Below Deck Recap: The Blame Game
Below Deck Recap: The Blame Game
Pier Pressure
Season 11
Episode 2
Editorâs Rating
3 stars
Below Deck
Pier Pressure
Season 11
Episode 2
Editorâs Rating
3 stars
Photo: Bravo
The charter guests are still stuck at dinner, where theyâve been seated for so long now that their stay on the St. David risks taking on a Shining quality: Why, youâve always been the primary. At last, after nearly an hourâs delay, a beautiful cube of tomahawk steak garnished with flowers finally arrives. Digging in, one guest comments that she is (I think?) having an âaneurysm.â
âDid you say, âan orgasmâ?â someone else pipes up, a leer in his voice.
âFor the love of God, Todd,â she scolds him, as if these people donât mention the concept of orgasms nearly every other sentence and as if announcing a blood vessel in her brain is bursting would be any less bizarre. (Justice for Todd.)
Fraser is aghast â aghast â at the sight of Cat bussing the table by stacking plates on top of one another. âThis is not a Waffle House; this is a super-yacht,â he tells the camera. Iâve never been on a super-yacht, but I have been to a Waffle House, and I have to say â no complaints. (Also, while I have not been on a super yacht, I would have to imagine stacked plates would be lower on my list of concerns than norovirus outbreaks or pirate attacks, or, worst of all, a pirate attack during a norovirus outbreak.)
Anthony knows he needs to work on his time management but nevertheless considers this first dinner a success. âWoo, woo, woo,â he sings to himself as he plates his poached pears. âBougie as fuck.â
After their friends go to bed, the primaries shoo away Barbie and proceed to bang in the hot tub. Actual, bodily sex and not just endless empty references to blow jobs? I didnât know these crazy kids had it in them! The editors do the couple hilariously dirty by continuing to roll (PG-13) footage of their rendezvous in a split screen as Barbie and Kyle each offer their nonplussed commentary. Barbie says she promised her dad that she wouldnât hook up on the St. David, and maâam, why was that a topic of conversation with your father at all? Kyle, meanwhile, wants us to know about âone of the scariest times of [his] lifeâ â namely when his apparently world-class cunnilingus skills gave a woman a seizure.
For the record, Barbie says she isnât interested in hooking up with Kyle, though he wouldnât mind her âjumping up and down on top of [him] in the bedroom speaking Spanish.â Barbie and her bunkmate Sunny agree that Ben is the cutest among the crew. No word yet as to whether Sunny or Ben have made any sex-related promises to their fathers, though.
The next morning, as Kyle deep-cleans the hot tub so intently Iâm surprised he isnât wearing a hazmat suit, Fraser rewards Xandi for her hard work by assigning her to join the guests on their kayak excursion. In reality, this is a punishment for Xandi, who â if the spooky royalty-free music they helpfully play in the background of her interviews didnât remind you â very much does not care for the sun. She is wampyr.
Fraser gives Ben a pair of cooler bags to carry the guestsâ refreshments. Ben dutifully fills the bags with ice and bottled water, brings them to the deck, points them out to Jared, and explains what they are and that they need to go with the kayaking crew. Lo and behold, when the guests set out, these bags are still onboard the St. David, right where Ben left them.
It isnât long before Captain Kerry discovers the refreshments are MIA and dispatches Sunny back to the yacht to retrieve them. Kerry at first blames Xandi, given that drinks fall under the umbrella of the interior and sheâs the only stew here (here against her will, but no matter). When Kerry brings this kerfuffle up to Fraser, our chief stew mentions that he gave the bags to Ben but ultimately takes responsibility himself. Less than thrilled that this is the first impression heâs made on his new captain, Fraser then confronts Ben. Ben, baffled as to how this oversight could have happened, confronts Jared. Virtually everyone on the boat is arguably a little to blame for the missing refreshments, if only for not double-checking they had them onboard â except Anthony, who is probably still finishing a forgotten final course from last nightâs dinner, and Cat, who is otherwise occupied staring into an open fridge and dissociating â but itâs clear where the chain of custody broke.
And yet, when Ben asks Jared about the bags, he insists that, yes, they went with the guests. But, uh ⊠Captain Kerry says they didnât? âNo, they did.â This cracks me up; I canât help it. Manifest your dreams into reality, Jared. For what itâs worth, in a confessional, our bosun discusses having ADHD but not having found a medication that works for him.
Jared seems nice. What he does not seem is ⊠good at his job? But then we abruptly cut to him kicking a balloon and saying, in a robot voice, to no one in particular, âRobot Jared.â (I have many questions, one of which is: Are robots known for kicking balls?) Iâm sorry to the rest of the crew, and I sympathize with their frustrations, but thanks to moments like this, Jaredâs presence remains an equivocal net positive for me.
Instead of serving the increasingly booze-thirsty guests who stayed behind on the boat, Cat hides in her bunk and eats a chocolate croissant. Before he leaves for the beach to serve the kayakers lunch, Fraser explains that she and Barbie need to make sure they check on the others. Cat interprets this conversation as Fraser officially bestowing her with a junior-deputy-sheriff badge and all its associated duties and powers, despite the fact that she herself has not yet figured out how to use her walkie. Barbie takes a break from her busy morning to chat with Kerry in the crew mess â she asks him to point out the Bermuda Triangle on a map. (I would commit terrible crimes, in international waters or elsewhere, if it meant weâd get a Below Deck: Bermuda Triangle.) Cat marches in to remind her fellow stew that they are, you know, supposed to be, you know, working? I would lose my mind, and it seems like Barbie is well on the way. In their respective confessionals, she and Cat suggest the other woman is acting like Regina George. I hate to break it to them, but I donât think we have a single Cady Heron on our hands. Somebody has to be Gretchen Wieners.
Kyleâs version of setting up for an elegant post-kayaking beach lunch is laying random strips of cardboard down on blankets, which are themselves pinned down by approximately three times as many shells as would be reasonably necessary. By the time Fraser arrives and sets about completely redoing all of this, Kyle (who, to be fair, is out of his wheelhouse) is at least considerate enough to be shirtless and, for some reason, doing push-ups. Small victories.
Barbie has already complained to Fraser about how slow Cat is; now, while they put the finishing touches on the lunch mise-en-scĂšne, itâs Catâs turn to complain to the chief stew that Barbie isnât showing her any respect. Ben, who heard a recap of this conversation from Fraser, gleefully brings word of Catâs airing her grievances about Barbie back to Barbie, who in turn immediately airs her grievances about Catâs grievances to Fraser, who in turn airs his grievances about the airing of the airing of those grievances back to Ben. Fraser asks him not to get involved in âinterior drama,â a directive I very much hope Ben will ignore, because I would love to see him further cultivate his natural gossiping instincts for my entertainment.
For tonightâs Miami-themed birthday party, Barbie, Ms. 305 herself, assembles a balloon arch that is giving gender reveal as much as it is Miami, to be honest. But cute! Down in the galley, Anthony crouches in front of an un-iced cake. âCâmon, bro,â he says to himself, or possibly to the cake.
After claiming the award for charterâs worst sunburn (honorable mention goes to Kyle, whose sunburn somehow found its way inside his ass crack), Xandi is at last permitted to retire to her coffin, I mean to her bunk. She drifts off listening to, at least according to the editing, a true-crime podcast that I am almost certain does not exist. (Really? Youâre going to cover âthe most gruesome murders in the United States between 1950 and 1970â in one episode? Amateur hour.)
The next morning, as the boat approaches the dock, Jared is too busy Jared-ing to inform the captain how much clearance there is around the stern, because no one is there to report it. Kerry is met with frustrating and dangerous radio silence as Robot Jared and the deckhands (free band name) scramble, running around in front of the guests, talking over each other, and announcing numbers of meters seemingly at random. They figure it out, but woof.
Although Kerry remains âpretty fucking pissed offâ about the baffling lack of communication during that docking, he still finds much to praise about their first charter and plenty of cause for optimism about the rest of the season. Theyâve made a healthy $25,000 in tips. Thatâs $1,923 each, or, converting to the default currency units of Barbieâs brain, approximately 1.2 new Louis Vuitton bags.
Barbie and Cat come close to making peace twice but fall short both times. Cat apologizes for being irritable, only for Barbie to pointedly request that she complain to her rather than about her next time. Later, once the guests are gone, Fraser summons them both to the sundeck to clear the air. Cat explains she moved so slowly on night one because she was overwhelmed with dishes and yet kept getting assigned new tasks. Next time, Fraser encourages her, she should respond by telling her fellow stews to wait until sheâs done with what sheâs already working on. Reasonable enough! It seems like theyâve made progress until Cat canât help herself but bring up how she saw Barbie just âhanging outâ in the crew mess, and then Barbie has to bring up Catâs condescending âweâre supposed to be workingâ tone, and ⊠here we go again. If they canât get along, Fraser warns, theyâll both be gone.
Below Deck Recap: The Blame Game
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