“About a Hook” picks up where “About a Boy Becoming a Man” left off -- Marcus is pissed at his mom for dating his teacher (and keeping it a secret), and
Will is trying to get the attention of music producer Johnny Idalis by any means necessary.
While Will puts Marcus up in his house, he tries to write a hook for the song he played for Idalis out of the back of Andy’s minivan. He can’t seem to think of anything, until Fiona tells Marcus that there will always be room in her love bubble for him -- and inspiration strikes! For some reason the phrase “love bubble” is exactly what Will’s looking for, and he uses that in the hook, which he then plays once again from the back of Andy’s minivan as they stalk Johnny Idalis through his own neighborhood, and forget to pick up Andy’s kids. I honestly thought that it was a bit of a joke, since the phrase “love bubble” is relatively ridiculous, but then Will actually put it in his song, so…I guess he was as earnest about it as Fiona was. As I mentioned before, it’s nice to see Will trying to get into music again, though clearly his methods are a little…sketchy. Maybe that’s how it works in the music biz, but the old “stalking a producer in a minivan with a boombox” seems just a bit creepy. Hopefully Will’s efforts to get back involved will give him a little bit more direction in life.
Will’s reemergence into the music world continues in “About a Prostitute,” in which Will needs money, and decides to teach guitar. He doesn’t get very far in the actually guitar-teaching field, however, because he ends up sleeping with his first student’s mom, and then Andy convinces Will that the mom is just paying him for sex. Will doesn’t believe him at first, though he does start to get suspicious after a while, when Emma keeps paying for everything on their date, and then buys him at the auction for $2,000. So Will takes another step in the right direction by trying to get a job, and finding something that plays to his strengths -- but it might make things less complicated if he doesn’t sleep with all the single moms. Music lessons seem like the sort of thing that Will could really do well, especially considering he seems pretty good with middle school-aged kids -- though he may not admit that. Keep up the progress, Will, and try not to turn to prostitution; I don’t think frosted tips and spray tans are really your style.
Due to Fiona’s relationship with the “hot teacher,” she has a status upgrade, and the “cool moms” ask her to help them plan the fundraising gala. Fiona acts just about as awkward as Marcus when surrounded by the Queen Bees, and instead of advocating for Marcus’ choice of “Cuban Pete” for the seventh grade musical number, she agrees with the other moms on their choice of Sara Bareilles’ “Brave.” (Admittedly, a very fun song.) But by encouraging Marcus to try and fit in a little bit, she ignores their family motto, “Don’t fit it, fit out.” Fiona realizes, after spending a little time with the “cool moms” that maybe it is better to fit out than to fit in with a bunch of mean women. So she has Marcus get up and perform “Cuban Pete” anyway (complete with maracas, of course), and she dances the rumba with Chris. Very well, I might add -- I’m not particularly surprised, but I am quite jealous of those smooth dance moves.
All in all, a couple of fun episodes; “About a Hook” had a little more familial angst with Fiona and Marcus, whereas “About a Prostitute” focused on Will’s goofy escapades in an attempt to get a job like normal, non-royalty-check-receiving people.
What did you think of the episodes? Is Mr. Chris and Fiona’s relationship going to get serious? Will Marcus ever really make a good friend around his own age? Is Will going to find a real job that works for him, and start to cut down on his extravagant lifestyle? Let us know below!