[s5e5] The Waitress Is Getting Married -
Charlie’s blind date with Jackie, a lawyer, serves as a brutal critique of performative identity. Forced into the persona of a "philanthropist," Charlie’s social anxiety manifests physically (extreme "flop sweat") and linguistically, famously mispronouncing his occupation as a . The humor stems from the tragic gap between who Charlie actually is—a janitor who enjoys "eating stickers"—and the impossible, polished version of humanity his friends try to project onto him. Jealousy and the Sabotage of Joy
Dee’s subplot mirrors this toxic dynamic. Her obsession with sabotaging the Waitress’s wedding isn't born from a desire for the groom, Brad Fisher, but from a pathological need to "win". When she realizes Brad has "grown into" his looks, her jealousy intensifies, leading her to throw a bachelorette party designed solely for humiliation. The irony is revealed in the finale: Brad is a villain in his own right, using marriage as a weapon of revenge against girls who rejected him for his high school acne. [S5E5] The Waitress Is Getting Married
"It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" The Waitress Is Getting Married Charlie’s blind date with Jackie, a lawyer, serves