down to three.
Susie Xu, reigning Phi Beta Kappa.
Abbi Miller, who apparently was
one day shy of expulsion
for non-attendance,
or Caleb Rose. You know
who I'm rooting for.
Listen, let's just
apologize and cut our losses.
I can't.
Why not?
Because I don't think
I did anything wrong.
That's not how apologies work anymore.
All right, it's hard
to get to number one.
It's even harder to stay number one.
I'm not number one because I
work so hard to be number one.
I'm number one, because I
work so hard to be myself.
Listen to me.
This thing that we built,
we built it together.
And if this comes down,
it comes down on all of us.
All right. Let me
talk to God real quick.
You haven't done that yet?
No, just Pastor Jack.
Please talk to God.
Talk to God.
All right.
JESSE: Mm-hmm.
Yeah, man.
Mmm.
God says to ask you about an
$800,000 check from the Dubai gig.
[SILENCE]
That came in today.
Let him know we're processing it.
Okay.
And so, this crazy competish
all comes down to the history fair.
We are live with the man who
decides it all, Mr. Holmes.
So, what can we expect at the fair?
-
- It's anybody's guess, Andy.
-
- History is wild
beheadings, gladiators,
concubines, sick stuff.
So, do you find it
surprising that students are
actually interested in history?
It's surprising they weren't before.
[LAUGHS]
TV: Skipping to the fun part,
who do you think is going to
spend the night with "The Wheels?"
TV: Who's going to
get a prize, Andy, huh?
The prize is that for a few short years,
their only task is to hear the
most brain-meltingly twisted,
true stories of the
planet they're born on.
Said they treat school as nothing more.
The preparation for lives
so boring and meaningless
that they actually look forward
to watching your stupid show.
Now, that actually hurt my feelings.
[MUSIC]
Mm-hmm.
[CROWD CHATTER]
What's this?
America.
America?
- America?
- Yup.
Where are the witches?
Hmm? The witch trials.
Where are the witches?
Trail of tears?
Genocide of a continent, slavery,
the adulation of slavery
telephone, electricity.
Rocket ships, war
Elvis Presley dead on a toilet!
Oh God, this is the most
pathetic project I've ever seen.
B minus baby.
Whoo.
The story of the world is
that chains of oppression,
morph into chain links of progress.
Everyone who has been
disconnected from society and
systems of power, has rebelled,
intersectional progress.
This guy is unbelievable.
Keep it up.
He got an A plus.
[APPLAUSE]
Thank you, sir.
Well, who are you?
I'm Abbi.
Abbi, yeah.
- Here you go.
- You've made your wands?
Yes, those are your magic wands.
MR. HOLMES: Oh really,
yeah. That better fit.
You're going to use them
when I put this on you.
Oh!
Ohhh.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
Oh my God.
The fundamental scandal of
every institution is to pretend
it is built out of the very
force capable of destroying it.
Government claims community,
Religion claims spiritual wonder,
and history, the running
record of rebellion
against every concept and
system, is claimed by school.
School hides the world's most
dangerous ideas in plain sight
by using them to bore
the shit out of people.
Until potential rebels to
the system reject the tools
that could take it down.
MR. HOLMES: Oh my God.
Which is why sex
the force most capable
of inspiring both infinite
selfishness and infinite bonding
is appropriated by all systems
of power and must be liberated.
If you want to matter to history,
you must be as disloyal
to its structures
as you are loyal to its spirit.
the world is watching, Mr. Holmes.
Do you belong to history's buildings,
or the people who blow them up?
[EXPLOSION]
[APPLAUSE]
[MUSIC]
[CAMERA CLICKS]
- Okay, thanks.
- Thank you.
- Hey.
- Hey.
- Hey, I'm Jesse.
- Hi, I'm Abbi.
- Nice to meet you.
- Nice to meet you.
Thanks for doing that
contest, it's really cool.
Yeah, that was no problem.
Um
You know, education is important.
Uh
I am grateful to know you.
It's good to be here.
- Yeah.
- Awesome.
Cool, well, if you want, you can just
wait in there for a sec
Okay, cool.
[CROSSTALK]
Peace.
Hey, you want a photo?
So, this is my home.
I've lived here for,
I guess like a year.
Still kinda new.
Oh my God.
It's a bit overwhelming at first,
but people tell me I'm
going to grow into it.
Wow.
This is my favorite room in the
house is where I come to read.
These are my yellow books.
These are my red books.
These are my purple books,
my green books and
of course, you know, my blue books.
Yeah, I love reading.
What's it like being smart?
Being the valedictorian?
- Uh
- JESSE: Um
Sometimes, I wonder what
my life would have been like
if I had stayed in school,
how smart I'd be.
Things like that.
You're not really missing anything.
Hmm, you don't care about school?
I mean, I loved it when I was little.
Then what happened?
I read all the books they assigned.
And if you really read them,
- they're just saying, fuck school.
- [LAUGHS] Right. Wait, really?
Yeah, fuck school and
everything like school.
Like with the F word.
In spirit, yeah.
Huh.
You want to read right now?
No, I'm cool with just
hanging out with you.
Cool. I'm cool with that.
ABBI: Yeah.
I'm comf I'm cool either way.
What's it like being famous?
And then coming back like that?
It was wild.
Because when I was up there,
I remembered all of the people
who were mean to me.
And who made me feel small and stupid.
And how badly they made me want it.
To make it.
And then to come back and just give
them two middle fingers, you know?
[LAUGHTER]
Why didn't you do that?
Because I wasn't the same person.
I wish I were so I could have.
[LAUGHTER]
I just spoke from the heart.
That's all.
Maybe that's a bigger two
middle fingers in a way.
Hmm.
[WATER DROP SOUND]
So
You don't like school,
and you don't know my music,
why did you become valedictorian?
Uh
[LAUGHS]
[MUSIC IN THE BACKGROUND]
Wait
that's me with you?
I've never seen this photo before.
How is that possible?
I know it's just, it's just mine.
They used to print pictures,
and there were only like one or two.
So, that day my
that day my parent's gave
us money to go to McCool's.
We were walking through Victory
Park and people were sledding and
we didn't have sleds.
So, you
[GIGGLES]
you took a garbage bag
out of the garbage can and
shook all the garbage out of it.
- Really?
- Yeah, it was the
it was the coolest thing I'd ever seen.
You just
always had this faith
in whatever you were feeling
that it is worth doing
[GIGGLING]
or saying.
[LAUGHING]
I don't know what
I don't know what to
do with this feeling.
Should we make it into a music video?
No.
No, it's just
No, it's just for us.
That was the best day of my life.
Better than today?
Yeah.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
Hmm.
[MUSIC]
So, what do you want to do now?
[APPLAUSE]
And now, some words of
wisdom from our valedictorian,
Um, can I uh
Let me get the check
first, then the speech.
Our valedictorian, Abbi Miller!
[APPLAUSE]
Congratulations.
I fucked him.
Woo!
[CROWD CHEERING]
[MUSIC PLAYING]
My check!
Wooo!
[INDISTIGUISHABLE SCREAMS]
[MUSIC CONTINUES PLAYING]
[MUSIC PLAYS]
I'm B. J. Novak.
Movies are too long.
TV shows are even longer.
You hear about a new show, it turns out
you're 400 episodes
behind everybody else.
I would never do that to you.
[MUSIC]
This next story takes us to
Victory High, where pop star
Jesse Wheeler returns
and makes a promise
that will change some young lives.
I hope you enjoy "The
Ballad of Jesse Wheeler."
[MUSIC]
[MUSIC PLAYING]
[CAR SIREN SOUND]
- PRINCIPAL WALLACE: Is that him?
- WOMAN: Yeah.
PRINCIPAL WALLACE: Oh
my God. "The Wheels!"
Jesse Wheeler.
Don't worry about that
machine, come on through.
That thing is basically
there for show anyways dude.
Oh my God.
The prodigal song is here.
The pride of Victory High and
the biggest pop star on the planet.
- All for love.
- WALLACE: Oh my God.
I'm Cooper, Jesse's manager.
This is my assistant, Kailey.
Fred over there is
shooting for CNN Heroes.
Jesse I want you to meet
our Phi Beta Kappa club.
That's a GPA of over 3.0. That's a B.
This is Susie Xu and
that's Susie's friend.
Susie was allowed to bring a friend.
[MUSIC]
[AUDIENCE CHATTER]
Look who came to school.
I come to school sometimes.
Sometimes, yeah
[APPLAUSE]
- Ok, ok, all right y'all.
- [CROWD BOOING]
Thank you for that wonderful reception.
Uh
STUDENT: You suck, Wallace.
Are you ready for "The Wheels?"
- [APPLAUSE]
- Jesse
Jesse
Jesse Wheeler!
[AUDIENCE APPLAUDING]
"The Wheels."
- [APPLAUSE]
- Thank you.
[BAND MUSIC PLAYING]
Thank you.
Wow.
From the bottom of my heart,
it feels unbelievable to be
back here at Victory High.
[APPLAUSE]
Man, it's a humbling feeling being here.
Actually, it's not a humbling feeling.
You're not making me feel humble,
you're making me feel incredible.
[APPLAUSE]
Seriously?
Yeah, so
I'm here today because
I've decided to donate
a million dollars to Victory
High to build a new library.
[AUDIENCE MEMBER COUGHING]
But that's not all.
To one hard-working student
What do you call the student
at the end of the year who ah
uh, has the best grade?
You call them a name?
- It's not a mean name.
- Valedictorian.
JESSE: Valedictorian. So, to
whoever is the valedictorian,
you win an all-expense paid trip
to my next concert in
Los Angeles, California.
WOMAN: Yes!
[APPLAUSE]
And then, we'll go
backstage and chill together.
[APPLAUSE]
And then,
I will personally give you
a tour of the Wheeler mansion
- STUDENT: Awoo!
- up at the top of the Hollywood Hills.
- WOMAN: All right!
- [APPLAUSE]
- Yes.
- WOMAN: YES!
And then,
if you want,
I'll fuck you.
[SOUND EFFECT]
[MUSIC]
[CROWD CHEERING]
[STUDENT CHATTER]
He can't offer sex as a prize.
I got to go study.
We got to walk back
what you said back there.
Oh, about the donation?
Right, yeah, that didn't
get that much love.
No, about fucking a student, Jesse.
Are you being for real right now?
That's the part that they liked.
What did you always
tell me that my gift was?
I hear things other people can't hear.
I hear energy.
I hear feelings.
I hear vibrations and
I put that into music.
That was the sound of
the school coming alive.
What if the winner is underage, Jesse?
Then it's after they turn 18.
What if the winner's a dude?
I'd really like to give
this opportunity to a woman.
Can we clarify that it's
like, a woman's scholarship?
Nope.
Fine.
Yeah.
Here's our website
and if you scroll down,
you'll see the message board
where the student messages are.
Okay. Mm-hmm.
What's an "ussy?"
"U-S-S-Y."
Ussy, is that like a selfie
with a bunch of people?
- Read the sentence.
- It says, "I'm going to win the contest,
then I'm going to make him
lick my ussy real good."
Ussy, what's "ussy?"
I think that's maybe a typo.
They forgot a P.
No. This is not good.
[PHONE RINGS]
Ah, superintendent.
PHONE: Wallace, what the hell
just happened in your school?
This is a religious school
board, you understand?
Man, you know these kids, it was a goof.
PHONE: You better hope it was.
- PHONE: If this contest becomes a big deal,
- It won't.
PHONE: you'll be
fired before you can
- cash that first pension check.
- Superintendent
I already know who's going to win.
She's not going be a problem.
Ain't nobody bonking nobody.
WOMAN: Study with us. Fuck "The Wheels."
- SUSIE: Ma
- WOMAN: Study with us.
[FOREIGN LANGUAGE]
Study with us.
Fuck "The Wheels."
[FOREIGN LANGUAGE]
-
- Mom, they don't say that to people here.
I just think it would be
such a statement if I won.
Oh, is that why you want to win?
- People think you're a transfer student.
- [MUSIC PLAYING]
You haven't even been to
school since you were like 13.
What do you care?
CALEB: What do you not care?
That's not a phrase.
Then why did it hurt?
CALEB: I'm going to win,
and I'm going to film it.
[MUSIC]
CALEB: Bye.
[AIRPLANE SOUND]
- [MUSIC PLAYING]
- I don't see how it's all that different
from the standard meet and greet stuff.
Like a selfie or a hug.
Jesse the difference is you offered sex.
Exactly, when is the last time
that sex actually mattered to people?
People have sex for dumb
ass reasons all the time.
- That's true.
- You included?
- COOPER: Oh yeah.
- Why can't I do it one time,
to change people's lives?
Look, people are going to say
I don't listen to
people, I listen to God.
[MUSIC]
Revolutions create by destroying,
- [MUSIC PLAYING]
- and destroy by creating.
Who is this guy? He's awesome.
Mr. Holmes?
Ah
So, you two love birds get that?
Sorry, sorry.
[PIANO MUSIC PLAYING]
[INDISTINCT DIALOGUE]
JESSE: Listen, pastor.
The voice I'm hearing is not
telling me what other people
tell me it should be saying.
For sure.
I hear that.
Can you hit me with
one of those parables?
For sure.
There was this village
years ago.
And in this village,
there lived a chemist.
Every day the chemist, he
would wander the fields,
picking flowers for his potions.
One day, he picked this beautiful poppy,
and he crushed it up and
put into one of his potions.
And do you know what poppies turn into?
- Poppy juice?
- Also known as opium.
Now, the chemist, he put some
of it on his lips to taste it.
He felt totally amazing
and he rushes back to the village
completely overcome with joy,
and he asks this woman
if he can kiss her.
And then she too felt the surge.
First on her lips, and
then all through her body.
Fire. [LAUGHS]
Now hand in hand, they lept
together through the village
back to the chemist's house
where they laughed and they danced.
Do you know what the chemist did then?
He put it on his dick.
That's exactly what he did.
PASTOR: He put it on his dick.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
PASTOR: Word spread through
the village and the chemist,
you know, all of a sudden, he's
got all these women lining up
- to lay with him.
- JESSE: Woof. That's a top story.
- PASTOR: It's not over.
- JESSE: Fire.
PASTOR: Some people, they questioned
if it was fair that the
chemist had this opium dick.
PASTOR: Did the women
want him or his opium?
[EXHALES]
It's all him because he made the opium.
Your talent Jesse
your fame,
the light music that shines through you.
That's my opium dick.
PASTOR: And opium is powerful.
You know, some say that opium
is a religion of the masses.
But even when it's your opium,
it's still not totally yours, is it?
It's God's.
[EXHALES]
WOMAN: Welcome.
I see a lot of new faces here
at the end of the semester,
which is great.
For those of you just joining
us, this is values and ethics.
Tell us what's on the test.
TEACHER: It's not really
about tests in here.
Hi, uh, I'm Abbi
Um, haven't been to school in a while,
but eager to engage
in ethics and values.
- Welcome, Abbi.
- STUDENT: Who's this bitch?
There's a more fundamental
issue at play here.
The central challenge is that
you're teaching a curriculum
that centers on a tradition
formed by thousands of years
of religious worship, but
you're teaching it in an era
where we worship celebrity.
Oh, I like this, is
everyone listening to Abbi?
And, celebrity worship is better.
ABBI: It's an evolution.
Okay, let's put a pin in evolution.
Pop culture is a religion,
it has its own deities,
hymns, rituals,
mythologies, except it's
not based on make-believe and
it hasn't started any wars.
By definition, popular culture
means that the common populace
gets to play a part in defining
it and changing it in real-time.
Except that democratization
doesn't mean it's superior.
It can just be a shallow reflection
of those same unjust structures.
Case in point, a white savior figure
coming into a majority-minority
school and making a promise in
which the prize itself escalates
a value system that places
himself firmly at the top
of the social hierarchy.
Okay, let's move back
towards ethics and values.
I'm sorry, does social justice
not count under ethics & values?
Oh, no, no, that's not what I meant.
It's not a rhetorical question.
It's about whether you
see ethics and values
through a societal lens
or an individualistic one.
Both valid but extremely
different points of view.
And, I'll connect them for him.
Every day around the
world as a maladaptation
of late-stage capitalism,
countless sex workers survive
by economizing their sexual
value through the enjoyment
of the rich and powerful.
Today, notably, we see a person
who is powerful and privileged
acknowledge his body as something
of sexual value to others.
He offers this of his own free
will as a systemic incentive
for the collective benefit
of the disenfranchised.
In that way, it's an
act of social justice
with repercussions far beyond school.
As a step towards
destigmatizing sex work,
revolutionizing the lives
of millions of people
and treating the aesthetic appeal
of status as a collective resource
belonging to the people who created it.
[MUSIC]
This is some bullshit.
I'm going to lose my patience.
These fucking kids are reading.
Stop reading!
Get on TikTok,
Get your phones out right now.
Susie Xu
my favorite student.
Listen up. All our
interests are aligned.
The religious school board
has been on my ass every day
about this contest.
Now, all you got to do
is ace that history fair.
Become valedictorian.
Give a nice, normal speech,
just a regular speech and
then we're going to move on.
I've been thinking.
Well, thinking is good.
What is any of this for?
No, not that kind of thinking.
Am I doing everything for other people?
Hell yeah.
You're doing it for the school.
You're doing it for uh, your parents,
job market, the community.
Yeah, but do I want what I want
because other people tell me I want it?
And why do they want
what they want for me?
Someone else must have made them want.
Right?
I mean, where does it stop?
How does it stop?
Who decides to stop it?
Why did Jesse Wheeler make that promise?
I don't know, just to fuck up my life.
Do me a favor. Just ace
the history fair, okay?
Get into college.
Smoking doobie in your dorm room,
then you ask the wacky questions.
He's the biggest pop star on the planet.
Who's next for Jesse Wheeler?
Our hush hush inside sources at
Victory High tell us the contest
for valedictorian is down to three.
Susie Xu, reigning Phi Beta Kappa.
Abbi Miller, who apparently was
one day shy of expulsion
for non-attendance,
or Caleb Rose. You know
who I'm rooting for.
Listen, let's just
apologize and cut our losses.
I can't.
Why not?
Because I don't think
I did anything wrong.
That's not how apologies work anymore.
All right, it's hard
to get to number one.
It's even harder to stay number one.
I'm not number one because I
work so hard to be number one.
I'm number one, because I
work so hard to be myself.
Listen to me.
This thing that we built,
we built it together.
And if this comes down,
it comes down on all of us.
All right. Let me
talk to God real quick.
You haven't done that yet?
No, just Pastor Jack.
Please talk to God.
Talk to God.
All right.
JESSE: Mm-hmm.
Yeah, man.
Mmm.
God says to ask you about an
$800,000 check from the Dubai gig.
[SILENCE]
That came in today.
Let him know we're processing it.
Okay.
And so, this crazy competish
all comes down to the history fair.
We are live with the man who
decides it all, Mr. Holmes.
So, what can we expect at the fair?
-
- It's anybody's guess, Andy.
-
- History is wild
beheadings, gladiators,
concubines, sick stuff.
So, do you find it
surprising that students are
actually interested in history?
It's surprising they weren't before.
[LAUGHS]
TV: Skipping to the fun part,
who do you think is going to
spend the night with "The Wheels?"
TV: Who's going to
get a prize, Andy, huh?
The prize is that for a few short years,
their only task is to hear the
most brain-meltingly twisted,
true stories of the
planet they're born on.
Said they treat school as nothing more.
The preparation for lives
so boring and meaningless
that they actually look forward
to watching your stupid show.
Now, that actually hurt my feelings.
[MUSIC]
Mm-hmm.
[CROWD CHATTER]
What's this?
America.
America?
- America?
- Yup.
Where are the witches?
Hmm? The witch trials.
Where are the witches?
Trail of tears?
Genocide of a continent, slavery,
the adulation of slavery
telephone, electricity.
Rocket ships, war
Elvis Presley dead on a toilet!
Oh God, this is the most
pathetic project I've ever seen.
B minus baby.
Whoo.
The story of the world is
that chains of oppression,
morph into chain links of progress.
Everyone who has been
disconnected from society and
systems of power, has rebelled,
intersectional progress.
This guy is unbelievable.
Keep it up.
He got an A plus.
[APPLAUSE]
Thank you, sir.
Well, who are you?
I'm Abbi.
Abbi, yeah.
- Here you go.
- You've made your wands?
Yes, those are your magic wands.
MR. HOLMES: Oh really,
yeah. That better fit.
You're going to use them
when I put this on you.
Oh!
Ohhh.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
Oh my God.
The fundamental scandal of
every institution is to pretend
it is built out of the very
force capable of destroying it.
Government claims community,
Religion claims spiritual wonder,
and history, the running
record of rebellion
against every concept and
system, is claimed by school.
School hides the world's most
dangerous ideas in plain sight
by using them to bore
the shit out of people.
Until potential rebels to
the system reject the tools
that could take it down.
MR. HOLMES: Oh my God.
Which is why sex
the force most capable
of inspiring both infinite
selfishness and infinite bonding
is appropriated by all systems
of power and must be liberated.
If you want to matter to history,
you must be as disloyal
to its structures
as you are loyal to its spirit.
the world is watching, Mr. Holmes.
Do you belong to history's buildings,
or the people who blow them up?
[EXPLOSION]
[APPLAUSE]
[MUSIC]
[CAMERA CLICKS]
- Okay, thanks.
- Thank you.
- Hey.
- Hey.
- Hey, I'm Jesse.
- Hi, I'm Abbi.
- Nice to meet you.
- Nice to meet you.
Thanks for doing that
contest, it's really cool.
Yeah, that was no problem.
Um
You know, education is important.
Uh
I am grateful to know you.
It's good to be here.
- Yeah.
- Awesome.
Cool, well, if you want, you can just
wait in there for a sec
Okay, cool.
[CROSSTALK]
Peace.
Hey, you want a photo?
So, this is my home.
I've lived here for,
I guess like a year.
Still kinda new.
Oh my God.
It's a bit overwhelming at first,
but people tell me I'm
going to grow into it.
Wow.
This is my favorite room in the
house is where I come to read.
These are my yellow books.
These are my red books.
These are my purple books,
my green books and
of course, you know, my blue books.
Yeah, I love reading.
What's it like being smart?
Being the valedictorian?
- Uh
- JESSE: Um
Sometimes, I wonder what
my life would have been like
if I had stayed in school,
how smart I'd be.
Things like that.
You're not really missing anything.
Hmm, you don't care about school?
I mean, I loved it when I was little.
Then what happened?
I read all the books they assigned.
And if you really read them,
- they're just saying, fuck school.
- [LAUGHS] Right. Wait, really?
Yeah, fuck school and
everything like school.
Like with the F word.
In spirit, yeah.
Huh.
You want to read right now?
No, I'm cool with just
hanging out with you.
Cool. I'm cool with that.
ABBI: Yeah.
I'm comf I'm cool either way.
What's it like being famous?
And then coming back like that?
It was wild.
Because when I was up there,
I remembered all of the people
who were mean to me.
And who made me feel small and stupid.
And how badly they made me want it.
To make it.
And then to come back and just give
them two middle fingers, you know?
[LAUGHTER]
Why didn't you do that?
Because I wasn't the same person.
I wish I were so I could have.
[LAUGHTER]
I just spoke from the heart.
That's all.
Maybe that's a bigger two
middle fingers in a way.
Hmm.
[WATER DROP SOUND]
So
You don't like school,
and you don't know my music,
why did you become valedictorian?
Uh
[LAUGHS]
[MUSIC IN THE BACKGROUND]
Wait
that's me with you?
I've never seen this photo before.
How is that possible?
I know it's just, it's just mine.
They used to print pictures,
and there were only like one or two.
So, that day my
that day my parent's gave
us money to go to McCool's.
We were walking through Victory
Park and people were sledding and
we didn't have sleds.
So, you
[GIGGLES]
you took a garbage bag
out of the garbage can and
shook all the garbage out of it.
- Really?
- Yeah, it was the
it was the coolest thing I'd ever seen.
You just
always had this faith
in whatever you were feeling
that it is worth doing
[GIGGLING]
or saying.
[LAUGHING]
I don't know what
I don't know what to
do with this feeling.
Should we make it into a music video?
No.
No, it's just
No, it's just for us.
That was the best day of my life.
Better than today?
Yeah.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
Hmm.
[MUSIC]
So, what do you want to do now?
[APPLAUSE]
And now, some words of
wisdom from our valedictorian,
Um, can I uh
Let me get the check
first, then the speech.
Our valedictorian, Abbi Miller!
[APPLAUSE]
Congratulations.
I fucked him.
Woo!
[CROWD CHEERING]
[MUSIC PLAYING]
My check!
Wooo!
[INDISTIGUISHABLE SCREAMS]
[MUSIC CONTINUES PLAYING]