And it’s time for the Boardroom. Busey felt he was a good project manager. Nobody on the team agrees. Meat Loaf talks about being frustrated, while John calls it a “catastrophic collapse of time management”, which makes it sound like they didn’t defuse the bomb in time. I mean, they got the presentation done and did a pretty good job. And since John’s contributions were non-existent, he’s not the one who should be making this argument. (You guys, it’s possible that I will be irritated by everything John Rich says with his stupid mouth from here on out.)
Meat Loaf complains about the lack of rehearsal, and then tries to come up with a nice way to say that Busey only hurts the team. He brings up that the menu is printed wrong – not only are there two misspellings, but it’s got the wrong things on it. Meat Loaf presents the original handwritten menu to prove his point. Wow, I have never before seen somebody actually present an “Exhibit A” in the Boardroom. Meat Loaf is just a simple country lawyer, y’all, but he knows a thing or two about writing a menu…
You could tell, even after the entire project crashed and burned, Trump didn’t want to send Busey home because the show is less entertaining without him.
See, I disagree. Trump only thinks the show is less entertaining, but I was so much more relaxed watching this week without his crazy ass invading the personal space of everyone he came in contact with.
Yeah, it was definitely more entertaining to watch without Busey — not only did he make me uncomfortable, but he was leeching screen time from everybody else. We don’t really know much about how the various people interact with one another, because the editing was so Busey-focused. I think I would have been happier if he just popped up once every episode to say something crazy and then moved on.